Lieutenant Alfred Douglas Douglas-Hamilton, 13th Duke of Hamilton and 10th Duke of Brandon TD, DL (6 March 1862 – 16 March 1940) was a Scottish nobleman and sailor.

Early life

Hamilton was born at Shanklin, Isle of Wight, in 1862, the son of Captain Charles Douglas-Hamilton (1808–1873). His grandfather, Augustus Hamilton, was a son of Charles Powell Hamilton, himself a grandson of James Hamilton, 4th Duke of Hamilton. As a young man, Hamilton was commissioned into the Royal Navy, and held the rank of lieutenant. He gained the reputation for being able to dive under the keels of the battleships on which he served, without any equipment, reappearing on the opposite side of the ship to the amazement of his crewmates. In 1888, his fourth cousin, William Douglas-Hamilton, 12th Duke of Hamilton, persuaded him to leave the navy. By then, he was the heir presumptive of the Duke, who had no son.

Inheritance

There was a serious possibility that Alfred Hamilton would provide a good match for the twelfth duke's daughter, Lady Mary, but such hopes were dashed in 1890, when Hamilton was partially paralysed by a rare tropical disease he had caught while overseas on his last tour of duty.

William Douglas-Hamilton, 12th Duke of Hamilton died on 16 May 1895 and was succeeded by Alfred as the 13th Duke of Hamilton.

The 12th Duke owned extensive estates in England and Scotland; by 1883 these comprised a total of 157,386 acres which produced £73,636 in agricultural income and £67,006 in mineral rents annually. The 12th Duke's estates were valued at £1,902,559 for inheritance tax; under the terms of his will, the Easton and Arran Estates, valued at £374,713, were to pass to his daughter Lady Mary and her descendants; if she died without descendants, these estates were revert to the next Duke of Hamilton. The properties that left the Hamilton family at this time included Brodick Castle on Arran, which had been owned by the Hamiltons for 500 years.

The remainder of the 12th Duke’s estate in Scotland, valued at £1,527,845, was settled as the Hamilton Estates Trust which was to pass to his successors to the Dukedom of Hamilton.

Despite the extensive size of Alfred's inheritance, at the time of the 12th Duke’s death his estates were heavily encumbered by debts amounting to £965,999; the bulk of these were secured on the Scottish estates, except for £117,500 charged on the late Duke’s English Estates.

In 1922 the Duke disposed of 450 parcels of land comprising 19,363 acres of his estates in Scotland acres of the Hamilton Estates for approximately £330,000, most of which were purchased by the existing tenants of the estates who had been offered the right to buy their landholdings prior to auction.

The 13th Duke's inheritance included Hamilton Palace, the main family seat. As Duke was also the hereditary keeper of the Palace of Holyroodhouse. She was later the founder of the Animal Defence and Anti-Vivisection Society. They had four sons and three daughters:

Works cited

  • Hamilton Palace: the Hamilton family<!-- bot-generated title --> at www.rcahms.gov.uk
  • Burke's Peerage and Baronetage