Merlin Sereld Victor Gilbert Hay, 24th Earl of Erroll (born 20 April 1948), is a crossbench member of the House of Lords, chief of the Scottish clan Hay, and hereditary Lord High Constable of Scotland.
Early life and education
Lord Erroll, elder son of Diana Hay, 23rd Countess of Erroll and Sir Iain Moncreiffe of that Ilk, was a Page to the Lord Lyon in 1956. He was educated at Eton College before going up to Trinity College, Cambridge.
Earl of Erroll
Succeeding his mother, the Countess, in 1978 as Earl of Erroll, and in 1985, his father as a baronet, Lord Erroll now serves as a member of the Council of the Hereditary Peerage Association. Whilst Lord Erroll inherited Chieftainship of Clan Hay via his mother, their father's Chieftainship of Clan Moncreiffe devolved to his younger brother Peregrine.
Marriage and family
He married Isabelle Jacqueline Laline Astell Hohler (Brussels, 22 August 1955 – 13 January 2020), daughter of Major Thomas Sidney Hohler and his wife, heiress to the Astell family, of Everton House, Bedfordshire, in 1982. The Countess was a Patroness of the Royal Caledonian Ball and served as High Sheriff of Bedfordshire in 2015.
The Earl and Countess had two sons and two daughters:
- Harry Thomas William Hay, Lord Hay (b. Basingstoke, 8 August 1984); married Clementine Camilla Curtis Travis in 2017.
- Hon. Amelia Diana Jacqueline Hay (b. Basingstoke, 23 November 1986)
- Hon. Laline Lucy Clementine Hay (b. Basingstoke, 21 December 1987); married Major Jeremy Sudlow in 2017.
- Hon. Richard Merlin Iain Astell (b. Basingstoke, 14 December 1990); took the surname "Astell" by Royal Licence in 2015. He served in the 21st SAS Artists Rifles (V) Territorial Army from 1975 to 1990, and was an Honorary Colonel of the Royal Military Police (Territorial Army) from 1992 to 1997.
Lord Erroll has worked as a marketing and computer consultant, He continues to head the Puffin's Club, founded by his father. He is President of ERADAR, an e-business consultancy, and is President of the Digital Policy Alliance (EURIM).
He was a director of LASSeO, a not-for-profit technical standardization and interoperability membership organisation for smartcard technologies.
Politics
Lord Erroll was one of 90 excepted hereditary peers elected to remain in the House of Lords following the House of Lords Act 1999. A programmer and system designer by trade, he sat as a crossbencher and usually spoke on matters relating to cybersecurity and information technology. He was a member of the Science and Technology Committee and criticised Gordon Brown's government for what he said was a failure to curb cybercrime after four government agencies, including the Ministry of Defence and HM Revenue and Customs, reported massive losses of data in 2008.
See also
- Earl of Erroll
References
External links
- Burke's Peerage & Baronetage
- Official Profile on the Parliament website
- Earl of Erroll Open Rights Group
