Archibald Kennedy, 3rd Marquess of Ailsa (1 September 1847 – 9 April 1938) was a Scottish peer.
Early life and education
Archibald was born in 1847 at Culzean Castle,[1] the eldest of three sons born to Julia (née Jephson), Marchioness of Ailsa, and Archibald Kennedy, 2nd Marquess of Ailsa.[2] Among his siblings was Maj. Lord Alexander Kennedy, Lord John Kennedy, Lady Julia Alice Kennedy,[3] Lady Evelyn Anne Kennedy, and Lady Constance Eleanor Kennedy.
In 1866, Kennedy joining the Coldstream Guards as an ensign. He was promoted lieutenant in 1870 and retired nine year later retired upon succeeding to the Marquessate and estates and joining the House of Lords.[4]
In 1874, he was granted an honorary lieutenancy in the Royal Naval Reserve in 1874. In 1887, he became Lieutenant Commanding the Clyde Brigade, Royal Naval Artillery Volunteers, and in 1921 was made honorary captain of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve.[4]
The Marquess was a keen sailor, having studied navigation, and had William Fife build him Foxhound in 1870, Bloodhound in 1874, and Sleuthhound in 1881. He had his own shipyard at Culzean Castle, where he built the 5-ton Cocker.[5]
At the time of his death, he was the oldest member of the Royal Yacht Squadron. In his will, he left the King of the Netherlands Cup, won by his yacht Sleuthhound in 1883, to the Royal Yacht Squadron.[6]
He married secondly on 3 November 1891 to Isabella MacMaster, the only daughter of Hugh MacMaster, a market gardener of Kausani, India. Together, they had two more children:[2]
Lt.-Col. Lord Hugh Kennedy (19 January 1895 – 27 April 1970), married Katharine Louisa Clare Atherton, daughter of Francis Henry Atherton
Lord Ailsa died at his home, Culzean Castle, overlooking the Firth of Clyde, where he was known as one of the foremost floriculturists, on 9 April 1938.[9] Lady Ailsa died on 9 December 1945.
References
^"Births". Fife Herald. 9 September 1847. p. 2. Retrieved 24 December 2024.