Francis William Ogilvie-Grant, 10th Earl of Seafield (9 March 1847 – 3 December 1888), styled Viscount Reidhaven from 1884 to 1888, was a Scottish peer who emigrated to New Zealand.
Early life
Seafield was born on 9 March 1847 in Kilmallock, County Limerick, Ireland.[1] He was the eldest son of The Hon. James Ogilvie-Grant, by his first wife, Caroline Louisa Evans (1820–1850), daughter of Eyre Evans, Esq. of Ash Hill, and Anna Maunsell.[2] After his education at Harrow, he served as a midshipman in the Royal Navy and then joined the merchant navy.[1]
Career
Seafield (then known as Frank Grant) arrived in New Zealand in 1870.[3] He bought a farm in the Waiareka Valley in a locality known as Te Aneraki to the west of Oamaru in North Otago.[4] He lost his money through his farming pursuits, and in the late 1870s the impoverished family moved to Oamaru town.[4]
After Lord Seafield died, his wife lived for some time in Auckland and Tauranga before moving to England.[7][8] She died at Brighton on 16 October 1935.[7]
Personal life
On 24 November 1874, Grant married his first cousin Anne Trevor Corry ("Nina") Evans, daughter of Major George Thomas Evans and Louisa Barbara Corry. They had seven children:[1][9]