Major Sir Keith Alexander Fraser, 5th BaronetJPDL (24 December 1867 – 21 September 1935) was a British cavalry officer, and a Conservative Member of Parliament for Harborough from 1918 until 1923.[1] He was also a breeder and trainer of racehorses.
Early life
Keith Fraser was born on 24 December 1867.[1] He was the eldest son of Gen. James Keith Fraser and Amelia Alice Julia Ward. His sister, Helena Violet Alice Fraser, was the wife of George Rous, 3rd Earl of Stradbroke, and his younger brother, Hugh Craufurd Keith-Fraser, married Dorothy Villiers (a daughter of Rt. Hon. Sir Francis Hyde Villiers).[2]
Fraser was a friend of Baden Powell and presented the Fraser Shield to the Boy Scouts in 1912 and the Fraser Shield Camping Competition is now thought by the organisers to be the longest running camping competition in Scouting.[5] Fraser was a "famous breeder and trainer of racehorses under both National Hunt and Jockey Club Rules."[6] Together with his wife, he trained Ardeen, who won the Scottish Grand National and the Grand Sefton Chase at Liverpool, and bred Totaig, who won the Royal Hunt Cup at Ascot in 1932.[6]
Personal life
On 30 August 1910, Fraser married Lady Dorothy Coventry (1872–1965), a daughter of George Coventry, 9th Earl of Coventry and the former Lady Blanche Craven (a daughter of the 2nd Earl of Craven). Together, they were the parents of:[3]
Keith Charles Adolphus Fraser (1911–1979),[3] who married Blanca de Undurraga y Sandiford, daughter of Don Julio de Undurraga, in 1934. They divorced in 1946; she married Duncan Grinnell-Milne and he married Sybil Ivy Savage, a daughter of George Savage, in 1947.[3]
Dod's staff (1901). Dod's peerage, baronetage and knightage, of Great Britain and Ireland, for ...: including all the titled classes. S. Low, Marston & Co. p. 372. "Sir Keith Alexander Fraser, s. of Lieut. - Gen. James Keith Fraser, CMO, 3rd son of the 2nd bait., by Amelia Alice Julia, d. of the Hon. Humble Dudley Ward. It. 1867 ; succeeded his cousin 1898;"
Dod's staff (1918). Dod's peerage, baronetage and knightage of Great Britain and Ireland for 1915, including all the titled classes (Seventy-fifth year ed.). London: Simkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent. p. 242.