Difference between revisions of "Earl of Inchcape"

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'''Earl of Inchcape''' is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom created in 1929.
 
'''Earl of Inchcape''' is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom created in 1929.
  
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:The family has a three per cent stake in the [[Inchcape Corporation]] - which over the past 18 months has sold off several business divisions, from bottling plants in Chile to global shipping services, to concentrate on its core motor business - trading in 30 countries. The sell-offs raised £600m, but the transition to global vehicle distributor was complete when Inchcape paid just £6m for a stake in Autobytel.Europe and took its car business online.<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/rich/article/0,,191219,00.html ??]</ref>
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==Titles==
 
The earl holds the subsidiary titles of ''Viscount Inchcape'' (1924), ''Viscount Glenapp of Strathnaver'' (1929), and ''Baron Inchcape'' (1911).
 
The earl holds the subsidiary titles of ''Viscount Inchcape'' (1924), ''Viscount Glenapp of Strathnaver'' (1929), and ''Baron Inchcape'' (1911).
  
 
The family seat is Carlock House, Glenapp, Ballantrae, Nr Girvan, Ayrshire, KA26 0PG.
 
The family seat is Carlock House, Glenapp, Ballantrae, Nr Girvan, Ayrshire, KA26 0PG.
 
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[http://www.multimap.com/map/browse.cgi?local=h&amp;scale=25000&amp;title=The%20family%20seat%20of%20the%20Earl%20of%20Inchape&amp;pc=KA260PG&amp;icon=x The family seat of the Earl of Inchcape]
 
==Earls of Inchcape (1929)==
 
==Earls of Inchcape (1929)==
 
*[[James Lyle Mackay, 1st Earl of Inchcape]] (1852-1932)
 
*[[James Lyle Mackay, 1st Earl of Inchcape]] (1852-1932)
 
*[[Kenneth Mackay, 2nd Earl of Inchcape]] (1887-1939)
 
*[[Kenneth Mackay, 2nd Earl of Inchcape]] (1887-1939)
*[[Kenneth James William Mackay, 3rd Earl of Inchcape]] (1917-1994)
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*[[Kenneth James William Mackay, 3rd Earl of Inchcape]] (1917-1994), former chairman of [[P & O]]
 
*[[Peter Lyle Mackay, 4th Earl of Inchcape]] (b. 1943)
 
*[[Peter Lyle Mackay, 4th Earl of Inchcape]] (b. 1943)
The Heir Apparent is Fergus James Kenneth Mackay, Viscount Glenapp (b. 1979)
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The Heir Apparent is [[Fergus James Kenneth Mackay]], Viscount Glenapp (b. 1979)
 
 
 
 
: A sporting estate once owned by an aristocrat who changed sex to marry her housekeeper has been bought by the son of a shipping magnate for £1 million. [[Ivan Mackay]], 27, the son of the late 3rd Earl of Inchape, has taken over the 1,100 acre Brux estate in Aberdeenshire, which used to be the property of a hermaphrodite baronet... Mr Mackay, whose father was the chairman of [[P & O]], has moved into the Swiss-style chalet that Sir Ewan built on the estate. He said: "The history certainly did not play any part in my buying Brux. But I have never heard anything unpleasant. "It is a marvellous place which I want to revive as a semi-commercial sporting estate, with grouse, partridges and pheasants." He also wants to have salmon fishing on the River Don, which runs through the estate. Mr Mackay, who left Stowe aged 16 to take a wildlife management course at Sparsholt College in Hampshire, has worked as a gamekeeper on nearby shoots and as a terrier man for foxhounds.[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2003/12/01/nest01.xml&sSheet=/portal/2003/12/01/ixportal.html]
 
 
 
:19 Viscount Glenapp, 20
 
:Head of family: Earl of Inchape
 
:Will inherit £50 million
 
  
:[[Fergus Mackay]], as he is more commonly known, is descended from a family of colonial merchants who made a vast fortune in India and Hong Kong at the end of the last century, and helped finance the building of the Suez Canal.
 
  
:Starting with a barony in 1911, the family head moved up to a viscount in 1924, before the earldom arrived in 1929. Mackay's grandfather was a significant landowner in Scotland, but the wealth is now in a family trust and the family live on their small estate in Wiltshire.
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: A sporting estate once owned by an aristocrat who changed sex to marry her housekeeper has been bought by the son of a shipping magnate for £1 million. [[Ivan Mackay]], 27, the son of the late 3rd Earl of Inchape, has taken over the 1,100 acre Brux estate in Aberdeenshire, which used to be the property of a hermaphrodite baronet... Mr Mackay, whose father was the chairman of [[P & O]], has moved into the Swiss-style chalet that Sir Ewan built on the estate. He said: "The history certainly did not play any part in my buying Brux. But I have never heard anything unpleasant. "It is a marvellous place which I want to revive as a semi-commercial sporting estate, with grouse, partridges and pheasants." He also wants to have salmon fishing on the River Don, which runs through the estate. Mr Mackay, who left Stowe aged 16 to take a wildlife management course at Sparsholt College in Hampshire, has worked as a gamekeeper on nearby shoots and as a terrier man for foxhounds.<ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2003/12/01/nest01.xml&sSheet=/portal/2003/12/01/ixportal.html ???]</ref>
  
:The family has a three per cent stake in the [[Inchcape Corporation]] - which over the past 18 months has sold off several business divisions, from bottling plants in Chile to global shipping services, to concentrate on its core motor business - trading in 30 countries. The sell-offs raised £600m, but the transition to global vehicle distributor was complete when Inchcape paid just £6m for a stake in Autobytel.Europe and took its car business online. [http://www.guardian.co.uk/rich/article/0,,191219,00.html]
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==notes==
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<references/>

Latest revision as of 15:55, 23 January 2018

Earl of Inchcape is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom created in 1929.

The family has a three per cent stake in the Inchcape Corporation - which over the past 18 months has sold off several business divisions, from bottling plants in Chile to global shipping services, to concentrate on its core motor business - trading in 30 countries. The sell-offs raised £600m, but the transition to global vehicle distributor was complete when Inchcape paid just £6m for a stake in Autobytel.Europe and took its car business online.[1]

Titles

The earl holds the subsidiary titles of Viscount Inchcape (1924), Viscount Glenapp of Strathnaver (1929), and Baron Inchcape (1911).

The family seat is Carlock House, Glenapp, Ballantrae, Nr Girvan, Ayrshire, KA26 0PG. The family seat of the Earl of Inchcape

Earls of Inchcape (1929)

The Heir Apparent is Fergus James Kenneth Mackay, Viscount Glenapp (b. 1979)


A sporting estate once owned by an aristocrat who changed sex to marry her housekeeper has been bought by the son of a shipping magnate for £1 million. Ivan Mackay, 27, the son of the late 3rd Earl of Inchape, has taken over the 1,100 acre Brux estate in Aberdeenshire, which used to be the property of a hermaphrodite baronet... Mr Mackay, whose father was the chairman of P & O, has moved into the Swiss-style chalet that Sir Ewan built on the estate. He said: "The history certainly did not play any part in my buying Brux. But I have never heard anything unpleasant. "It is a marvellous place which I want to revive as a semi-commercial sporting estate, with grouse, partridges and pheasants." He also wants to have salmon fishing on the River Don, which runs through the estate. Mr Mackay, who left Stowe aged 16 to take a wildlife management course at Sparsholt College in Hampshire, has worked as a gamekeeper on nearby shoots and as a terrier man for foxhounds.[2]

notes