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William Stowell Haldane


Sir William Stowell Haldane (19 August 1864 – 7 Nov 1951) of Cloan was Crown Agent for Scotland.

Haldane was the son of Robert Haldane, and his grandfather was the Scottish evangelist James Alexander Haldane. His mother was Mary Elizabeth Burdon-Sanderson, the daughter of Richard Burdon-Sanderson and the granddaughter of Sir Thomas Burdon. His maternal uncle was the physiologist John Scott Burdon-Sanderson. He was the brother of Elizabeth Haldane, John Scott Haldane and Richard Burdon Haldane, 1st Viscount Haldane.

He married Edith Nelson. They had three children:

Obituary in the Times (London) on 8 Nov 1951:

Sir William Haldane, formerly Crown Agent for Scotland and Commissioner under the Development Fund Act, died yesterday at Cloan, Perthshire, at the age of 87.

William Stowell Haldane was the sixth and youngest son of Robert Haldane of Cloan and was born on August 19, 1864. He was educated at Edinburgh Academy and Edinburgh University and received his professional training in the well known Edinburgh office of Messrs. Lindsay, Howe & Company. He was admitted a Writer to the Signet in 1880. In the early nineties he began business on his own account in the firm of W. & F. Haldane, steadily built up a wide and important family connexion, and soon began to be employed in important litigation.

In 1905 Mr Thomas Shaw (afterwards Lord Craigmyle), as Lord Advocate, appointed Haldane Crown Agent for Scotland. This office is one of great responsibility, being concerned in all judicial proceedings, civil and criminal, in which the Lord Advocate appears, and the holder is ex officio one of the Prison Commissioners for Scotland. It was generally agreed that Haldane discharged his multifarious duties with exceptional industry and efficiency during the 12 years in which he held office and that he had well earned the knighthood conferred on him in 1912. The Crown Agent holds office during the pleasure of the Lord Advocate and goes out of office with him. This happened to Haldane in 1917.

In 1910 Haldane was appointed Scottish Commissioner under the Development Fund Act. His practice had given him some knowledge of estate management, including forestry, and it was forestry that particularly interested him as a Development Commissioner. In collaboration with Sir Sainthill Eardley-Wilmot, who had been Inspector-General of Forests in India, he prepared a scheme for the development of forestry in Britain. It included the establishment of a Forestry Research Institute and a generous provision of funds for the afforestation of waste lands under departmental control, and it was supported by the Minister of Agriculture, Mr. Rowland Prothero, afterwards Lord Ernle. The scheme was, however, thought to be too rigid by the Scottish lairds, led by Lord Lovat, and their view prevailed when the plan was referred to a Cabinet committee; the result was the establishment of the present Forestry Commission.


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