Edmund Rupert Drummond


Vice-Admiral The Hon. Edmund Rupert Drummond CB MVO DL was a Royal Navy officer who became Commander-in-Chief of the New Zealand Division.

Early life

Drummond was the youngest son of James Drummond, 10th Viscount Strathallan and his second wife Margaret, Viscountess Strathallan, daughter of William Smythe of Methven Castle.
The family lived at Machany House in Perthshire, which had been historically used as the Dower house for the seat of the Viscounts Strathallan, Strathallan Castle. During the early 1900s Strathallan Castle had been leased to Graeme Whitelaw M.P.. Following Whitelaw's departure from the district, in 1910 Drummond's older half-brother William Drummond, 11th Viscount Strathallan sold the ancestral Strathmore Estates at Strathallan, Tullibardine, and Machany, which comprised 7,322 acres to industrialist Sir James Roberts, 1st Baronet.

Naval career

Drummond was educated at the Royal Naval College Dartmouth; in 1906 he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant. He served in World War I as second in command of the cruiser HMS Caroline from 1914 and then as an officer in the cruiser HMS Cardiff from 1917.
Drummond served as the Chief Executive Officer of HMS Renown during the period of October 1921 to June 1922 when the ship was commissioned for an official tour of Japan and the Philippines undertaken by Edward, Prince of Wales, who later, as King, appointed Drummond as a Naval Aide-de-camp in June 1936.
He was appointed Commanding Officer of the cruiser HMS Capetown in 1927, Chief of Staff to the Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth in 1930 and Chief of Staff to the Commander-in-Chief American and West Indies Station before becoming Commander-in-Chief of the New Zealand Division in 1935. He served in World War II as Captain of the Dockyard at Portland from August 1939 and as Chief of Staff to the Commander-in-Chief, Rosyth from 1942 until September 1945 when he retired.

Family

In 1910 he married Evelyn Frances Butler, eldest daughter of Lord Arthur Butler and Chicago heiress Ellen, Lady Arthur Butler . The couple had three children:

Personal life

Drummond's wife Lady Evelyn served as a First Officer in the Women's Royal Naval Service at Bletchley Park during the Second World War. Lady Evelyn was described as "one of a remarkable collection of junior officers," inspected in 1941 by WRNS Director Vera Laughton Mathews in the latter's memoir Blue Tapestry.

Residences

The 1921 United Kingdom census records that Capt. Drummond and Lady Evelyn Drummond lived at Blackbrook Grove in Fareham, Hampshire. Their household included a domestic Nurse, Housekeeper, Cook, Nurserymaid, Parlour maid, Kitchen maid, and two gardeners. Blackbrook Grove was later purchased in 1927 by the newly-created Anglican Diocese of Portsmouth as an official residence for the Bishop of Portsmouth, and the house was renamed Bishopswood.
The couple's electoral roll address from the period of c. 1918 - 1920 was No. 39 Elm Park Gardens in Chelsea, London. The couple were living at Elm Park Gardens in November 1919; records survive of an advertisement for a domestic maid made by Lady Evelyn in The Times, which noted that six maids were kept in the household. By 1924 their London address was 21 Moreton Terrace in Pimlico, Westminster. During the 1930s the couple lived at The Old Manor in Fareham, although the house was leased in 1934, and again from 1935-38 when Drummond was stationed in New Zealand.
The couple were close with Scottish Noblewoman Gwendolen Fitzalan-Howard, Duchess of Norfolk, who was also the Suo jure 12th Lady Herries of Terregles. Lady Evelyn and the couple's eldest daughter Anne stayed at Norfolk House, London from January to April 1929.

Later life and death

Following the conclusion of the Second World War, Drummond and his wife rented the 12,500 acre Garynahine Estate near Stornoway on the Isle of Lewis duries the 1950s, and he served as a Deputy Lieutenant of Ross and Cromarty. They departed Garynahine in 1959 when the estate's owners decided to sell the property, and during the 1960s they lived at No. 2 Queen's Acre in Windsor, Berkshire.
Drummond died in September 1965 at Windsor. His funeral was held at The Royal Chapel, Windsor Great Park; attendees included his nephew David Drummond, 8th Earl of Perth, Bernard Fitzalan-Howard, 16th Duke of Norfolk, and Mary Somerset, Duchess of Beaufort.