Ilay Campbell, Lord Succoth


Sir Ilay Campbell, 1st Baronet, Lord Succoth, was a Scottish advocate, judge and politician.
He rose to be Lord President of the Court of Session.

Early life

Campbell's birthplace is given as either Argyll or Edinburgh. His mother was Helen Wallace, and his father, Archibald Campbell of Succoth, Principal Clerk of Session to the Scottish Courts.
He attended Mundell's School in Edinburgh and then the University of Glasgow to study law, graduating in 1751.

Career

An advocate from 1757, he was engaged in the Douglas peerage case from 1764 to 1769. in September 1759 Campbell was admitted as an elder of Old Kilpatrick parish. On 26th January 1777 his home on the second floor of a tenement in Old Bank Close, Edinburgh, was damaged in a fire.
Campbell was appointed Solicitor General for Scotland in 1783 and Lord Advocate in 1784. He became Member of Parliament for Glasgow Burghs in the same year. He was Lord President of the Court of Session and Lord Justice General from 1789 to 1808, where he sat as Lord Succoth.
On his resignation in 1808, he was created a baronet, and resided at Garscube House, about four miles from Glasgow on the banks of the river Kelvin. There he engaged in the management of his estate, and the performance of his duties as a country gentleman. Lord Cockburn says of him that "he lived like a patriarch in a house overflowing with company, beloved by troops of relations, and courted for his character and hospitality by many friends."
Campbell was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Glasgow in 1784, and elected Lord Rector of the university in 1799. He died at Garscube in 1823 aged 89.
Campbell was succeeded by his son Archibald, also a Senator of the College of Justice under the same title of Lord Succoth.
It is worth observing that the title "Lord Succoth" derived from the 1st and 2nd baronets' status as law lords rather than as Lords of Parliament. As such, the title "Lord Succoth" was not hereditable. The honorific "The Much Honoured" references a feudal barony. Sir Ilay's descendants remained baronets until the extinction of the baronetcy in 2017.

Personal life

In 1766, Campbell married Susan Mary Murray of Murrayfield, sister of Alexander Murray, Lord Henderland. Before her death in 1815, they were the parents of:
Lord Succoth died on 28 March 1823 and was succeeded in the baronetcy by his eldest son, Archibald.

Descendants

Through his daughter Margaret, he was a grandfather of Arthur Connell FRSE, a chemist who discovered connellite.
Through his daughter Susan, he was a grandfather of Archibald Campbell Tait, the Archbishop of Canterbury.

Positions of note