Thomas Fraser, 12th Lord Lovat


Thomas Alexander Fraser, 12th Lord Lovat and 1st Baron Lovat, was a Scottish nobleman. He was the 21st Chief MacShimidh of Clan Fraser of Lovat, succeeding to the title of his distant cousin, the 11th Lord Lovat, who had been attainted and executed as a Jacobite in 1747.

Early life

Born on 17 June 1802, he was the son of Amelia Fraser and Alexander Fraser, 9th of Strichen, a Captain of the 1st Dragoon Guards who died on 28 October 1803, shortly after his birth. His paternal grandparents were Alexander Fraser, 8th of Strichen and Jean Fraser. His maternal grandparents were John Leslie, 22nd Baron of Balquhain and the former Violet Dalzell.
In 1821, Fraser commissioned Aberdeen architect John Smith to design a town house known as Strichen Town House.

Career

In 1815, upon the death of Archibald Campbell Fraser, Fraser became the 21st Chief of the Clan Fraser, through his descent from the second son of the 4th Lord Lovat. He also inherited the Lovat estates at Beauly in Inverness-shire. On 28 January 1837 he was created Baron Lovat, of Lovat in the County of Inverness, in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. In 1854, the attainder of the 11th Lord Lovat was reversed, and Lovat thereby became 12th Lord Lovat in the Peerage of Scotland. He notably served as Lord Lieutenant of Inverness from 1853 to 1873 and was made a Knight of the Thistle in 1865.

Personal life

On 6 August 1823, Fraser was married to Charlotte Georgina Stafford-Jerningham, the daughter of George William Stafford-Jerningham, 8th Baron Stafford, in 1823. The couple had three daughters and four sons:
Lord Lovat died in June 1875, aged 73, and was succeeded in his titles by his eldest son Simon. Lady Lovat died in 1876.

Legacy

Lord Lovat's legacy is that of the present 16th Lord Lovat, and the good standing of the present Clan Fraser. He completed the restoration of Lovat titles and lands, which had been started by the 11th Lord's son, General Simon Fraser of Lovat.

Red squirrels

In the 1880s, Lord Lovat's wife, Lady Charlotte, pioneered the translocation and release of English red squirrels to augment depleted populations of the species in the Highlands.