William Smith Gill
Colonel William Smith Gill CB VD DL (16 February 1865 – 25 December 1957) was a Scottish Volunteer Force officer and paint manufacturer.
Born at Old Machar, Peterculter, Aberdeenshire, Gill was the son of Alexander Ogston Gill (1832–1908) and Barbara Smith Marr.[1]
By 1896, Gill was a partner with his father in Farquhar & Gill, paint manufacturers.[2]
On 30 June 1898, at Queen's Cross Church, Aberdeen, Gill married Ruth Littlejohn, a daughter of David Littlejohn, DL, and they had five children:[1][3]
- Alexander Ogston Gill (1900–1982)
- Jean Forbes Gill (1901–1987)
- Elizabeth Penelope Gill (1904–1995)
- Ruth Sylvia Gill (1908–1993),[4] mother of Frances Shand Kydd and grandmother of Diana, Princess of Wales, Charles Spencer, 9th Earl Spencer, Lady Sarah McCorquodale, and Jane, Lady Fellowes[1]
- William David Littlejohn Gill (1915–1999)
In the 1880s, Gill became an officer of the Aberdeen Volunteers,[5] and between 1908 and 1910 he was Colonel Commanding the Highland Division Royal Engineers (Territorial Force).[6]
In 1925, Gill was appointed as a Deputy lieutenant of Aberdeen.[7]
Gill died in 1957 at Dalhebity in Bieldside, Aberdeenshire, aged 92.[1] He was buried in Peterculter Cemetery, Aberdeen.[8]
Notes
- D. Williamson, “The Ancestry of Lady Diana Spencer” in ' Genealogist’s Magazine, vol. 20 (1981), pp. 192–199 and 281–282
- “Alexander Ogston Gill and Another v. William Cutler” in Cases Decided in the Court of Session, Court of Justiciary, and House of Lords (T. & T. Clark, 1898), p. 371
- Burkes Peerage vol. 1 (2003), p. 1414
- Bruce Harrison, The Family Forest Descendants of Sir Robert Parke, p. 389
- Donald Sinclair, The History of the Aberdeen Volunteers: Embracing Also Some Account of the Early Volunteers of the Counties of Aberdeen, Banff, and Kincardine (Aberdeen Daily Journal Office, 1907), pp. 302, 303
- Supplemental History of the Society of Advocates in Aberdeen (1939), p. 119: “Ruth married in 1898 William Smith Gill, C.B., D.L., of Dalhebity, Peterculter, Colonel Commanding Highland Division R.E. (T.F.), 1908-10. Died, 11th May, 1924.”
- The London Gazette, 15 September 1925, p. 6030
- William Smith Gill, findagrave.com, accessed 5 December 2020