Arthur Kinnaird, 10th Lord Kinnaird

[1] In 1868, he was elected as President of the National Bible Society of Scotland after the resignation of George Campbell, 8th Duke of Argyll.

[2] He was a keen farmer and, in 1862, installed a Turkish bath for cattle at his Millhill Farm at Inchture, raising the temperature higher than usual, and successfully using it in the treatment of distemper.

They had seven children out of whom six grew to adulthood: Frederica Georgina (1845–1929), Arthur Fitzgerald (1847–1923), Louisa Elizabeth (1848–1926), Agneta Olivia (1850–1940), Gertrude Mary (1853–1931), and Emily Cecilia (1855–1947).

[8] He was treasurer of the Highland Emigration Fund[9] In 1856 he and their five children went to live above the bank where he worked in Pall Mall East.

[7] Lord Kinnaird died in April 1887, aged 72, and was succeeded by his eldest son, Arthur Fitzgerald.

Kinnaird c. 1861-63
"Piety and Banking". Caricature by Ape published in Vanity Fair in 1876