[3] Having been educated at Rugby School,[2] Montgomerie entered St. John’s College, Cambridge 23 November 1846 and obtained a B.A.
[6] Described as having many amiable qualities, he was greatly respected by his political opponents as by the party which he did his best to serve.
His leisure time was devoted to the cultivation of the fine arts, being very proficient in carving on wood, and in painting in oil and water colours.
[2] Montgomerie died of typhoid fever,[2] unmarried on 25 October 1880 at Annick Lodge, Ayrshire,[7] the family home and is buried in the family grave alongside his paternal grandparents, parents, aunt, sister Elizabeth and brother John Eglinton Montgomerie in Dreghorn Churchyard and New Cemetery, North Ayrshire, Scotland.
You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This article about a Conservative Member of the Parliament of the United Kingdom born in the 1820s is a stub.