Alexander Dirom


Lieutenant General Alexander Dirom of Luce and Mount Annan FRS FRSE was a British military commander who saw overseas service in Barbados, Jamaica and India. He is remembered not only as a military commander but also as an agricultural improver, which earned him Fellowship of both the Royal Society of London and the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His most notable contribution was to identify the importance of salt in animal diets, leading to the widespread use of "salt-licks" from around 1800. His views on the British corn trade also paved the way to the formulation of the Corn Laws in the early 19th century.

Biography

He was born in Banffshire the son of Alexander Dirom of Muiresk and his wife, Ann Fotheringham.
He was appointed ensign in the 61st Regiment of Foot on 8 December 1778 and lieutenant in the 88th Foot 13 October 1779. He served with the regiment in Barbados and Jamaica as Military Secretary to the GoC and Major of Brigade. He exchanged into the 60th Regiment of Foot, later the Kings Royal Rifle Corps, as a Captain in 1781 and in 1783 went to St Domingo to negotiate an exchange of prisoners of war. In 1784 he returned to England. He was aide-de-camp to Major General Sir Archibald Campbell and subsequently served in India against Tippoo Sahib in the Third Mysore War.
In 1795 he was elected a Fellow Royal Society and in 1796 a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers for the latter were Henry Mackenzie, John Playfair, and James Finlayson.
He died in Annan on 6October 1830.

Publications

He was brother of Sophia Dirom who married Captain George Duff RN.
Dirom married the wealthy Magdalen Passley of Mount Annan in Dumfriesshire, in Edinburgh on 3 August 1793 and thereafter adopted the title Dirom of Mount Annan. They had 12 recorded children including sons: Lt John Pasley Dirom, Sophia Dirom, Captain Alexander Dirom, Robert Dirom, Andrew Dirom, William Maxwell Dirom, Francis Moira Dirom and Admiral James Dirom.
Their daughter, Leonora Anne Dirom, married Rev William Muir FRSE. Other daughters included Magdalen Jemima Dirom and Sophia Dirom.

Artistic recognition

There is a "school of Raeburn" 3/4 length portrait, supposedly of him, which has Dirom's face painted onto an ensign in the red uniform of a regiment to which Dirom never belonged.