James Carnegie, 9th Earl of Southesk


James Carnegie, 9th Earl of Southesk KT was a Scottish nobleman, explorer and poet.

Early life

Born in Edinburgh, on 16 November 1827, Southesk was the son of Sir James Carnegie, 5th Baronet and Charlotte Lysons, daughter of the Rev'd Daniel Lysons. He attended the Edinburgh Academy, received his military training at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and in 1845 joined the 92nd Regiment of Foot, before transferring to the Grenadier Guards the next year, with whom he served for three years. In 1849 he was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Kincardineshire, a position he continued to hold until 1856, when he sold his lands in Kincardineshire.
Through his great-great-great grandfather, who was the fourth son of David Carnegie, 1st Earl of Southesk, James was the heir to the earldom of Southesk and the lordship of Carnegie. The fifth earl was involved in the Jacobite rising of 1715 and was attainted, with his titles and estates forfeited. However, in 1855 Sir James Carnegie obtained a reversal of his kinsman's attainder by Act of Parliament and became the ninth Earl of Southesk. He held the office of Lord-Lieutenant of Kincardineshire between 1849 and 1856. He succeeded as the 6th Baronet Carnegie, of Pittarrow, co. Kincardine on 30 January 1849. He succeeded as the 9th Lord Carnegie of Kinnaird on 2 July 1855, after the original precedence by reversal by Act of Parliament of the Act of Attainder. He succeeded as the 9th Lord Carnegie of Kinnaird and Leuchars on 2 July 1855, after the original precedence by reversal by Act of Parliament of the Act of Attainder. He succeeded as the 9th Earl of Southesk on 2 July 1855, after the original precedence by reversal by Act of Parliament of the Act of Attainder. He was created 1st Baron Balinhard, of Farnell, Forfar on 7 December 1869. He held the office of Deputy Lieutenant of Forfarshire.

Marriage

In 1849 Southesk married Lady Catherine Hamilton Noel, daughter of Charles, Earl of Gainsborough on 19 June 1849 at Exton Park, Rutland, England. They had one son and three daughters, before Catherine's death in 1855 at the age of twenty-six. In 1860 Southesk married Lady Susan Catherine Mary Murray, eldest daughter of Alexander, Earl of Dunmore. They had three sons and four daughters. Lord Southesk died in February 1905, aged seventy-seven. He was succeeded by his son from his first marriage, Charles Noel Carnegie.
His children were:
By Catherine-
By Susan-
In 1859, after the death of his wife, the Earl was advised that to improve his health he should travel to a place where he could live an open-air life and hunt. In 1859, at the age of 32, he embarked on a trip to western Canada.
Southesk left Liverpool on April 15, 1859 on a Cunard paddle-wheeler called the “Africa” for North America. Eventually, he ended up in St. Paul, Minnesota, the jumping off point for his expedition and then continued on north to Fort Garry, the Hudson's Bay Company's western headquarters in the Red River Colony. In June, Southesk, headed out west and over the next seven months, the expedition travelled more than 4,000 kilometres across the northern prairies to the Rocky Mountains. The plan was to head west out of Fort Garry into Rupert's Land, to hunt bears and bison. He arrived at Fort Edmonton on August 1. At the fort he paused to buy horses, hired a Metis guide called Antoine Blandoine and built enough pack saddles to haul his outfit into the mountains west of Cadomin to pursue bighorn sheep. The journey, in early September, took the expedition up the Athabasca River to the McLeod River and finally, the Medicine Tent River, noting that he was now in country that, "no European had ever seen, where bears and wild sheep were certain to be abundant." The expedition then crossed over , to the s of the Saskatchewan River valley, in present-day Alberta. The expedition followed the Siffleur River, crossed over the Pipestone Pass, and followed the Pipestone River to the Bow River. After camping near Cascade Mountain, the Earl nearly crossed paths with another explorer, James Hector at a time when there were very few Europeans in the Canadian Rockies.
On the expedition, the Earl of Southesk climbed a mountain, located 6 km north of and erected a cairn on top that can still be seen today. He wrote in his journal, "I am the first European who has visited this valley, and if I might have the geographic honour of giving my name to some spot of earth, I should choose the mountain near which the two rivers rise."
For the expedition he employed a number of Métis guides and scouts; James McKay, John McKay, George Klyne, John "Piscan" Munroe, Baptiste La Grace, James "Little Dog" Short, Antoine Blandion, Pierre Desnomme, Thomas Arinwakena, and Duncan Robertson. These men were experienced buffalo hunters. During this trip which took him west to Fort Edmonton and into the Rocky Mountains he commissioned and collected several Métis and aboriginal artifacts.
While on his trip, the Earl received considerable support from the Hudson's Bay Company. HBC Governor Sir George Simpson helped the Earl arrange for guides, supplies and horses. He gave the Earl a map and instructed HBC employees to show him “every attention.”.
In 1875 he wrote, "Saskatchewan and the Rocky Mountains" which described his travels.
An exhibit dedicated to the Earl's Canadian prairie trip, including a life-sized statue of a large plains grizzly bear he killed while on a bison hunt on the nearby prairie, can be found at in Herschel, Saskatchewan.

The Southesk Collection at the Royal Alberta Museum

Throughout the 1859 Canadian expedition, Southesk collected objects made by First Nations and Métis people whom he met in the course of his travels. The artifacts returned home with Southesk to Kinnaird Castle, the family estate in Scotland where they remained for the next 146 years, until 2006, when the earl's descendants put them up for auction at Sotheby's in New York.
The Royal Alberta Museum purchased many of the items put up for sale. for $1.1 million. Although relatively small, the Southesk collection is historically significant given that objects from the northern Plains dating to the 1850s are rare and that many of the artifacts are of exceptional quality. Although modest in size, the collection includes work from at least five distinct cultures — Plains Cree, Blackfoot, Métis, Nakoda and Anishnaabe. The current Earl of Southesk subsequently donated five additional items linked with the collection.

Publications

Novels

The 9th Lord Southesk died on February 21, 1905, aged seventy-seven while at his home in Kinnaird Castle in Scotland. He was succeeded by his son from his first marriage, Charles Noel Carnegie.