Matthew Campbell (civil servant)


Sir Matthew Campbell was a senior British civil servant and Secretary of the Department of Agriculture and Fisheries for Scotland. He was highly instrumental in the establishment of the Crofters Commission.

Early life

Matthew Campbell was born on 23 May 1907, son of nurseryman Matthew Campbell of High Blantyre, Lanarkshire, Scotland. Matthew, junior, attended the Hamilton Academy, “a famous scholarly school” in nearby Hamilton. From the Academy, Campbell matriculated at the University of Glasgow, graduating MA.

Career

Entering the civil service in 1928, Campbell was to hold posts in the Inland Revenue and the Admiralty, before being appointed Principal, Department of Agriculture for Scotland, Assistant Secretary, Under-Secretary, and latterly, the last Secretary of the Department of Agriculture for Scotland, becoming in 1962 the first Secretary of the new Department of Agriculture and Fisheries for Scotland, a position he held ‘till his retirement in 1968.
From 1951 to 1954 Campbell served as Secretary of the Taylor Committee, on which recommendation the Crofters' Commission for Scotland was established and Campbell was to be highly instrumental in taking forward the recommendations and work of the Crofters’ Commission.

Marriage, awards and honours

Married in 1939, Campbell was invested Commander of the Bath in 1959 and elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh on 6 March 1961, one of his Proposers being Sir Thomas Murray Taylor KC, Principal and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Aberdeen and former Chair of the Taylor Committee, to which Campbell had been secretary.
Matthew Campbell was knighted in 1963.
He died at Christleton, in Cheshire on 7 March 1998.