James Scarlett, 8th Baron Abinger

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Lieutenant-Colonel James Richard Scarlett, 8th Baron Abinger, DL (28 September 1914[1]–23 September 2002[2][3]) was a British peer.[4]

Scarlett was born in Datchet, Berkshire on 28 September 1914.[2] He was the son of Hugh and his wife Marjorie. He was educated at Eton and Magdalene College, Cambridge,[2] where he read for a BA in Economics.[3] Having been commissioned into the Royal Artillery in 1936,[2] he saw service in France, Norway and India,[2] eventually rising to became a Lieutenant-Colonel by the time of his retirement in 1947.[3] After the war, he returned to Magdalene, where he received an MA in 1946.[5] In 1968, he was appointed Deputy Lieutenant for Essex.

In 1957 Lord Abinger married Isla Carolyn Rivett-Carnac[6] (1925-2011), sister of the last two Rivett-Carnac baronets. They had two sons:

  • James Harry (born 1959), who succeeded his father on his death.
  • The Honourable Peter Richard Scarlett (born 1961)

After the death of his father in 1943,[2] he inherited the baronial title along with Inverlochy Castle near Fort William in Scotland. He sold Inverlochy after World War II to a Canadian whiskey merchant[3] and bought Clees Hall,[2] a mixed farm situated near Alphamstone on the Essex/Suffolk border.[7]

Scarlett was passionate about the regulation of 'amateur archaeologists' using metal detectors, and worked from 1979-1981 towards legislation to regulate the reporting of finds.[2] His interest in the conservation of the rural environment led to his appointment as chairman for the Essex branch of the Council for the Preservation of Rural England, which he held from 1972 to 1982.[3] In 1974, Scarlett co-founded the Stour Countryside Association.

Scarlett was also chairman of the Keats-Shelley Memorial Association, his grandmother having been adopted by the son of Mary and Percy Bysshe Shelley.[2] The Boscombe Collection of Shelley's letters and manuscripts, which Scarlett worked on cataloguing, are now held at the Bodleian Library in Oxford. He was also the Vice-President of the Byron Society, and a Knight of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem.[5]

Scarlett died on 23 September 2002, aged 87.[2]

References

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External links

Peerage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Baron Abinger
1943–2002
Succeeded by
James Scarlett