James Graham-Montgomery
Lieutenant-Colonel Sir James Graham-Montgomery, 4th Baronet (1850 - 7 November 1902) was a Scottish British Army officer and landowner.
Biography
Graham-Montgomery was the son of Sir Graham Graham-Montgomery, 3rd Baronet (1823–1901) and Alice Hope Johnstone (d.1890). He was educated at Eton College, and succeeded his father in the title of Baronet Montgomery of Stanhope in June 1901. With his succession, he also inherited Stobo Castle, in the Scottish Borders, in the former county of Peeblesshire. The Manor of Stobo had been the family seat of the Graham-Montgomery Baronets from 1767, and the castle itself was constructed between 1803 and 1811 for his grandfather Sir James Montgomery, 2nd Baronet, then remodelled for his father who also had the grounds redesigned in 1872.
Military career
Graham-Montgomery was commissioned into the Coldstream Guards as a lieutenant in 1869, and saw active service with his regiment in Egypt during the Anglo-Egyptian War in 1882, where he was present at the Battle of Tell El Kebir. For his service he received the Egypt Medal and the Khedive's Star. He retired from the army in 1889 with the rank of lieutenant-colonel.[1]
Death
Graham-Montgomery met with a violent death on 7 November 1902, when he was hit by a train near Seaton Junction railway station, Lincolnshire.[2] He was traveling by train from Edinburgh to London St. Pancras and had apparently opened the door of a compartment while the train was in motion, and fallen on the line, where he was hit by a passing train on the neighbouring track. His head was badly injured and one foot was severed. He died 10 minutes after the accident.[1][3]
He was unmarried, and the title and estate was inherited by his brother, Sir Basil Templer Graham-Montgomery, 5th Baronet.
References
- "Obituaries - Sir James Graham-Montgomery". The Times. No. 36921. London. 10 November 1902. p. 6.
- "Deaths". The Times. No. 36922. London. 11 November 1902. p. 1.
- Archives, The National (22 January 2021). "The National Archives - Verdict – Accidental death: The strange case of the Scottish aristocrat killed on the Midland Railway". The National Archives blog. Retrieved 28 January 2021.