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  1. Charles Gore Hay, 20th Earl of Erroll, KT, CB (7 February 1852 – 8 July 1927), styled Lord Hay until 1891, was a Scottish soldier and Conservative politician.

  2. 18 de may. de 2023 · Charles Hay 20th Earl Of Erroll in Famous People Throughout History. view all. Immediate Family. Mary Caroline L'Estrange. wife. Victor Hay, 21st Earl of Erroll. son. Lady Eliza Amelia Hay. mother. William Hay, 19th Earl of Erroll. father. Charles Gore Hay Lord Kilmarnock. brother. Major Hon. Arthur Hay. brother. Lord Francis Hay of Erroll. brother

  3. Charles Gore Hay, 20th Earl of Erroll KT, CB (7 February 1852 – 8 July 1927), styled Lord Hay until 1891, was a Scottish soldier and Conservative politician. Erroll was the son of William Harry Hay, 19th Earl of Erroll, and his wife Eliza Amelia, daughter of General the Hon. Sir Charles Gore.

    • Male
    • February 7, 1852
    • Mary Caroline (L'estrange) Hay
    • July 8, 1927
  4. Lt.-Col. Charles Gore Hay, 20th Earl of Erroll was born on 7 February 1852. 1 He was the son of Major William Harry Hay, 19th Earl of Erroll and Eliza Amelia Gore. 1 He married Mary Caroline L'Estrange, daughter of Edmund L'Estrange and Lady Henrietta Susan Beresford Lumley, on 11 August 1875. 1 He died on 8 July 1927 at age 75. 1.

  5. The 11th Earl of Erroll having died in 1674 without issue, Sir John Hay of Keillour became 12th Earl of Erroll. On his death in 1704, his son, Charles became the 13th Earl of Erroll. Charles died unmarried in 1717, when the title devolved on his sister, Mary.

  6. By the early years of the next century, the family was under serious financial pressure, a result of their own mismanagement as well as the inflation and taxation that resulted from World War One, and Charles Hay, 20th earl, was forced to sell the last of the family's property in Scotland in 1916.

  7. By the early 20th century, especially with the inflation and taxation that came with the First World War, the Aberdeenshire estates were under serious pressure and Charles, 20th Earl, reluctantly disposed of Slains in 1916, ending a 600 year association with the area.