Colonel Sir George McCrae DSO MP (28 August 1860 – 27 December 1928) was a Scottish textile merchant Liberal Party politician.
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Born poor circumstances [1] in 1860, the son of George McCrae of Edinburgh, George McCrae was educated at the Lancasterian School, Edinburgh. In 1890 he married Eliza Cameron Russell. [2]
McCrae made his mark in the textile trade. He was described variously as a draper [3] or a merchant hosier and mercer [4] In 1909, after a successful career as MP for Edinburgh East, he resigned from the House of Commons to take up a position in Scottish government service, accepting the appointment of Vice-President of the Scottish Local Government Board. [5] From 1919-1922 he served as Chairman of the Scottish Board of Health. [6] He was knighted in 1908.[7]
McCrae was a volunteer soldier. In November 1914, [8] before the introduction of conscription, he raised the 16th Battalion the Royal Scots. [9] Among the first recruits were the entire Heart of Midlothian first team. At the time Hearts were top of the Scottish League. [10] The battalion was raised in Edinburgh and McCrae commanded it on the Western Front. After what was seen as the battalion’s failure in action in August 1916 however, the divisional commander removed McCrae from command and assigned him to a reserve unit. He was judged to be popular with his men and personally brave but he was thought to have deficiencies as a leader, probably an unwillingness to incur casualties. [11] Despite this judgment of their chief, McCrae's Own, as the battalion was known, had managed to penetrate deeper into the enemy line than any other regiment during the ‘big push’ of July 1916. [12] A memorial cairn dedicated to McCrae’s Battalion was erected in the French village of Contalmaison, a commune in the Somme département where so many of its soldiers fell in 1916. [13][14]
McCrae ended the war with the rank of Colonel and was awarded the DSO. [15]
McCrae became a member of Edinburgh Town Council in 1889. He was a City Treasurer and Chairman of the Finance Committee from 1891-1899 and also served as a Justice of the Peace in Edinburgh [2]
In 1899, Robert Wallace, the sitting Liberal MP for Edinburgh East, died causing a Parliamentary by-election. McCrae was selected as Liberal candidate and held the seat over his Liberal Unionist challenger with a majority of 1,980 votes. [16]
McCrae fought Edinburgh East again in 1900, holding the seat with a majority of 1,291 and he successfully defended the constituency again at the 1906 general election this time increasing his majority to 4,174 [17]
After he stepped down from Scottish public service, McCrae tried to resurrect his Parliamentary career. He fought the 1922 general election as a Lloyd George National Liberal at Edinburgh Central. In a straight fight with Labour he trailed sitting MP, William Graham by 3,505 votes. [18]
For the 1923 general election McCrae switched his attention to the Stirling and Falkirk Burghs. Standing as a Liberal, McCrae defeated the sitting Labour MP, Hugh Murnin by the narrow margin of 156 votes (which was less than 1% of the total poll). [19] However in 1924 he was unable to hold to his gain and Murnin won back the seat with a majority of 1,924 votes. [20]
McCrae died on 27 December 1928 aged 68 years. [21]
Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
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Preceded by Robert Wallace |
Member of Parliament for Edinburgh East 1899 – 1909 |
Succeeded by Sir James Puckering Gibson |
Preceded by Hugh Murnin |
Member of Parliament for Stirling and Falkirk Burghs 1923 – 1924 |
Succeeded by Hugh Murnin |