George Hay, 7th Marquess of Tweeddale

George Hay (1753-1804), 7th Marquess of Tweeddale (Jean-Laurent Mosnier, 1794)

George Hay, 7th Marquess of Tweeddale DL (1753 9 August 1804) was a Scottish peer.

Hay was a great-grandson of the 2nd Marquess of Tweeddale, and in 1787 he inherited the titles of his first cousin once-removed, the 6th Marquess. He then became a Burgess of Edinburgh a year later, Lord Lieutenant of Haddingtonshire in 1794, and a Scottish representative peer in 1796. On 18 April 1785, he married Lady Hannah Maitland (a daughter of the 7th Earl of Lauderdale) and they had (with two other unmarried daughters):

As a result of the marquess's declining health, he and his wife went to travel the Continent in 1802, starting in France. It was here that they were captured by Napoleon's police a year later, with other British subjects, when war was renewed between the two countries. They were then imprisoned in the fortress at Verdun and the marchioness died there on 8 May 1804, as did the marquess during the following August.

Honorary titles
New office Lord Lieutenant of East Lothian
17941804
Succeeded by
The Earl of Haddington
Peerage of Scotland
Preceded by
George Hay
Marquess of Tweeddale
17871804
Succeeded by
George Hay


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