George Sutherland-Leveson-Gower, 3rd Duke of Sutherland
George Granville William Sutherland-Leveson-Gower, 3rd Duke of SutherlandKGFRS, styled Viscount Trentham until 1833, Earl Gower in 1833 and Marquess of Stafford between 1833 and 1861, was a British politician from the Leveson-Gower family.
Sutherland was LiberalMember of Parliament for Sutherland from 1852 until he succeeded his father as Duke in 1861. He took part in a number of state occasions. He was one of the British delegation to the coronation of Tsar Alexander II of Russia in 1856, hosted the public visit by Garibaldi to Britain in 1864, attended the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869, and accompanied the Prince of Wales on his state visit to India in 1876. He was Lord Lieutenant for the county of Cromarty from 1852 to his death. Sutherland chaired a committee that organised charitable work to help those involved with the Turko-Russian and Zulu wars.
Lady Alexandra Sutherland-Leveson-Gower, who died unmarried.
On the death of Anne in November 1888, Sutherland married, in February 1889, Mary Caroline Blair, the daughter of Rev. Richard Michell, DD, and widow of Captain Arthur Kindersley Blair, formerly of the 71st Highland Light Infantry. Blair resigned his commission in the Highlanders in 1861 and worked as a land agent and business manager for Sutherland; Mrs. Blair became Sutherland's mistress, and although Blair's death in 1883 was officially recorded as accidental, there was considerable speculation, at the time and later, that it may have been suicide or even murder. Sutherland was estranged from Anne for many years before her death, and the marriage, less than four months after her death in November 1888, caused a scandal, the conventional minimum period between the death of a spouse and remarriage being one year. The Duke and Mrs. Blair were married on 4 March 1889 at 11:00 a.m., with the Bishop of Florida, Edwin Garner Weed, officiating. The 3rd Duke of Sutherland died, aged sixty-three, at Dunrobin Castle, and was buried on 29 September 1892 at Trentham in Staffordshire. Shortly before his death, Sutherland effectively disinherited his natural heirs and tried to leave all his money to his second wife, who was later found guilty of destroying documents and was imprisoned for six weeks. The family later made a substantial settlement in her favour, enabling her to build Carbisdale Castle between 1906 and 1917. Prior to this, she had resided at Sutherland Grange at Dedworth adjoining Windsor in Berkshire. Sutherland's widow, known as Duchess Blair, married thirdly on 12 November 1896 as his second wife Sir Albert Kaye Rollit, MP for Islington South. She enjoyed an income of £100,000 until her death according to one source.