Henrietta Gilmour
Henrietta, Lady Gilmour (1852 – 1926) was a pioneer female photographer plus keen winter sportswoman. She is the creator of the Lady Henrietta Gilmour Photographic Collection, 1500 prints and 145 lantern slides held by St Andrews University.[1]
Life
She was born in Quebec in Canada the second daughter of David Gilmour (d.1857) the youngest son of Allan Gilmour of Allan Gilmour & Company, a major shipping company with major Canadian connections.
During a visit of her first cousin, John Gilmour (later Sir John Gilmour), she fell in love. They married in 1873 and she returned to Scotland with him to live at Montrave House in central Fife, several miles south of Cupar. At marriage he had estates at both Lundin and Montrave. He later acquired Greenside, Pratis and Kilmux, all nearby in Fife.
Her husband had a strong love of curling and this wore off on her, she soon became an accomplished curler. She is one of the first female curlers to be photographed on ice (1895).[2] In 1885 she and her husband founded the Lundin and Montrave Curling Club, and built their own curling pond on their estate, just east of the main house (this was quite fashionable in this period). Unusually (and probably due to her own influence) this club admitted both male and female members. Her own active participation appears to have begun after the birth of her final son, in 1889.
Around the same time she took up photography and is the first identified female photographer in Scotland. Her huge collection of work (largely of Scottish society, their estate and livestock, and sporting life) was donated by her grandson to St Andrews University in 1978. A further 600 negatives were given to the National Museum of Scotland and are held by the Scottish Life Archive.[3] The collections gives a fascinating personal insight into society life in late 19th century Scotland. When her husband received a baronetcy from Queen Victoria in June 1897 she became Lady Henrietta Gilmour.[4]
She died at Denbrae House, a few miles north-east of Cupar and is buried with her son Harry on the southern edge of Cupar Cemetery.
Family
She had seven children: Allan (1874-1878), John (Jack) (1876–1940), Harry (1878-1925), Maud (b.1882), Henrietta (Netta) (b.1884), Ronald (1888-1888) and Douglas (b.1889)
Artistic Recognition
Lady Henrietta appears as one of the only two female curlers in the large assembly of famous curlers known as Curling at Carsebeck, painted for the Royal Caledonian Curling Club by Charles Martin Hardie in 1899.