Record

Reference NoDD391/1
TitleAlexander Macdonald of Kepplestone: trust disposition, inventory, executry and subsidiary legal papers
DescriptionDD391/1/1: Trust disposition and deed of settlement (1885);
DD391/1/2: Copy trust disposition and settlement (1882)
DD391/1/3: Draft abstract deed of settlement (1884);
DD391/1/4: Inventories of estate (1885);
DD391/1/5: Confirmation of executors (1885);
DD391/1/6: Copy contract of marriage between Alexander Macdonald and Miss Hope Gordon (3 June 1861).
Date1861
1882 - 1885
CreatorTrustees of Alexander Macdonald of Kepplestone
Extent9 items
​Open or Restricted AccessOpen
Administrative HistoryAlexander Macdonald of Kepplestone (1837 - 1884) was a granite merchant and proprietor of Aberdeen Granite Works in Constitution Street, Aberdeen. The firm had been founded by his father, and Alexander Macdonald took over at his father's death in 1863. From 1873 to 1883, Macdonald was in co-partnership with Sidney Field and Robert Fergusson, trading as Macdonald, Field and Company. From 1883, following Field's departure from the partnership, the business was known as Alexander Macdonald & Company. In 1861 Macdonald married Hope Gordon (died 1900), eldest daughter of George Gordon, merchant of Riga and Montrose. They had one son, who died in infancy. Macdonald was crippled by a seizure and confined to a wheelchair some time after his marriage, but though he was restricted in his travelling he kept in contact with the art world in which so much of his interest lay by dint of his many correspondents, and with the help of them and of agents in London and Paris, he built up a fine collection of contemporary art.

Alexander Macdonald died on 27 December 1884. By a trust disposition and deed of settlement dated 1882, he appointed trustees to defray his funeral charges and debts, distribute legacies and, after the death of his wife, to offer to Aberdeen Town Council his collection of paintings, etchings and drawings together with a third of the residue of his estate to purchase further works of art. The trustees sold their interest in the granite business, which was floated as a joint stock concern under the name Alexander Macdonald & Company Limited. The proceeds were invested in British and colonial stocks, and in feu superiorities over properties at Sandilands and on the lands of Rubislaw and Forbesfield. Following the death of Mrs Macdonald on 3 June 1900, the trustees realised the estate and it was divided among the residuary legatees. Macdonald's collection of paintings was formally transferred to Aberdeen Art Gallery on 30 March 1901, together with items bequeathed to the Town Council by Mrs Macdonald. The trust was wound up in September 1902.
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