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COLONEL AITKEN, last of the 1st L.R.V., comes of a race whose members have been Volunteer officers and notable citizens of Glasgow for several generations. He preserves the commissions of his grandfather and grand-uncle, the last-named of whom had as his country house Frisky Hall at Bowling. His father also served in the corps of Glasgow Sharpshooters about the time when it was disbanded. Colonel Aitken's father, grandfather, and great-grandfather were all, like himself and his son, burgesses of the city. His grandfather,
Robert Aitken, was manager of the Bank of Scotland in Glasgow when the head office was successively in Miller Street and Ingram Street, his residence in the latter building being the first in Glasgow to be lit with gas. He was also an original member of the Western Club, and was intimately acquainted with the leading city men of his day,
Samuel Hunter of the Herald among them. His wife, Agnes Easton, traced her pedigree back to the days of Charles II. and on the mother's side came of the Yuills of Darleith, carrying the record back to the era of the Reformation. Colonel Aitken's father, again, was, in 1844, an original member of Glasgow Stock Exchange, and was for three years chairman of that institution. His wife was a daughter of
George M'Nish of Ibroxhill, a property lately acquired by the city for inclusion in the
Born over sixty years ago, Colonel Aitken himself was educated at Glasgow Collegiate School,
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