Charles John Guthrie, Lord GuthrieFRSE FRSGS LLD (4 April 1849 in Edinburgh – 28 April 1920 in Edinburgh) was a Scottish judge and lawyer.[1]
Life
Guthrie was born at 2 Lauriston Lane in Edinburgh,[2] the son of RevThomas Guthrie,[1] a major figure in Scottish church history. By 1860 the family had moved to 1 Salisbury Road, a large villa in south Edinburgh.[3]
When he was young, Guthrie had been a friend of Robert Louis Stevenson, and published, in 1914, an appreciation of "Cummy," Stevenson's nurse. His other works include John Knox and his House (1898), and an edition of Knox's History of the Reformation in Scotland (1898), besides contributions to the memoir of his father, Thomas Guthrie (1875). From 1910 to 1919, he was President of the Boys' Brigade of Great Britain and Ireland, and was a member of various antiquarian societies.[1]
Lord Guthrie died at his home, 13 Royal Circus in Edinburgh,[7] on 28 April 1920. He is buried in the north-west corner of the north section of Dean Cemetery.
Family
In 1876 Guthrie married his cousin, Anne Jemima Burns (1845-1927), the daughter of Rev Dr James Chalmers Burns[8] of Kirkliston, and they had two sons and three daughters to the marriage.[9]