- Sir William Lithgow, 2nd Baronet
Sir William James Lithgow, 2nd Baronet (born
10 May 1934 ) is a Scottish industrialist and vice-chairman of Lithgow Group. In 1952 he inherited the Scottishshipbuilding company,Lithgows , which was established by his grandfather, William Lithgow. At the time, it was the largest private shipbuilding concern in the world.fact|date=January 2008 Economic and political changes, especially thenationalisation of British shipbuilding in the 1970s, prevented Sir William from simply continuing the family business, and he therefore led it in new directions, including engineering, salmon farming and other marine and agricultural matters. He describes himself as an "industrialist and farmer".cite book |title=Who's Who 2006 |publisher=A & C Black |date=2006 |ISBN=0713671645] Since 1999 his son James has been chairman of the Lithgow Group, with Sir William as vice-chairman.Early life
Sir William is the son of
Sir James Lithgow, 1st Baronet , and Lady Gwendolyn Lithgow, whose family homes were Gleddoch House, atLangbank on the Clyde, a few miles from their shipyards atPort Glasgow , and Ormsary, their country estate inKnapdale . He was educated atWinchester College , and is aChartered Engineer and Fellow of theRoyal Academy of Engineering . His father died when he was eighteen, and his mother acted as chairman of the family company until 1959. ["The Scotsman ", 4 July 1999] In 1967 he married Mary Claire Hill and they have a daughter and two sons.Change of direction
In the 1960s British shipbuilding was facing serious competition from the Far East, as well as other challenges. [cite web |url=http://www.ehs.org.uk/ehs/conference2006/Assets/ConnorsNRIB.doc |author=Connors, Duncan Philip |title=British British Shipbuilding 1950-1980: Trends and Developments with a case study of the Scott Lithgow Shipyard, Greenock |accessdate=2008-01-30] In the late 1960s a government enquiry into the UK shipbuilding industry led to a merger between Lithgows Ltd. and Scotts Shipbuilding & Engineering Co Ltd. of
Greenock . This becameScott Lithgow Ltd. in 1970, but in 1977 the government nationalised the company under the control of theBritish Shipbuilders Corporation by theAircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act 1977 .Sir William and others involved challenged the amount of compensation they were offered and ended up taking their case to the
European Court of Human Rights . The press reported his views about the wider implications of his experience, which he related to the Thatcher government's privatisation policies, ["Lithgow warned that new shareholders might lose money in a future wave of re-nationalisation", "The Financial Times ", 9 July 1986] and the forthcoming expiry of the British lease on Hong Kong. ["You can hardly expect Marxists in Peking to pay decent compensation for property rights, when the Government has pleaded that no such rights exist in Britain" (Lithgow quoted in "The Financial Times", 9 July 1986)] When he finally lost his legal battle in 1986 he told "The Times " that his claim had started as a "squalid argument about money" but had come to be about "fundamental property rights which are part of the basis of the free world". ["The Times ", 9 July 1986] On other occasions he has expressed strong views publicly on subjects ranging from the importance of wealth creation to weaknesses in ferry services to the Scottish islands.After nationalisation
Meanwhile Lithgows was diversifying. In 1980 they moved into
salmon farming through their subsidiary Landcatch. TheirCampbeltown boatyard producing fishing vessels closed in 1997, but they still build fishing boats atBuckie in Moray. Engineering interests include firms producing off-road vehicles and rifles. Many of the conglomerate's interests are related to rural and coastal life, not least their land management and agricultural activities on the Ormsary estate and on the nearby Isle of Jura.Sir William says his hobbies are "rural life, invention and photography". The many public bodies on which he has served include some connected with shipbuilding and agriculture, and he also has links with
Strathclyde University which made him an honoraryDoctor of Laws (LLD) in 1979. He is a member of theRoyal Company of Archers .In 1999, Sir William passed on the chairmanship to his son James, around the time of his 65th birthday. At the time, the press reported his belief that many of British shipbuilding's problems in the 1960s and 1970s could be attributed to government policies stemming from the Treasury. He had apparently "seriously considered relocating to Australia". ["
Scotland on Sunday ", 4 July 1999] As of 2006, he has an address in Western Australia, but Ormsary is his home as well part of his title as 2ndBaronet of Ormsary.Sir William and the Lithgow Group still have offices at Langbank, close to the house the first William Lithgow moved to in 1883.References
*cite web |url=http://news.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=1119&id=610052005 |author=Magnus Linklater |title=Linklater's Scotland |date=5 June 2005 |accessdate=2008-01-30 |publisher="The Scotsman"
*cite web |url=http://www.archiveshub.ac.uk/news/0504scottlithgow.html |title=Records of Scott Lithgow Ltd, shipbuilders, Greenock, Inverclyde, Scotland |accessdate=2008-01-30
*cite web |url=http://www.worldlii.org/eu/cases/ECHR/1986/8.html |title=Lithgow and others v. the United Kingdom |publisher=European Court of Human Rights |date=8 Ju;y 1986 |accessdate=2008-01-30
*cite web |url=http://www.whoownsscotland.org.uk/page_cache/ar/ormsary.htm |title=Ormsary |publisher=Who Owns Scotland? |date=14 August 2005 |accessdate=2008-01-30
*cite web |url=http://www.leighrayment.com/baronetage/baronetsl2.htm |title=Baronets Lees to Lithgow |author=Leigh Rayment |work=Leigh Rayment's Peerage Page |accessdate=2008-01-30External links
* [http://www.lithgows.co.uk/ Lithgow Group]
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