Andrew Froude
Andrew Froude ISO (1876-1945) was Registrar General for Scotland.[1]
Born the son of a blacksmith in 1876 at Stonehouse, South Lanarkshire, Andrew Froude won a place to attend the Hamilton Academy.
Froude entered the civil service in London in 1897, subsequently transferring to the General Register Office for Scotland, at Edinburgh; in 1911 being appointed a superintendent of that year’s Census. In 1925 Froude was promoted to Secretary of the General Register Office, the administrative ‘second’ to the Registrar General, and in 1930 was appointed Registrar General for Scotland, a post he held from 3 September 1930 to 14 February 1937, in which year he retired, due to ill health, awarded the Imperial Service Order.
Andrew Froude died in 1945.[1][2]
References
- 1 2 Scottish Government, General Registry Office for Scotland - History, Registrars General - Andrew Froude Retrieved 8 November 2010
- ↑ University of Glasgow – Registrars General of Scotland – biography, Andrew Froude Retrieved 7 September 2011