Thomas Dundas of Fingask, Perthshire, and his wife Bethia Baillie, daughter of John Baillie of Castlecary, Stirlingshire, had two sons namely Thomas Dundas of Fingask and Carron Hall, and Lawrence Dundas of Kerse. Lawrence, born in 1712, became Sir Lawrence Dundas baronet, a Member of Parliament for Linlithgow burghs from 1747 to 1748, a Privy Councillor in 1771, Vice Admiral of Shetland and Orkney, Commissary General and a contractor to the
British Army from 1748 to 1759, was created a baronet 16 November 1762. Sir Laurence Dundas of Kerse received several grants during the 1760s and 1770s including Seabegs in 1764, parts of Kerse in 1766, Abbotskerse in 1772, West Kerse in 1773, also Clackmannan in 1763, and Denboig 1766. He also acquired the lands and barony of Newton around this period. All these properties were in the Forth Valley an area which was rapidly industrialising. ==Lawrence Dundas (1766–1839)==