He was born on 2 January 1843, in
Fifeshire at
Markinch, the eldest son of the textile industrialist Joseph Gordon Stuart with a
flax mill—Balgonie Works at
Milton of Balgonie—and his wife Catharine Booth, daughter of
David Booth. He was the uncle of
Josephine Gordon Stuart.
Balgonie Mill The Balgonie Mill on the
River Leven was founded c.1800, and extended in 1807. It produced yarn that was sent to
Dundee, the main products being
canvas and sacking. Joseph Gordon Stuart (1815–1866) was the son of Alexander Stuart
WS, and his wife Mary McKnight, and elder brother of
Alexander Stuart and
Edward Craig Stuart. He was educated at the
Edinburgh Academy, took an arts degree at the
University of Aberdeen and a law degree at the
University of Edinburgh. After a time as barrister he became a flax spinner. The original mill owner William Drummond took into partnership his son-in-law Robert Baxter, and when Drummond retired, Stuart, related to him, became a partner. The sequestration was lifted in 1863, but money owed to the Liverpool soap merchant Edward Steele had been directed to support Staig & Stuart, via the London bank Stuart Brothers run by Joseph Gordon Stuart and his brother James Stuart the elder (born 1820), an East India merchant. A chancery case of 1866 followed.
Education Stuart attended
Madras College and the
University of St Andrews before matriculating at
Trinity College, Cambridge in 1862. As an undergraduate, Stuart became secretary of the Grote Club (later the Grote Society), founded as a dining club by
John Grote in 1847, and by the 1860s a forum for debate on university reform, led by
F. D. Maurice after Grote's death in 1866. He graduated B.A. at Trinity College in 1866, as third
wrangler, classed equal with
William Davidson Niven. He became Fellow of the college in 1867, and graduated M.A. in 1869. ==Continuing education==