Born on 19 April 1910 to Arthur Druitt of
Gullane, Harvey Druitt was educated at the
Edinburgh Academy and
Oriel College, Oxford. He was admitted a
solicitor in 1935, joining the
Treasury Solicitor's department two years later. In 1956, he was appointed Deputy Treasury Solicitor, and then in 1964 became
HM Procurator General and Treasury Solicitor. He was the first Treasury Solicitor to be promoted from inside the office. Druitt retired in 1971; he had been appointed a Companion of the
Order of the Bath in the
1951 Birthday Honours, and promoted to Knight Commander in the
1965 New Year Honours. Outside of his legal work, Druitt played rugby for
Oxford against
Cambridge in 1929, 1930 and 1931, with one obituarist describing him as a "rawboned Scottish forward, good with his feet before forwards forgot how to dribble, and no mean kicker". He played three times for
Scotland in 1936 before captaining
London Scottish F.C. in 1937. In later life, he chaired the
Civil Service Sports Council (1965–68) and was President of the
Civil Service Rugby Club, which beat each of the armed forces' teams in one season for the first time under his presidency. Druitt died on 6 February 1973, leaving a widow (Joan Holdsworth,
née Swift) and one son (a daughter had predeceased him). == Likenesses ==