Claude Bowes-Lyon, 13th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne (21 July 182416 February 1904), styled The Honourable Claude Bowes-Lyon from 1847 to 1865, was a Scottish peer. He was the 13th holder of the Earldom of Strathmore and Kinghorne, the paternal grandfather of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, a great-grandfather of Elizabeth II, and great-great-grandfather of Charles III.
Claude Lyon-Bowes was born in Redbourn, Hertfordshire. He was the second surviving son of Thomas George Lyon-Bowes, Lord Glamis (son of the 11th Earl), and his wife Charlotte Grimstead. His paternal grandparents were Thomas Lyon-Bowes, 11th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne, and his first wife, Mary Elizabeth Louisa Rodney Carpenter. His maternal grandparents were Joseph Valentine Grimstead, of Ewood Park and Merry Hall, Ashtead, Surrey, and his wife Charlotte Jane Sarah Walsh. Born Claude Lyon-Bowes, he altered the family name to Bowes-Lyon.
Bowes-Lyon also played cricket, making four appearances in first-class cricket, appearing three times for the Marylebone Cricket Club between 1843 and 1846, and once for the Gentlemen of England in 1846. In 1865 he succeeded his elder brother Thomas. The Canadian Pacific Railway named Strathmore, Alberta in his honour in 1884. In 1887 he was created Baron Bowes, of Streatlam Castle and Lunedale, in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. He was a Scottish representative peer from 1870 until 1892, and Lord Lieutenant of Angus from 1874 until his death.
On 28 September 1853, Claude married Frances Dora Smith (29 July 18325 February 1922). They had 11 children:
The Earl died in Bordighera, the Italian Riviera, in his Villa Etelinda, so named for the opera composed by his daughter Lady Mildred Marion. The villa was later sold by his widow in 1913 to the Italian Queen Mother Queen Margherita.
His personal estate was valued at ã233,927 for probate, and his entailed estates were valued at ã716,150. ã14,903 in estate taxes were levied on his estate, which included:
The valuation of Lord Strathmore's personal estate included approximately ã100,000 which was value placed on Strathmore's interest in the estate of his deceased first-cousin-once removed John Bowes. John Bowes was the biological son of the Strathmore's great-uncle John Bowes, 10th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne and the Earl's mistress; the 10th Earl had married John Bowes' mother on his deathbed, and attempted to legitimise his natural son as the heir to all of his properties and titles under the terms of his Will. This resulted in significant litigation over the family estates following the 10th Earl's death in 1820; ultimately the Courts declared that although Scottish Law could permit the retrospective legitimisation of a child born out of wedlock if the child's parents subsequently married, the 10th Earl had been domiciled in England, and thus English law applied. The result was that John Bowes inherited the 10th Earl's English estates, which produced an income of approximately ã20,000 annually, whilst the 10th Earl's younger brother inherited the family's Scottish Estates and the Earldom. As John Bowes had died childless in 1885, the terms of the settlement of English properties under the Will of the 10th Earl resulted in these estates reverting to the Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne.
Under the terms of his will, he made the following bequests to his family: