John Crichton-Stuart, 5th Marquess of Bute (4 August 1907 â 14 August 1956), son of John Crichton-Stuart, 4th Marquess of Bute, and Augusta Bellingham, was a Scottish peer and landowner.
On 26 April 1932, as the then Earl of Dumfries, he married Lady Eileen Beatrice Forbes (1912âÂÂ1993), a daughter of Bernard Forbes, 8th Earl of Granard, by his wife Beatrice Mills, an American socialite who was the daughter of Ogden Mills. They had four children:
In 1947, the then Earl succeeded his father, becoming the fifth Marquess of Bute and inheriting the expansive Bute Estate. Facing considerable death-duties, the Marquess sold the family's remaining interests in Cardiff and disposed of Cardiff Castle by way of gifting it to the city. Similarly, in 1950, he placed Castell Coch in the care of the Ministry of Works.
The Marquess was an expert ornithologist; in 1931 he bought the islands of St Kilda to preserve them as a bird sanctuary, leaving them to the National Trust for Scotland on his death.
In 1953, the Marchioness of Bute and Lady St David's Fund was set up to encourage and support women to train as nurses and midwives in south Wales.
The Marquess died on 14 August 1956, aged 49, at Mount Stuart House, Isle of Bute, having allegedly been "suffering from a throat complaint".