The family moved from Woodlands Terrace, near Park Circus, to St James (now Ruskin) Terrace, Great Western Road, in the mid-1880s, and then to Woodside Terrace, overlooking Kelvingrove Park around 1900.
The boys all attended Fettes College in Edinburgh, but only Bertie followed his father as an accountant. He joined the Volunteers (The Territorial Force, later The Territorial Army) in 1900, and married Gertrude Gilmour, daughter of a 'Turkey Red' dye-manufacturer, in 1908. He settled in Cardross with his wife and two sons, from where he commuted to his father's firm, Kerr, Anderson and MacLeod (the partners had changed), in West George Street, Glasgow. The 'MacLeod' partner was the father of the future Lord MacLeod of Fuinary, whose own traumatic experiences in the Great War inspired him to found the socially-active Iona Community.
The Anderson family suffered an appalling loss with the deaths of all four of their sons on active service, but they had already suffered the death of their fifth son, Harry, as an infant in 1887.
Son of Nora Anderson, of Strathairly, Largo, Fife, and the late W. J. Anderson.
The family moved from Woodlands Terrace, near Park Circus, to St James (now Ruskin) Terrace, Great Western Road, in the mid-1880s, and then to Woodside Terrace, overlooking Kelvingrove Park around 1900.
The boys all attended Fettes College in Edinburgh, but only Bertie followed his father as an accountant. He joined the Volunteers (The Territorial Force, later The Territorial Army) in 1900, and married Gertrude Gilmour, daughter of a 'Turkey Red' dye-manufacturer, in 1908. He settled in Cardross with his wife and two sons, from where he commuted to his father's firm, Kerr, Anderson and MacLeod (the partners had changed), in West George Street, Glasgow. The 'MacLeod' partner was the father of the future Lord MacLeod of Fuinary, whose own traumatic experiences in the Great War inspired him to found the socially-active Iona Community.
The Anderson family suffered an appalling loss with the deaths of all four of their sons on active service, but they had already suffered the death of their fifth son, Harry, as an infant in 1887.
Son of Nora Anderson, of Strathairly, Largo, Fife, and the late W. J. Anderson.
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