Background
Ralph Abercromby was the son and heir of James Abercromby, the barrister and Whig politician raised to the peerage as Baron Dunfermline on retirement in 1839, and Lady Mary Anne (Marianne) Leigh.
Ralph Abercromby was the son and heir of James Abercromby, the barrister and Whig politician raised to the peerage as Baron Dunfermline on retirement in 1839, and Lady Mary Anne (Marianne) Leigh.
Abercomby was educated at Eton and Peterhouse, Cambridge.
He entered the Diplomatic Service, becoming an attaché at Frankfurt in 1821 and a précis writer in the Foreign Office in 1827. He was Secretary of Legation at Berlin from 1831 to 1835, and Minister at Florence from 1835 to 1838. From 1838 to 1840 he was Minister to the German Confederation, from 1840 to 1851 Minister at Turin, and from 1851 to 1858 Minister at The Hague.
In 1851 he was awarded the Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath. Upon his father"s death in 1858 he succeeded to the Barony, and lived at the family home Colinton House, Midlothian (now in Edinburgh).
In 1863 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, upon the nomination of Sir John M"Neill. He died without a male heir in 1868, and the Barony became extinct.