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'''Samuel Laing'''
{{Infobox rai-fellow
| first_name = Samuel
=== House Notes ===
A5 9 John Anderson., 3 Apr. 1866 – doubts as to Samuel Laing’s reliability on the Keiss site, 8 pp.; see ‘On some ancient shell-mounds and graves in Caithness’, JASL, 1864, pp. xx-xxxviii in Anthrop. Rev. vol. 3, 1865<br />death noted in report of the council for 1897
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
Samuel Laing, (12 December 1812 – 6 August 1897), was a British railway administrator, politician, and influential writer on science and religion during the Victorian era.<br />He was born at Edinburgh on 12 December 1810. He was the nephew of Malcolm Laing, the historian of Scotland; and his father, also called Samuel Laing (1780–1868), was a well-known author, whose books on Norway and Sweden attracted much attention. Samuel Laing the younger entered St John's College, Cambridge in 1827, and after graduating as Second Wrangler and Smith's Prizeman, was elected a fellow.[1] He remained at Cambridge temporarily as a coach, before being called to the bar in 1837, and becoming private secretary to Henry Labouchere, later 1st Baron Taunton, who was then the President of the Board of Trade.