Samuel Rutherford Crockett was a novelist and poet. He married Ruth Mary Miller.
Crockett was educated in Edinburgh, Heidelberg and New College, Oxford. He entered the Free Church of Scotland in 1886. He was a minister in Penicuik for some years and then became a writer and journalist. He published many novels and poems mostly on Scottish subjects, including Dulce Cor (1886), The Stickit Minister (1893), The Playactress (1894), The Grey Man (1896), The Black Douglas (1899) and Love Idylls (1901).
The publisher Fisher Unwin arranged for Whistler to make a lithograph of Crockett. In 1896 Whistler painted his portrait, The Grey Man: Portrait of S. R. Crockett y453. Crockett recalled how he and Whistler would lunch together every day whilst he was being painted. He did not feel that Whistler liked him very much at first, but claimed that by the end 'we got on like a pair of brothers - even better'. Crockett declared in April of that year that the portrait 'promises to turn out splendidly' and offered to pay to have reproduced it for Unwin [#11817]. Painting, however, was interupted by the illness and death of Whistler's wife. Whistler still had the painting in January 1898 when he suggested that Crockett come to Paris to sit and retrieve it (#02940).
Pennell, Elizabeth Robins, and Joseph Pennell, The Life of James McNeill Whistler, 2 vols, London and Philadelphia, 1908 ; British Library Catalogue; Young, Andrew McLaren, Margaret F. MacDonald, Robin Spencer, and Hamish Miles, The Paintings of James McNeill Whistler, New Haven and London, 1980 .