Son
of Sir Charles Hay Seton, 7th Baronet of Abercorn and Caroline
Hodges, he was born on the 31st of January, 1836. His uncle,
Sir Henry John Seton 6th Baronet, was a Captain in the Army and
was a Groom-in-Waiting to HRH Queen Victoria and who died in 1868
unmarried.
The Baronetcy passed to Sir Henry
John's brother, Sir Charles Hay Seton in 1868, and then to Sir
Bruce Maxwell in 1869.
He married Helen Hamilton, daughter of
General Richard Hamilton, on the 30th January, 1886. Sir
Bruce was Deputy-Lieutenant for Tower Hamlets, and Private
Secretary to the Lord President of the Council (1867-1874).
He was a great traveler as well as a renowned Administrator and
retired as an Official of the War Office. He and his wife
Helen lived at Durham House, Chelsea, London. They together
were noted for entertaining with great hospitality at their London
home.
He maintained throughout his life and
avid collection of artwork, antiquities, objets-de-vertu,
heirlooms and sketches, as well as various relics, such as: Queen
Mary's lace collar, a silver snuffbox of Charles I, a gold ring of
Charles I and a lock of the same king's hair (precious Stuart
relics), an Andrea Ferrara claymore, Alexander Pope's reading
chair, and a large Burmese sword belonging to a renowned dacoit
named Bohshwey in India who had long terrorized a whole district
there, which was obtained through hand-to-hand combat by General
Hamilton (Sir Bruce's brother-in-law) while stationed in India.
Helen Hamilton herself was noted for
her own accomplishments of painting and various administrative
qualities, as well as being a remarkably accomplished writer and
noted well by journals of the time on both sides of the Atlantic.
She was the "diamond" of Sir Bruce's life, an amazing beauty to
whom he devoted his life to faithfully. Archbishop Robert
Seton, of the Parbroath family, mentions her with great
admiration.