A
bridge doth reach along the river Dee,
Wherein seven double stately Arches be:
Who built this sumptuous-work if ye would know,
The myter which is carv’d thereon doth show.”
—Arthur Johnston.
The
bridge of Dee is one of the most interesting relics of antiquity in the
north-east of Scotland. The interest centres, not only in the mere
structure, but in its associations with the history of the town of
Aberdeen, and more than once with great national events.
As
early as 1384 there would seem to have been a bridge across the
Dee—perhaps on the same site as the present one—with a paved road
leading southwards across the mounth.1
It had doubtless been of slim construction, for, in 1459, Master John of
Levingston, vicar of Inuer-ugy, was appointed, by the alderman and
common council of the burgh of Aberdeen, to be the master of work of a
proposed bridge across the Dee. It would appear, however, that this
design was abandoned, probably as too great an undertaking for the
slender revenues of the town.
To
the forethought and liberality of Bishop Elphin-stone the present bridge
owed its origin. It was one of the last efforts of the church to
exercise that function with which it was so closely identified in the
Eternal City, the function that gave a title which its highest prelate
bears to this day. It is strange—if we are to believe the statement of
one writer2—that the only bridge
that has been built by the clergy in this country since the Reformation,
is the one erected by Dr. Morison across the Dee at Cults, in the same
parish. The bridge was one of Elphinstone’s greatest schemes—the
keystone virtually of his many magnificent services to the country. In
1500 he set about the erection of the College which the famous popish
bull had authorised, and in the same year it is believed he began
building the bridge of Dee. The early history of the latter structure is
not very clear, for, as an ecclesiastical enterprise, the records of it
have not been kept. That the bishop died, however, before it was
finished is certain. The enormous labour entailed in carrying out two
such schemes as building King’s College and the bridge of Dee, in the
early years of the sixteenth century, can scarcely at this date be
realized; but we cannot wonder that the latter work was not completed in
1514. The bishop’s successor, Alexander Gordon, did not take up the
work. Bishop Gordon occupied the See for the short period of three
years, and in 1518 he was succeeded by Bishop Gavin Dunbar, a man after
Elphinstone’s own heart. It seems a doubtful point whether Dunbar
finished the structure begun by Elphinstone, or made a new one
altogether. A document, corroborating the latter view, was recently
found in “ a rare old folio ” in the library of the Archiepiscopal
Seminary at Mechlin.3 The writer,
Alexander Kennedy, is said to have been an Aberdonian living in
Brussels, who had joined the Order of St. Francis. The translation of
the document is as follows :—
“The
testimony of Brother Alexander Kennedy, the Scot, monk of the order of
S. Francis. I, the undersigned, bear witness and take my oath that I
heard from my ancestors the following facts :—That the statue of the
Blessed Mary the Virgin, called Of Good Success, and placed in the
monastery of the Augustine Fathers at Brussels, gave audible indications
to the Most Reverend Father Gavin Dunbar, Catholic Bishop of Aberdeen,
whilst he was praying concerning the spot where he should lay the
foundations of the bridge over the rapid river Dee, and pointed out to
him on both sides the points between which he afterwards built the
magnificent bridge of seven arches that to this day is to be seen.
—Given at Brussels, 19th May, 1636, in the Monastery of S. Augustine, by
the hand of Brother Alexander Kennedy, unworthy Minorite of the Regular
Observance.”
The
evidence of this document certainly deprives Elphinstone of the honour
of a share in raising the existing structure ; but it is at best a
legend founded on an equally fanciful miracle. When we recall that
Dempster and Bishop Leslie, writing at a much earlier date, set the
pons lapideus
magnificentissimus on
ten
arches, the story of the “ unworthy Minorite” will not carry much
weight.
A
side glimpse is given of how the bridge was actually built from an entry
in the Council Register in 1531, when the Town Council ordained that the
master of work “suld gar amend the frame of the brig, and gif hir in
keping to sum traist hand.” A peculiar use was to be made of it, namely,
to “ lat hir and the prouestis greit Reile to fraucht to the losing and
laidnyng of schippis, and to the hame bringing of elding, and the
profitte to be equalie deuidit betiux thame, hir part cummand to the
tovnis vtilitie.” The town, it may be observed in passing, made
excellent “vtilitie” of the bridge work, using the cooms for the arches
of the Blockhouse at Footdee, in 1532, and nine years later the “lym,
stanis, tymmer, andjrn, takin away fra the brig Wark,” were used “to byg
ane bryg of tre our the pot burne ”—that is the Ruthrieston bridge.
Dunbar carried out the idea of the early connection of the church with
bridge building by appointing Alexander Galloway, parson of Kinkell, the
architect. The master mason was Thomas French, who also built Dunbar’s
Aisle in St. Machar Cathedral. Little is known of the progress of the
work, but it had evidently been at least once delayed by a spate in
1522, which brought down the “ sentrice of the brig,” sweeping them
away, “broking, spylt, to the see haid, in gret skayth and damag to the
noble wark.” The “skayth” was estimated at “ane hundreth pundis and mair.”
At
last, in 1527, the bridge was finished. The bishop builder immediately
offered it to the town, together with the lands of Ardlair in the parish
of Kennethmont, which the bishops of Aberdeen had got before 1199 from
David, Earl of Huntingdon and the Garioch, to uphold it. The most
unaccountable wariness was exhibited by the Town Council in accepting
the handsome gift. The first time it is mentioned in the town’s records
is 1st April, 1527. “ The haill tovne, all in ane voce, thankit gretly
thar lord and bischop of Aberden for the gret plesour and pro-ffeit done
to thame in the biging of the brig of Dee,” but even on this occasion
Elder John Anderson “saed he wad nocht mell with sik materis.” It was,
however, agreed to “give a finell ansuir to the said lord.” “This is the
ansuer of the tovnn of Abirden gevin to my lord of Abirdene anent the
brig of Dee. (My lord, we your seruandis, prouest, bailzeis, consull,
comunite, of Abirdene, hes ressauit your l[ordschipis] guid mynd exponit
to vs be your commissar, Maister Alexander Hay, persoun of Turref
tuching of your l[ordschipis] brig of Dee, fundit, biget, and endit one
your grit, hie and exorbitand expensis, for the perpetuall commond weill
of the cuntra and of ws ; of the quhilkis guid deid and mynd God
eternall revard yow, for we ma nocht; and quhar your lordschip desiris
ws and our successouris to be bundin to the ouphaldin of the said brig,
it beand completit one your expensis, in the maist souer wise cane be
devisit be wismen and men of craft in all thingis necessaris ; and at
your lordschip will infeft ws and our successouris in your landis of
Ardlar to be haldin of yow and your successouris in few, we ar hartlie
contentit of the same, makand ws souer thairof be the pape, the prince
your chartour, and all wther handis necessar, for we desyir na
inconuenient, bot to be maid souer ; quhilk ve vnderstand is your
l[ordschipis] guid mynd. Nochtwithstanding, gif your l[ordschip] may
eislie infeft ws in ony if your landis liand mair evnse to ws, or
interchange the saidis landis with wtheris haiffand landis liand mair
ewnse to ws, lik as Rudrestoun or ony vther sik lik, it var profetable
for the canseruacioun of your said l[ordschipis] vark, and plesand, and
ewnse; quhilk we refer haill to your l[ordschipis] plesour, besaikand
you to labour the same gif ye ma guidlie. And atour, we consideraned the
mony guid turnis done be your l[ordschip] within your diocy to your
cathedral and vther places, and wnderstanden at your l[ordschip] hes na
kyrk within your diocy appropriat to your mitar except our mother kyrk,
we vald exort your l[ordschip] to help to sum notable turne to be done
thairto; to the quhilk we sail put our handis in the largeist form be
the sycht of your l[ordschip], that sum remembrance ma remain thairin of
yow, lik as is of money of your reuerend predecessouris, Bischop Thomas
Spens, and Bischop Wm. Elphinstoun. In this cause and all wtheris
referrand ws to your l[ordschipis] plesour, to the quhilkis we are
gritlie indettit, as knowis the gret God eternall, quhome mot conserue
your I[ordschip] in sawill and body at your noble desyir. Your
l[ordschipis] seruandis, Prouest, bailzeis, consail, and comunite of
your burght of Abirdene.”
As a
specimen of Aberdonian caution this document ought to be preserved and
become classic. The way in which the council looked the gift horse in
the mouth, gently hinting that his lordship might “eislie infeft ws in
ony of your landis liand mair ewnse to ws, or interchange the saidis
landis with wtheris haiffand landis liand mair ewnse to ws, lik as
Rudrestoun,” is characteristic
;
and although no heed was paid to the council’s hints on this occasion,
yet nearly a century later—1610—they were given effect to, through the
sale of Ardlair and the purchase of the lands of Caprastoune—the old
name for Hilton, Wood-side—“ to the uphauld and manteining of the brig
of Dee, in place and sted of the lands of Ardlair.” Continuing the
narrative of the original transfer, on June 3rd, 1527, twelve gentlemen
objected to the making of the bond of indenting with the bishop to
uphold the bridge, and the affair was not settled for two years, when,
“efter diuerse and sundry consultatiounis at this time maid, and at
diuerse wthyr tymes afor, it was fundin and concludit be the haill
communite that the said bond vas ressonable.” So it was agreed that “
thair suld be ane kyst, denit in the souerest sort, quhilk said haue
four lokis, and four keyis,” in which the funds for the support of the
bridge were to be kept. Of the keys the “provest sail haue ane in
keiping, and the merchandis ane wther, the maisteris of the kyrk wark
the thrid, and the deikynnis of craftis the ferd.” The council then
swore “ in jugment the grit bodelie aytb, the crucifixt being tuiching
be thame and ilk ane of thame that thai suld neuer intromit with the
money” for any other purpose, “and every future council was ordained to
“sweir inlikvise the grit ayth.” The bridge was formally handed over to
the town in 1529 by its architect, the parson of Kinkell, and Robert
Elphinstone, the parson of Kincardine, in “name and behalf of ane
reverend father in God, Gauane bischop of Dunbar,” and the council
accepted it “without ony langer delay.”
The
city has always been proud of the Bridge of Dee, and a whole series of
eulogistic couplets might be adduced to show this. The document just
referred to waxes eloquent over the “nobill and substantius brig.” “ The
greatest and brawest bridge now to be seen in Scotland,” quoth Parson
Gordon, but perhaps the most enthusiastic panegyric is by Boece, “ that
excessively Scotch Herodotus” as Masson cleverly dubs him. His life of
Elphinstone leads him of course to speak of this part of the bishop’s
work, and it has been versified thus by Alexander Garden :—
“And
yet a work als great
And necessar much more,
Unto his oune, his countrie’s good,
And both their great gloir,
Annon their-after he
Resolved and first intends,
That everie age and ey that vieus
Admires and yet commends.
This was the bridge of Dea
Which every man may mark,
Ane needful, most expensive, great,
A good and gallant wark;
Knit close with quadrat stones,
Free all, incised and shorne ;
Of these the pend with arches sevine,
Supported is and borne.
Sharpe poynted butresses
Be both that breaks and byds
The power of winter speats
And strenth of summer tyds
Above it’s beawtified
With posts and prickets four;
And all alongst rayled is
And battailed to look our.
A great and goodlie work
Which how long t’ stands and stayes
It aye shall mater ministratt
Unto the author’s praise.”
Near
the north end of the bridge stood a chapel which was dedicated to the
Virgin Mary. The earliest mention of it is in 1530, when Sir William Ray
is described as “ vmquhyle chaplane to our lady chappell,” but it had
probably been built at the same time as the bridge itself. The habit of
building chapels at bridges in those times was not uncommon, and in this
case it had probably been set down for the benefit of passing strangers
coming to the town, and townsmen speeding south. In that year, however,
Sir William Ray gave to the council “ ane challis of siluer, ane ymage
of siluer of our lady, baicht our guilt; thre naipkingis, ane broodin,
and tua quhyt, “ane altare towell, togidder with the key of the offerand
stok, to be kepit to the vtilite and proffite of the said chappell.”
This image which the chaplain presented is now in a church at Brussels.
An extraordinary story of how the statue found its way to the Continent
is told by Father Blakhal in his tedious and misnamed
Brcijfe Narration of the
Services done to Three Noble Ladyes— “I did
ther, as I have oft tyms dun in the faire of St. Germains, behold many
fyne things, and wish myself able to buy them, but, for want of moneys,
leave them to others for I was very scant. I had non but what I gotte
for saying the first messe, every morning, at Notre Dame, de bonne
successe, a chapelle of great devotion, so called from a statu of our
Ladye, which was brought from Aberdein, in the North of Scotland, to
Ostend, by a merchant of Ostend, to whom it was given in Aberdein. And
that same day that the shippe in which it was did arrive at Ostend, the
Infanta did winne a battaile against the Hollanders, the people thinking
that our Ladye, for the civil reception of her statu, did obteane that
victorye to the princesse, who did send for the statu to be brought to
Bruselle, when the princesse, with a solemn procession, did receave it
at the porte of the toune, and placed it in this chappel, wher it is
much honored, and the chapelle dedicated to Our Ladye of bonne successe,
which befor was pouer and desolat, now is riche and wel frequented. The
common beleiff of the vulgar people ther is, that this statu was thrown
in the sea at Aberdein, and carried upon the waves of the sea
miraculously to Ostend. So easie a thing it is for fables to find good
harbour, where verities would be beaten out with cud-gelles.” This is
the statue referred to by Kennedy in his story of how Dunbar came to fix
the site for his bridge. There has been a great deal of discussion over
it, which has been revived within recent years. About twenty years ago,
Father John Sutherland made strong but unsuccessful efforts to get it
back to Aberdeen.
The
chapel was protected by a bulwark, which was an eyesore to the laird of
Abergeldy, who ordered the town to “ mak ane esy gait and passage betuix
the brig of Dee and chapell of the samyn, quhair throw thai may eselye,
without impediment wyrk and laubour thair watteris.” The council did not
evidently see eye to eye with the laird, although he protested “ aluayis
quhat damnage or skaith thai sustenit thairthrow suld com on the toune
and nocht” on him, and so he hewed down the obnoxious bulwark. He was
immediately demanded to build it again, and “to keipe stane stabill,”
and, as if to punish him the more, “this to be extendit in the largest
forme.”
The
bridge was of much greater importance in the past than it is now. It was
the only accessible land entrance from the south, and thus, if guarded,
nearly all strangers from the south could be kept from entering the
town. Two powerful factors compelled the town to keep watch and ward
over the bridge—pestilence and war. This seems very primitive, viewed
from the modern standpoint, but then the structure was of paramount
importance ranking with the ports of the city, if not taking a higher
position. The dreaded plague called in the guardianship of the bridge
for the first time in 1529. It was then ordered that two persons should
“pas dailie to the brig of De, and ramane thair continualie fray vj
houris in the morning quhill vj houris at euin, during all the tym it
hapnis this contagius plaige and pestilance to ring, for keiping of this
guid tovne fra the samyn, and to lat nane our the said brig without
testimoniall quhat place thai came fra.” The duty of watching went by
turns among the citizens. The next step was to get a port erected, and,
in 1545, the dreaded approach of an enemy made the council ordain that “
thair be ane port maid incontinent with all diligence on the south end
of the brig of Dee with tymmer, to be fast lokit in the nycht, and weill
keipit one day licht.” Every neighbour of the town “and honest men” had
to give twelve pence thereto, and “ sobir folkis viijd., ” or “ sax d.”
at the least. While the port was being made, “ tua trew honest fellowis”
had Horatius-like to keep the bridge. A few months later the presence of
the plague again demanded a watch, so that “ na suspect personis of the
contagius pest haue enteres thairat.” Those antiquated sanitary
precautions gradually became stricter. The punishment for a drowsy
bridge watchman in 1566 was to pay forty shillings, and failing that “
to haue his lug nailed to the trone and to be put in the branks.” The
severity of the order, however, reached its climax in the disastrous
period of 1584-85 when Scotland was devastated by the plague. Seeing
that it was “ringand in dyuerss partis, townis, and places of the south
contrie,” the council ordained “ane port of tree to be biggit and sett
upoun the Brig of Dee; that thair be ane wache there of twa honest
burgess men or craftismen, that nane be sufferit to haue entrie thairat,
without ane sufficient attentik testimoniall ; and that na testimoniall
be ressauit nor admittit, giffen at ony suspect place.” A much more
rigid restriction was enforced in the following year when the council,
driven to desperation, ordered gibbets to be erected at the cross, the
harbour, and the Bridge of Dee, “ that in caice onye infeckit per-soun
aryue or repair be sie or land to this burght or fredome thairof, or in
caice ony induellar of this burght ressaue, hous, or harbrie, or giff
meat or drink to the infekit persoun or personis, the man to be hangit,
and the woman to be drownit.”
These
ports were all more or less of a temporary character, being erected
every now and again when the council became panic-struck at the
threatening of a plague, or other invader. The erection of one of those
ports was one of the good deeds for which, in 1597, William Dwn, the
dean of guild, received some odds. This dean has immortalized himself in
local annals for “hes extraor-dinarlie takin panis in the birning of the
gryt numer of wiches brint this year,” 1597, and the hanging of four
pirates. In the following year the first really substantial erection was
made in the shape of an arched port on the south end “ with a chamber
above the arch for a watch tower.” This, probably, was the tower
constantly occupied for two years, 1604-6, by watchers. When all the
other ports in the town had had their watch restrictions removed, the
Bridge of Dee port was still occupied. We find mention in the town’s
accounts on one occasion, 1648, of “ twa gryt lockis to the brig of Die,
and for stokis to thame and for shots and yron work.” There were
evidently seats erected, for a mason is paid for “ seating the same and
for caring out a tril to be a baer.” This arched gateway, which seems to
have latterly been built of stone, was, in 1679, ornamented with
Elphinstone’s and the town’s arms.
The
building of ports leads to the occasion when they were really most in
requisition—the time of war. In this connection the Bridge of Dee has
figured very prominently in the city’s history.
The
first event of historical importance occurred in 1589, when the great
Catholic noblemen of the north— Huntly, Errol, and Crawford—raised the
standard of rebellion against the king, whose Protestant attitude struck
terror to their hearts. James, advised of “sum interprises appeirandlie
moved aganis the treu religion,” hastily collected about iooo men, and
marched to oppose his noble subjects ; who, with 3000 followers, were
then quartered in Perth. Both parties moved northwards, but at the
Bridge of Dee, 20th April, according to Calderwood, “ feare seazed upon
the most part of Huntlie’s faction, when they heard the king was in
person in the feilds.” So the Catholic rebellion was for the time
quenched, although it was not the last time that its leaders were heard
of. Indeed, the “ Brig of Dee affair,” as it was long called, was
Huntly’s first entry into a public life, which lasted for nearly
half-a-century.
The
part of history, however, in which the Bridge of Dee will always figure
most conspicuously, was in the great Covenanting struggle. Built by the
church, it is a noteworthy fact that in two religious struggles the
bridge should have occupied a prominent place.
The
part played by Montrose in the early struggle in the North is well
known. Within three months, in 1639, he mulcted Aberdeen in 110,000
merks of penalty, and in May left the city for the purpose of punishing
the Royalists elsewhere, carrying off Lord Huntly as a prisoner. A month
later Huntly’s son, Lord Aboyne, a spirited boy of nineteen, was on his
way north, and on June 6th he landed with two armed vessels, and a
Newcastle collier, and a few gentlemen and field pieces. His subsequent
movements are familiar. On June 14th he marched against Montrose at
Stonehaven, was beaten at Megray Hill, his men scattering like sheep
before Montrose’s guns. “ Musket’s mother,” as the great guns were
called, were too powerful for them, and even Spalding tremblingly writes
of the artillery as “veray feirfull.” The young general retreated to
Aberdeen with his two colonels, Gun and Johnston, while his men fled
helter-skelter. On Sunday the 16th he sent out a picket of seven men
under Johnston ; and these, meeting seven of Montrose’s men some six
miles from the city, soon knew that the energetic Covenanter was on the
track. On the following day Aboyne issued orders to his men to
re-muster, but they were not all forthcoming, One detachment, numbering
4000, never got further than Leggatsden, where they lay to see their
comrades beaten. Before sunrise on the 18th, Johnston was sent to
barricade the south port of the bridge, by casting up a “thik faill”
rampart behind it. The river being swollen, and unfordable to the enemy,
these preparations were deemed the most judicious for the safety of the
town. Aboyne followed with 100 musketeers and a large number of cavalry,
only to catch a glimpse of Montrose’s army encamped in the Tollo hill
above Banchory House. Here, in March, Montrose and the Covenanters had
“stentit thair pav-ilionis” before marching upon the city. Montrose’s
force was estimated at 2000 foot and 300 horse. The arrival of Aboyne
was greeted with a small volley, which, however, fell short of the
defending cavalry. Then followed that quarter cannon, “haueing hir
bullet of 20 pund wecht,” which Spalding thought so “veray feirfull.”
But the defenders, under the courageous Johnston, stood firm. So bravely
did they defend their position, that they won the admiration of the
opposing musketeers. Their intrepidity inspired their servants and
followers, who, in spite of the cannon and musket shot, went and came to
the bridge with provisions and necessaries for the defenders.
“In
the afternoon,” says Gordon in his
Scots Affairs,
“the companies of Dundee, emulous of the Aberdeen citizens, desired to
be letten storm the bridge, which Montrose readily yielded to. Two
companies fell on, under the command of one Captain Bonar, but they
found so hot a welcome from the Aberdeens-men that they made a quick
retreat, which was seconded with whooping and hollowing of such as were
looking on, who mocked their poor bravado.” The battering rams which
were brought into requisition against the barriers were of no avail.
“Thus, this haill day, thay on the ane syde persewing the brig with
cannon and mvscat, and on the vther syde thay ar defending with muscat
and thair four brassin peices (whiche did littill service), yit,”
recounts Spalding, '• no skaith on our syde except ane townes man callit
John Forbes wes pitifullie slayne, and William Gordoun of Gordouns Mills
rakleslie schot in the foot, both ante covenantaris.” The gathering
darkness of night put an end to the fight, for, says Gordon curiously,
“there is no sky-set then in the north of Scotland,” Watches were set,
and the two forces went to sleep, only however, to renew hostilities as
vigorously as ever on the morrow.
The
obstinacy of the defenders irritated the dashing Montrose, whose whole
military tactics were of an energetic character. He “thought such a
delay little better than to be beaten,” writes Gordon, and in the
darkness of the night, he had drawn up his two half cannon nearer the
bridge. The citizens were less active. In the early morning fifty of
them foolishly left their post, leaving the other fifty to guard the
bridge, and went to the town to bury Forbes, “quhilk wes veray vnwyslie
done and to the tynsall of the brig.” Montrose saw his advantage and was
quick to embrace it. He levelled his guns against the barricade, “ both
to break the gates of the porte, and scour the bridge all along. For the
day befor most of the canon shott wer made against one of the corners of
the porte, which looked to the south-west, whereby one of the two small
watche turretts upon the sydes of the porte, was much shattered in the
topp of it, being all hewed stone, as all that bridge is, being,” says
Gordon grandly, “ one of the gallantest in Scottlande, if not the
statelyest itselfe.” Johnston put his few men “in the roundis of the
brig on both sydes, where they could defend themselves with little
loss.” Afternoon came, and yet there was no sign of victory for the
besiegers. Montrose saw to his intense chagrin that—in Spalding’s homely
language—he “culd cum no speid.” Resolving, therefore, to become master
of the situation by strategy, he devised a “prettie slicht,” to decoy
the defenders from their position, by sending a body of his horse up the
bank of the river, as if they meant to ford it near Banchory. Loyalist
writers, from the time of Gordon down to Mr. Mark Napier, have credited
Colonel Gun with the basest treachery at this part of the battle. “ The
colonel,” says Gordon in his most bitter style, “ who could espy no
occasion before to draw off the horsemen, cries, ‘ March up the river’s
side, and stop Montrose’^ crossing.’ It was told him there was no
danger, the fords having been lately tried and found impassable. But no
assurance could serve his turn, who would not believe that which he knew
to be true.” Spalding merely says that_ the feint was “over haistellie
believit ” by Aboyne, who immediately led off part of the defenders to
oppose it. Johnston, with but a mere handful, was left to hold the
bridge position. Montrose opened fire on both sections of the divided
defenders. He poured his shot on the party that had turned to the river
side, and the Royal Standard-bearer, celebrated in ballad lore as “
Bonny John Seton ” of Pitmedden, was shot dead, “most part of his body
above the saddle being carried away and quashed.” The ballad is much
more minute :—
It
fell about the month of June
On Tuesday temouslie;
The northern lords hae pitch’d their camps
Beyond the Brig o’ Dee.
They
ca’ed him Major Middleton
That man’d the brig o’ Dee ;
They ca’ed him Colonel Henderson
That gar’d the cannons flee.
Bonny
John Seton o’ Pitmedden
A brave baron was he
;
He made his tesment ere he gaed
And the wiser man was he.
He
left his lands unto his heir
His lady her dowrie ;
Ten thousand crowns to Lady Jane
Sat on the nourice knee.
Then
out it speaks his lady gay
Oh stay my lord vvi’ me
For word is come, the cause is won
Beyond the Brig o’ Dee.
He
turned him right and round about,
And a light laugh gae he ;
Says, I vvoud’na for my lands sae broad
I stay’d this night wi’ thee.
He’s
taen his sword then by his side
His buckler by his knee ;
And laid his leg in o’er his horse Said,
Sodgers, follow me.
So he
rade on, and further on
Till to the third mile corse ;
The Covenanters’ cannon balls
Dang him aff o’ his horse.
Up
then rides him Craigievar Said,
Wha’s this lying here?
It surely is the Lord o’ Aboyne,
For Huntly was not here.
Then
out it speaks a fause
Forbes Lived up in Druminnor ;
My lord, this is a proud Seton
The rest will ride the thinner.
Spulzie him, spulzie him, said Craigievar.
O’ spulzie him, presentlie ;
For I could lay my lugs in pawn,
He had nae gude will at me.
They’ve taen the shoes frae aff his feet
The garters frae his knee ;
Likewise the gloves upon his hands—
They’ve left him not a flee.
His
fingers they were sae sair swell’d
The rings wuld not come aff;
They cuttet the grips out o’ his ears,
Took out the gowd signots.
Then
they rade on and further on
Till they cam to the Crabestane ;
And Craigievar he had a mind
To burn a’ Aberdeen.
Out it
speaks the gallant Montrose
(Grace on his fair bodye !)
We winna burn the bonnie burgh
We’ll even lat it be.
Then
out it speaks the gallant Montrose
Your purpose I will break ;
We winna burn the bonnie burgh
We’ll never build its maik.
I see
the women and their children
Climbing the craigs sae hie ;
We’ll sleep this nicht in the bonnie burgh
And even lat it be.
While
this blow was being dealt at the river side party, Montrose’s men, under
Colonel John Middleton, were dealing havoc on the bridge defenders. His
men had been growing impatient and discouraged by the death of Captain
Andrew Ramsay, brother of the laird of Balquhain, but Middleton rallied
them, and led on himself to the attack. The defenders were “cruelie
chargit, both with cartow and muskat schot in gryte aboundans, quhilk
wes moir feirfullie renewit” the moment Aboyne left the bridge. At last
the turret of one of the ports was struck by a shot, and Johnston, who
stood all the time where there was most danger, was half buried in the
ruins, his leg being “quashed to pieces.” The gallant defender was
rendered useless. “ He haistellie callis for ane horss,” says Spalding
in one of his vivid outbursts, “ and sayes to his soldioaris,
‘Gallantis, do for your selffs and haist yow to the toun’; quhairvpone
thay all with him self took the flight. Then follouit in certane
capitanes, quiklie takis in the brig peceablie, and kest our thair
cullouris.” The river side party saw their colours flying from the
bridge. Gordon, determined to blacken Gun, makes him give the order, “
‘Gentlemen, make you for the town, Lieutenant-Colonel Johnston is
killed, and the bridge is won,’ but his words got slender obedience.” He
goes on to tell that William Gordon of Arroudale, asked Gun to stand and
wait upon the Covenanters’ fore-party crossing the bridge, showing him
that they yet had the advantage, and, as a final encouragement,
reminding him that “ it was not the fashion of Huntly’s family to leave
the field without fighting the enemy. But,” he adds, “there was no
hearing for it was Gun’s fashion always to cry out that, if they would
not obey his orders, he would lay down his charge and complain to the
King.” Aboyne’s men, continues Gordon, did not take Gun’s refusal to
fight well, but began to murmur that he was betraying them, and
Arroudale “in a great chafe told him to his face that he was a villain,
and an arrant traitor, all which Gun swallowed quietly.” The story is
far too verbose to have been enacted on the river side at such a
critical moment. One is inclined to believe with Spalding, whose
royalist tendencies do not lead him to decry his own side—that “ the
Lord Oboyne, seing thair horssmen stay vpon the vther syd of the water
and not coming throw the water, as they seimit to intend and with all
seing thair cullouris vpone the brig, takis the flight schamefullie, but
straik of suord or ony vther kynd of vassalage.”
At
all events the bridge was taken about four in the afternoon after nearly
two days’ fighting. The defenders lost five men, and Montrose but two.
Then Montrose marched in triumph into the city “ with sound of
trumpettis, displayit cullouris, and touking of drumis. As the army
merchit, the haill covenanteris wes blyth, and the royallistis alss
sorrowfull at this sicht, who for plane feir fled the toun, with thair
wyfis and children in thair armes and careit on thair bakis, weiping and
mvrning most pitifullie, straying heir and thair not knowing quhair to
go. Thus war thay sore distrest for the love they had to the King, and
now for following Aboyne.” Such is Spalding’s wail, and he waxes more
mournful as he recounts the subsequent sufferings of the city, how it
was rescued from destruction only by a bribe of 7000 merks,and how the
citizens suffered gross indignities at the hands of the victors. In a
very different vein is the following.
Pasquil made at the
Bridge of Dee quhen it was wone from the Ante-Covenanteris of the north:—
God
bliss our Covenanters in Fyffe and Lothean,
In Angus and the Mearnis, quho did us first begin
With muskit and with carabin, with money, speare and shield,
To take the toune of Aberdeen and make our Marques yield.
quhairvpone thay all with him self took the flight. Then follouit in
certane capitanes, quiklie takis in the brig peceablie, and kest our
thair cullouris.” The river side party saw their colours flying from the
bridge. Gordon, determined to blacken Gun, makes him give the order, “
‘Gentlemen, make you for the town, Lieutenant-Colonel Johnston is
killed, and the bridge is won,’ but his words got slender obedience.” He
goes on to tell that William Gordon of Arroudale, asked Gun to stand and
wait upon the Covenanters’ fore-party crossing the bridge, showing him
that they yet had the advantage, and, as a final encouragement,
reminding him that “ it was not the fashion of Huntly’s family to leave
the field without fighting the enemy. But,” he adds, “there was no
hearing for it was Gun’s fashion always to cry out that, if they would
not obey his orders, he would lay down his charge and complain to the
King.” Aboyne’s men, continues Gordon, did not take Gun’s refusal to
fight well, but began to murmur that he was betraying them, and
Arroudale “ in a great chafe told him to his face that he was a villain,
and an arrant traitor, all which Gun swallowed quietly.” The story is
far too verbose to have been enacted on the river side at such a
critical moment. One is inclined to believe with Spalding, whose
royalist tendencies do not lead him to decry his own side—that “ the
Lord Oboyne, seing thair horssmen stay vpon the vther syd of the water
and not coming throw the water, as they seimit to intend and with all
seing thair cullouris vpone the brig, takis the flight schamefullie, but
straik of suord or ony vther kynd of vassalage.”
At
all events the bridge was taken about four in the afternoon after nearly
two days’ fighting. The defenders lost five men, and Montrose but two.
Then Montrose marched in triumph into the city “with sound of trumpettis,
displayit cullouris, and touking of drumis. As the army merchit, the
haill covenanteris wes blyth, and the royallistis alss sorrowfull at
this sicht, who for plane feir fled the toun, with thair wyfis and
children in thair armes and careit on thair bakis, weiping and mvrning
most pitifullie, straying heir and thair not knowing quhair to go. Thus
war thay sore distrest for the love they had to the King, and now for
following Aboyne.” Such is Spalding’s wail, and he waxes more mournful
as he recounts the subsequent sufferings of the city, how it was rescued
from destruction only by a bribe of 7000 merks, and how the citizens
suffered gross indignities at the hands of the victors. In a very
different vein is the following.
Pasqnil made at the
Bridge of Dee quhen it was ivone from the Ante-Covenanteris of the north:—
God
bliss our Covenanters in Fyffe and Lothean,
In Angus and the Mearnis, quho did us first begin
With muskit and with carabin, with money, speare and shield,
To take the toune of Aberdeen and make our Marques yield.
I had
a beard as vther men,
But God reuard the pouder,
He suers he’s never cocke hes mathche,
Nor musket one hes shoulder.
While that the dogs of Aberdeene,
Which did cast vpe such trinches,
Themselves with speed fill vpe the same,
To please our Couenanters.
The beaten dogs of Aberdeene,
Is fled and veighed ther ankers,
They durst not byde into ther toune,
To feast the Couenanters.
They left ther children and ther wyffes,
To reed yare reuelit yairne,
And cuckold-lyke fled for their Hues,
Unto the Iyle of Ferne.
There
is probably a good deal of truth in this skit. “ Musket’s mother ” had,
according to one verse of the pasquil—whose suppression the taste of the
day demands,—a disastrous effect on Aboyne himself. Sir Walter Scott
touches the same key when he quotes in
IVaverley,
from one of the numerous “old ballads” that could sprout from his
imagination like mushrooms. “In an old ballad on the Bridge of Dee,” he
says, these verses occur :—
The
Highlandmen are pretty men
For handling sword and shield,
But yet they are but simple men
To stand a stricken field.
The
Highland men are pretty men
For target and claymore,
But yet they are but naked men,
To face the cannon’s roar.
For
the cannon’s roar on a summer’s night
Like thunder in the air ;
Was never man in Highland garb
Would face the cannon fair.”
For
long the “Brig Raid” was one of the reckoning dates with the citizens.4
This
battle was the leading event, but for the next five years the bridge
often crops up in the history of the struggle. It was, as Spalding says,
a “randevouss” of the parties. Not satisfied with crushing Aberdeen at
the Battle of the Bridge, the Covenanters made another campaign to the
north; and, on May 26th, 1640, Earl Marischal penned the following
epistle from Dunnottar:—
“To
my loving friends, the prowest and bailies of Aberdeine. My very loveing
freinds, these ar to show zow that I intend (God willing) on Thursday
nixt, in the eftirnoone, to be at Abirdeine, quhair I will bring with me
generall Maior monro and his regiment, for quhome I pray zow cause
prowyd victuallis for the payment, for nothing sail be takin without
reddie moneyis, ye alvayes approving zourselffis gude cuntrie men. And
with all ye sail be in armes, and meitt ws at the brig of Dee, that we
may joyne for defense of your toune, and of so many honest men as sail
be fund thairin, and for the peace of the cuntrie about. But I wish ze
be better conveened nor ze were at last wappin showing. So, not doubting
of zour cair and diligence heirin, I rest zouris lowing freinds.”
In
conformity with the foregoing behest, the citizens, two days after,
being “chargit be tovk of drum,” marched forth to the bridge. There they
met Munro with 40 horse and 800 foot, all in “ gude ordour, haveing blew
bonnetis on thair heidis, with fedderis vaveling in the wynd.” The
magistrates had to sign eleven articles, each of which humbled them to
the dust. The city, already burdened with nigh twenty thousand pounds of
debt, was compelled to support the army ; having in ' reddiness, 12,000
pund wecht of good bisket breid, togidder with 1000 gallouns of aill and
beir; 1200 pair of schools, togidder with 3000 elnis of hardin tyking or
saill canvess, for making of tentis to saif the souldatista from grite
invndatioun of raynes accustomat to fall out wnder this northern climat.”
For three long months the wretched citizens had to comply with these
galling conditions, which had been imposed upon them at the bridge.
By a
turn of the tables, however, in 1644, Huntly gained the ascendency, and,
in April, marched into the town with 10,000 men. Determined to secure
himself against a surprise from the south, he ordered the Town Council
to “caus build ane port of timber, with ane wicket, on the south end of
the Bridge of Dee,” threatening to “cut down ane bow” of the bridge
unless his order was complied with. The poor Council, battle-dored and
shuttle-cocked from party to party, did so “ with diligence;” and,
instead of one“saif gaird,” two were put, one at each end.
The
next occasion when the bridge appears is when Montrose marched north in
the Royalist interest. Twice he had punished the town in the Covenanting
cause, and now he marched north to inflict the severest blow of all for
the opposite side. The citizens mustered some 3000 men; and, determined
to meet the Marquis before entering the town, began to guard the Bridge
of Dee and build fortifications. It was, as Spalding laments, “ to litle
effect.” The Marquis “miskenis” the bridge and outwitted the citizens,
on 11th September, by fording the river at Drum. Two days later, at the
Justice Mills, he inflicted the most crushing blow that the city had yet
received. The battle itself was not so bloody, but “ horribill wes the
slauchter in the flight”—a few of the fugitives being slain at the very
bridge which they had guarded but forty-eight hours before.
A few
weeks later the town was again outwitted by the Marquis, whom Argyle had
gone in pursuit of after the battle of the Justice Mills. How the latter
out-manoeuvred Argyle for weeks is matter of history. But at last word
was brought to the city that he was marching through Angus with his
hotly pursued army, and Marischal, at once, on October 14th, got
together “all, of whatso-euer aige, sex, or qualitie,” who had horse and
money, to intercept him in advance by guarding the Bridge of Dee. For
three days the citizens kept watch and ward, but the clever strategist
once more repeated his trick, by fording the Dee at Drum. Thus, while
the citizens were “lying watcheing the brig of Dee foolishlie,” the
Marquis had his “ haill army saif and sound,” his men “ leiving idlie,
destroying the countrie and thair cornes pitfullie.” All this but shows
that the bridge was losing its importance as a city entrance, and with
such a clever general as Montrose to deal with, the old edicts against
the plague would have been utterly useless.
In
the spring of the next year, 1645, Montrose was again master of the
situation. He sent the gallant, but reckless, Nathaniel Gordon into the
city, with 100 Irish dragoons. He took 1800 muskets from Torry, and
routed Captain Keith, brother of Marischal, at the Bridge of Dee. After
Hurry’s departure from the city Montrose despatched General M‘Donald,
with 700 men, to guard the bridge. No sooner had he left, than Hurry
once more appeared on the scene ; but an engagement there was
fortunately averted.
In
the course of the last two centuries the bridge has almost been rebuilt.
From a very earlyperiod in thehistory of the structure, a special mason
was appointed to keep it in repair. The first was Alexander Moneypenny,
who, in 1531, was engaged to attend daily “ and aduert to oure brig of
Dee, bulwarkis and chappell, and reforme all small faltis that sail
happin in the said varkis.” He was not permitted to “ depart nor pass
away fra the said wark at anay tyme without speciale lycence.” Time,
however, wrought many changes, and, notwithstanding the caution
exercised by the council in taking over the bridge, and obligations
entered into to uphold it “ in good order and condition,” it had, within
seventy years of erection, been allowed to fall into considerable
disrepair. In the summons served upon the Town in 1591, at the instance
of certain citizens, it is stated that the “provest and counsall hes
sufferit, and daylie suffers our bridge of Dee, the most profitable
monument within the north pairt of our realme, to decay, and the water
bushing and rwning throw the hewin work of the pillars thairof, to the
utter wrack alsweill of all our Hedges, as of our said burgh, the
skaithe, damnage, and expensiss thairof, befoir the samyn be
sufficientlie repairit. extending to fyve hundredth merkis.” In the
middle of the 17th century a rude attempt was made to strengthen it.
Most activity in this direction, however, occurred during last century,
at various dates. A start was made in 1712, but little actual work was
done beyond getting materials together. From 1718 to 1722 great masses
of material were purchased for repairs, including rough sandstone from
Elgin and Edinburgh, timber from the Duke of Gordon’s forests, and, in
1722, a quarry was opened on the Pitfodels’ property for stone to the
bridge. The first improvement did not take place till 1773, when the
port and stone walls at the south end were removed for the convenience
of traffic. The original bridge consisted of seven semicircular groined
arches, with a total span of 432 feet, but it was only 16^ feet wide.
The great inconvenience of such a narrow roadway was first experienced
when the great coach traffic began, and the turnpike to the south was
made. But it was not till 1841-2 that the bridge was thoroughly repaired
and widened, when 11^ feet were added to the west side, at a cost of
£7250, Provost Thomas Blaikie carrying on the work.
The
history of the bridge is continued briefly in the inscriptions and coats
of arms that adorn the various parts of the structure. The first mention
of inscriptions is in 1679, when the Council resolved to “caus heu the
tounes armes and Bishop Elphingstounes ” on the port of the bridge, and
“ to caus illuminat the same in decent forme.” There are no less than
twenty-five such—nine on the east side, and sixteen on the west. There
are eight inscriptions, the rest being coats of arms. Dunbar’s arms
appear eight times—six times on the west side and twice on the east
front. Elphinstone’s arms appear twice, once on each side. The arms of
Scotland appear three times— on the first pier and last buttress of the
west front, and on the first buttress of the Aberdeen side. The arms of
Bon-Accord and of Provost Thomas Blaikie appear on the second pier of
the west side, and the Duke of Albany’s on the first pier of the east
side. Taking the inscriptions chronologically, the following one in
black letter takes the first place :—
GAUIN
. DUBAR . ABERDONEN .
EPS . IPERII . IACOBI . 5U
SCOTORU .
REGIS . ANO . DNO . ME . LAPSU .
REEDIFICARE . FECIT . ORATE . P . EO .
The
translation is—As I had fallen into a state of decay, Gavin Dunbar,
Bishop of Aberdeen, with the assistance of James V., King of Scotland,
caused me to be rebuilt, in the year-. Pray for him.
The
next inscription, also in black letter, is as follows :—
GAUIN
. DUBAR. ABERDONEN .
POTIFEX . ME . TRAS . DEE . FLUUII . FIERI .
IUSSIT . ANNO . DNI . QUITO . ET . UINESIO .
SUPA . MILLEm . ET . QUIGEm . ORATE . P . EO . ANNO . DOMINI .
1525
.
The
translation is—Gavin Dunbar, Bishop of Aberdeen, caused me to be built
over the river Dee, A.D. 1525.
The
next inscription brings us down to the repairs made in the early years
of the eighteenth century. It is on the third pier of the west side :—
Senatus Aberdonensis, QUI, PER
INTEGRUM ADMINISTRATION IS CURRICULUM, NE QUID INCURIA SUA RESPUBLICA
DETRIMENTI CAPERET SUMMA OPE NITEBATUR, OMNES ARCUS HUIUSCE PONTIS, IAM
COL-LABASCENTES, EX .ERE AD PONTEM SARTUM TECTUMQUE CONSERVAN-DUM
DEDICATO, INSTAURANDOS CURABAT ANNIS DOMINI 1719, 1720, 1721,
1722 ET
1723
The
translation, taken from Jervise’s
Epitaphs,
runs— “The Town Council of Aberdeen, who, during the whole period of
their tenure of office, exerted their utmost efforts to prevent the
public interests from sustaining any injury through their negligence,
caused, in the years 1719-2021-22 and 23, the whole of the arches of
this bridge, which had fallen into a state of decay, to be rebuilt out
of monies set apart for keeping the bridge in repair.”
On
the parapet over the first four arches, Aberdeen side, of the east
front, several modern dates are given—as,
Instauratus a.d.1720
The
longest inscription appears on a slab inserted into the second piers of
the west front, and reads as follows—
Annvente svmmo nvmine,
HICCE
PONS EX BENE ADMINISTRATA PECVNIA AD EVM CONSERVANDVM LEGATA TRECENTIS
AMPLIVS ANNIS POSTQVAM PRIMVM EST EXTRVCTVS MVLTVM DILATATVS PENITVSQVE
REFECTVS EST ANNO M.D.CCC.XXXXI . ET M.D.CCCXXXXII
Thoma Blaikie civitatis Aberdonensis
PRAEFECTO,
Georgio Henry 'I opervm publicorvm deinceps
Gvlielmo Fraser
Ioanne Smith, Architecto,
Alexandro Macdonald Gvlielmo Leslie
The
arms and initials of Provost Blaikie are on the opposite side of the
pier.
The
translation, again according to Jervise, is— “ Under the Divine
blessing, this bridge, more than 300 years after its first erection, was
much widened and thoroughly repaired in the years 1841 and 1842, out of
the funds left for its maintenance, Thomas Blaikie being Provost of
Aberdeen ; George Henry and Thomas Fraser, successive Masters of Kirk
and Bridge Works ; John Smith, Architect; and Alexander Macdonald and
William Leslie, Contractors.”
At
the approach to the west front of the Kincardineshire end stands an old
sun-dial. An iron clamp has
destroyed part of the face
;
but the following letters can still be made out on the top of it—
a.
w . Mr o . . . . b. w. 1719 .
A
stone inserted in the wall on the east front, of the Aberdeen approach,
shows how far the famous flood came up—
FLOOD
MARK.
6th
AUGUST 1829.
The
bridge regained much of its ancient prestige in the end of the last
century, when turnpikes were being made with such energy. In the days of
the old north and south road, when the coaches sped across its narrow
roadway daily, it was something of importance ; but since that era
ceased it has not figured conspicuously beyond being an excellent
country road. Perhaps the only incident worth noting in the
century—beyond the improvement already mentioned—is one which, strange
to say, adds to the death-roll which has been made on the old bridge. On
20th April, 1818, when two police officers, were conveying James Grant
from Stonehaven jail to Aberdeen, to stand his trial before the Circuit
Court for sheepstealing at Bridge of Dye, the desperate prisoner broke
clear at the Bridge of Dee and threw himself over the parapet. He
fractured his skull and died instantly. |