THE early history of
the Garioch may be divided into (1) the Celtic period, which
terminated with the creation of the Earldom of the Garioch, under
David, Earl of Huntingdon; (2) from that time till the battle of
Barra, in 1307, when Robert Bruce finally overthrew the power of the
Comyns; (3) from the date of the battle of Barra to that of the
battle of Harlavv, when victory declared for the South against the
North in 1411.
Of the families which
held land and office in the Garioch prior to the battle of Harlaw,
the Blackhalls of that Ilk were one. How long before that date they
were domiciled in this district, it is difficult to determine.
Material for the early history even of powerful families, whose
descendants still continue in possession of their ancestral acres,
is frequently scanty. The troublous times in the history of their
county and country, through which many such houses have passed, have
caused the loss or destruction of charters, which would be
invaluable for historical purposes. These difficulties are increased
tenfold when an attempt is made to write the history of families,
long after they have lost touch with their lands ; while statutes of
limitation under these circumstances only require the preservation
of such deeds as are necessary for the transmission of lands to new
proprietors, who may, and frequently do, succeed one another at
comparatively short intervals. The Blackhalls appear, indeed, at one
time to have been a sufficiently powerful county family, with a
reasonable expectation of future greatness, but a division of their
estates, which seems to have taken place at an early period, also
divided their power, and since that time they do not seem to have
produced any member sufficiently distinguished to reach a public
position of power and influence. They appear, on the whole, to have
been a law-abiding ;iml steady race, who had, generation after
generation, fulfilled the duties of their position as a recognised,
though minor, county family, and suffered, as will be told,
undeserved spoliation, at the hands of those in whose service they
sacrificed both wealth and life. A circumstance fortunate for the
genealogist, but annoying, and doubtless expensive to the Blackhalls,
at: a time when they could little afford it, was the action for
reduction brought against them in 1634 by the Earl of Mar, to which
reference will again be made. Owing to this action, however, the
purport of many charters, dealing with the history of the family,
has been preserved, which would, in all probability, have otherwise
been lost.
It is generally
agreed that surnames first began to be used, in Scotland at all
events, in the reign of David I., and the most ancient surnames are
those which have been taken from lands. It may also be, that in some
instances, lands have been named after their owners, and ancient
landmarks removed, as is at times observed even in the present day.
Blackhall itself, for example, and some other old properties in the
Garioch, are now included in the estate of Manar, so called from the
Straits of Manar, where the grandfather of the present proprietor
amassed money!
As a place-name,
Blackhall, or its equivalent, is pre-Norman. It is met with in
various forms, and in different parts of the country, in Domesday
Book. Thus Blacheshale, in Somersetshire, belonged, after the
Conquest, to Roger de Corcelli, and Blachenhale and Blachehol, in
Cheshire, to Count Hugo (Earl Hugh). In 1278-79, Walter de Wigton
held the manor of Blachale, in Cumberland, and Lower, in his
Pntronymica Brittanica, derives the surname Blackhall from Blackhall
in Cumberland. Lower, however, regards Blackhall as a place-name as
a corruption of Blackwell, but the reverse is the fact. Blackhall,
now the property of Musgrave of Edenhall, immortalised by Hufeland
and Longfellow, is the ancient Blachale, in Cumberland, already
mentioned. The earliest instance I have met with of the use of
Blackhall, or its equivalent, as a surname by one presumably an
Englishman, is that of Simon de Blakeshale, who was constable of
Roxburgh Castle for Edward the First in 1306-7 (Col. of Doc.
relating to Scotland, Vol. II., p. 502). Whether in that period of
fluctuating political allegiance, he had any conncction with the
Garioch Blackhalls, who appear to have espoused the cause of Bruce,
does not transpire. As a surname, Blackhall is also met with in
England in the form of Blackewhall, Blackhall, Blackhaller and
Blackall. One of the Bishops of Exeter, in the 17th century, was
Offspring Blackall. He was born in London. His father probably came
to town as a “Blackhall,” and discontinued the use of, or “dropped
the h” in the Metropolis (Diet, of National Biography). The Bishop
had a son, Theophilus, who was a Prebendary of Exeter, and the
father of two sons, John and Samuel, of whom the former became a
distinguished physician, and the author of a work on Dropsies and
Angina Pectoris, which is still valuable; while the latter was a
somewhat pugnacious ecclesiastic, who became rector of Loughborough
(Diet, of National Biography). From a search made for me by
Portcullis Herald, at the English College of Arms, it would appear
that documentary evidence of the name bearing arms does not exist in
the repositories there prior to 1533.
The argument from
heraldry, to establish a connection between the English name and
that of the family of the Garioch, is less convincing in the case of
the latter than in that of some other families in Aberdeenshire,
such as the Bissets and Burnetts, whose southern origin can be
demonstrated.
In consequence of a
destruction of the Lyon Registers, between 1542 and 1672, an Act of
the Scottish Parliament was passed in the latter year, ordaining
those entitled to bear arms in Scotland to register the same in the
books of the Lord Lyon. The arms of the Blackhalls were not
registered. Some twenty years prior to 1672, both the Blackhalls of
that Ilk and the Blackhalls of Barra, as represented by cadets of
that family—the Blackhalls of Finnersie—had parted with their
estates, and, prior to 1655, John Blackhall of that Ilk, the last
male in the direct line of the Barra family who possessed Blackhall
and the offices, had died without issue. Although there were at that
time descendants of the original Blackhalls of that Ilk in the City
of Aberdeen, as will be shown later, one of these contented himself
with a birth-brief affirmation, but took no other steps. The
signatures to charters show, however, that the Blackhalls used their
“proper seals” on these occasions, and some particulars of their
arms have been preserved by James Pont in his “ Alphabet of Arms of
the Nobility and Gentry of Scotland,” written in 1624. Font’s
manuscript is now at Uupplin Castle, but was formerly in the Lynn
office in Edinburgh, when two generations of the Earls of Kinnoul
held the office of Lord Lyon. Copies of the manuscript are still
preserved in the Lyon office. In one of these, which I have
examined, the Blackhall arms are given as “Gules, a hooded falcon
sitting on a hand and glove, or; on a chief argent, three mullets,
gules.” Iri another copy, known as Hume’s manuscript, the arms are
given as “ Gules, a dexter hand couped fessways, and thereon a
hooded falcon perched, or; on a chief argent, three mullets of the
first.”
There must, however,
be yet another version, as Burke gives the more complete arms of
Blackhall of that Ilk as, “Gules, a hand issuing out of the sinister
flank, and thereon a falcon perching, and hooded, or; on a chief
argent, three mullets, azure; Crest, an annulet, or, stoned vert.” (
General Armoury, 1878, p. 87.) Finally, Nisbet, giving as his
authority Font’s manuscript, states as the arms of “the name of
Blackhall, gules, a hand issuing out of the sinister flank, and
thereupon a falcon perching, and hooded, or; and on a chief argent,
three mullets azure.” (System of Heraldry, Vol. I., p. 346.) The
difference in the tincture of the mullets, recorded by these
authorities, is probably due to their having been azure in the case
of one of the chief families of this name, and gules in that of the
other. At the time when Pont made his collection, moreover, it must
be remembered that the head of the house of Barra had acquired the
honours of the Blackhalls of that Ilk, and this fusion of the
chieftainship may in a measure be accountable for confusion in the
heraldic detail in question. These insignia seem very appropriate to
the hereditary Coroners and Foresters of the Garioch, and this
impression is not diminished when we know, as we do, that the feudal
reddendo for Blackhall, duly paid into the Royal Exchequer in 1462
and again in 1465, was twelve hunting dog collars (columbaria
leporariorum) (Exchequer Rolls of Scotland, Vol. VIII). It is rarely
that the herald and feudal lord in conjunction succeed in producing
so appropriate and eloquent a combination. As regards the antiquity
of the arms, Mr. William F. Macdonald, an expert authority on seals,
whom I had the pleasure of meeting in Edinburgh, is of opinion that
their very eloquence argues that they cannot be older than the
sixteenth century. It is possible that the original arms were
simpler, and showed the mullets on the chief as the principal
charge, but we know that the offices were held at the commencement
of the fifteenth century, and I have shown that the sporting
reddendo was paid during the same period.
There is also a
certain interest in considering a possible southern origin of the
Blackballs from the mullets charged on the chief, for the Devonshire
Blackhalls also bear a chief, but charged with bezants. Thus, there
is in the College of Arms, in London, a pedigree of a few
generations of Blackhalls of Cowick, in Devon, beginning with a
burgess named John Blackhall, in 1538,and also of Blackhalls of
Totnes, in Devon, commencing in 1555. These families bore: paly of
six, or and sable, and on a chief gules, three bezants. The arms of
Blackenhall, in Warwickshire, were also registered in the College in
1533. They are: party per pale or and azure, an eagle displayed,
counter-changed, charged with a mullet of the first. Here we have,
curiously enough, the chief on the shield of the Scottish Blackhalls,
with bezants instead of mullets, and an eagle displayed instead of a
falcon perching, and charged with a mullet (possibly a mark of
difference) in the arms of Warwickshire Blackenhalls. It is evident,
however, that from these faint resemblances no reliable conclusion
as to a common origin can be drawn. The Blackhalls were therefore,
possibly, like many others in the colonisation of the Garioch, of
Norman or Saxon origin, or they may have been Normanised Celts of a
later period. The point must, in the meantime, be left undecided,
until accident or research produce trustworthy evidence to settle
the question. There is, however, one point which should be mentioned
before leaving this subject.
The emerald ring as
the crest of the Blackhalls may merely be symbolical of their
coronership, as the annulet in heraldry was sometimes associated
with an official position, but it is interesting in this connection
to recall the fact that James, Lord Douglas, held “all his lands as
ane free regality, and be putting on ane ring and ane emrod on the
Earle and his successor’s fingers the day he should take sasine, by
the King” ('Robertson's Missing Charters, p. 10). It will be
remembered that the first Earl of Douglas, and his son, the hero of
Ottcrburn, were both Earls of Mar and Lords of the Garioch, while
the Blackhalls of that Ilk were Coroners of the Garioch certainly in
the time of Earl James Douglas’s sister, the Countess Isabel, and
probably earlier. The emerald ring of the Douglases and Blackhalls
may therefore be a mere coincidence, or the Garioch coroners’ crest
may have been suggested by the feudal ceremonial ring of their
overlords. From the possession, at an early date, by the Blackhalls,
of the estate of Barra, the scene of Bruce’s overthrow of Comyn,
their early official status in the Garioch, together with the
interestingly suggestive similarity between their charges on the
chief and their crest, and some of the charges in the Douglas arms,
and the emerald ring ceremonial of those early overlords of the
Garioch, I am inclined to believe that the Blackhalls belonged to
the Bruce and Douglas faction in the War of Independence, and
probably found their way to the Garioch from the south of Scotland,
and as probably went thither from Cumberland. This is, I admit,
merely surmise, but it has a reasonable probability.
As a place-name,
Blackhall is met with in all parts of the kingdom, and occurs
plentifully in Scotland. In the indices of the published volumes of
the Great Seal Register it occurs no less than fifteen times, and in
many parts of the country. Thus it is met with in Aberdeen,
Dumfries, Edinburgh, Elgin, Fife, Perth, Renfrew, Kincardine,
Kilwinning, Haddington, Dirleton, Ewisdale, Forfar, Lanark and
Stirling. So widespread a name could not, of course* be associated
with possession by a similar surname. Moreover, many of these places
must have existed before surnames came into use, and had they given
a name to persons, these would form a very numerous clan. The
Blackhalls, on the other hand, have never been a numerous people,
and the chief families of the name in Scotland are now, so far as
documentary evidence goes, extinct in the male line. The term
Blackhall was then, in all probability, originally used to denote
the seat of some widespread office.
Etymologically
regarded, there are places with the qualifying prefix “black” which
may be derived from the Norse “blakka,” meaning white or bleached,
or bleak, rather than the Anglo-Saxon “blac” or “blaec.” Thus Isaac
Taylor, in his Words and Places (3rd Ed., p. 324), suggests that
such names as Blackheath and Blackmore are quite as probably
Bleakheath and Bleakmore, but in association with “hall” in its many
forms, the Anglo-Saxon “blac” is evidently most appropriate,
although the genius of Dickens wound a story of human interest round
a “Bleak House.”
Murray (New English
Dictionary) gives as the various forms of “hall” — heall, heal,
halle, alle, hal, haule, hale, awle, hawlle, haull, the old English
heall and the old Norman holl, or hall. He might have added the
Lowland Scottish haw, the form in which Blackhall is met with in one
document (Reg. Mag. Sig., Vol. II., p. 6G8). The hall or manor house
was, we know, anciently a local court of justice. Shakespeare’s
Justice Shallow has emphasised this point. The qualification of the
term in this sense by the adjective black seems to suggest not only
a court of justice, but of condemnation and imprisonment, a hall, in
short, where a prisoner could not only be tried, but condemned and
immured, if deemed advisable. The ‘J Blackhall” might, in short,
lead to the “blackhole,” and although dictionaries are silent as to
such a derivation of the latter term, it seems quite a reasonable
transition. According to Murray (op. cit., p. 894) the punishment
cell, or lock-up in a barracks, the guardroom of to-day, was, until
1868, officially termed the black-hole.
In the monastery of
Kilwinning there was a chamber known as the Blackhall, and called
also the tolbooth for the administration of justice. In a charted
agreement between Alexander, the Commendator of Kilwinning, and
Hugh, Earl of Eglinton, dated April 23rd, 1582 (Reg. Mag. Sig.), it
is provided that “lie Blakhall nuncupand. lie tolbuith pro justicia
administranda,” is to be placed at the disposal of the latter as
bailie “suo domum,” together with other places for incarcerating
criminals, erecting gallows, or for general political purposes. In
Berwick Castle there was also a hall, called “le Blackhalle,” which,
with its kitchen and two holes (foramina), are directed to be
repaired (Col. of Doc. relating to Scotland, Vol. IV). “Nicholas of
the Blackhall” occurs as the designation of an individual in the
Close Rolls (tempore Richard II.), and probably denoted some
attendant or official in the Blackhall of a monastery. (Dictionary
of English and Welsh Surnames, by C. W. Bardsley, London, 1901.)
It is evident,
therefore, that the Blackhall was a local court of justice in
ancient times, and, as the term is Anglo-Saxon, probably dated from
that period. Hence the wide-spread occurrence of the name all over
the Kingdom. Its frequent occurrence in Scotland is probably due to
the incursion of the Saxons into that Kingdom about the time of
Malcolm Canmore, whose saintly Queen was the sister of Edgar
Atheling. The Norman conquest of England is also known to have
driven many Saxons into the neighbouring kingdom, and the present
North of England was, we know, in ancient times, as much Scottish as
English.
In endeavouring to
decide whether the Blackhalls of Blackhall, in the Garioch, gave
their name to their lands, or took :t from the latter, vve are met
with this additional difficulty, that, from a remote but
undetermined period, they were the Coroners of the district, and
exercised their jurisdiction as such at that place. The occurrence
of the name as a place-name in the district must date from the time
of the southern colonisation of the Garioch, somewhat on the lines
of the more recent Plantation of Ulster. “The origin of the
Blackhalls of that Ilk,” Dr. Davidson remarks, “is not known, nor
that of the dignity they enjoyed of hereditary Foresters and
Coroners of the Garioch” (Inverurie and the Earldom of the Garioch,
p. 228). So far as documentary evidence goes, they appear to have
been Coroners before they were Foresters, as will presently be
shown.
The antiquity of the
designation “of that Ilk,” “de eodem,” “ejusdem” and “de eadem” is
great, and the term is not altogether limited to Scotland. Thus, the
name of “Robertus de Stokes de eadem” occurs in a charter of Edward
I. in 1297 (Rymer’s Foedera). In Scottish history the designation
begins to occur most frequently in the reign of David II
(1331-1370). Prior to that it was more usual to find the name of the
owner associated with that of his lands mentioned separately. Thus
there is a charter of the lands of Thornton, in the Mearns, to
Valens de Thornton, but nowhere among Robertson’s missing charters
of the reign of Robert the Bruce do I find the style “of that Ilk,”
“de eodem” or “ejusdem,” while these terms are constantly met with
in the reign of his son.
On the whole, the
opinion seems to be well founded that in the case of the minor
aristocracy, to which a large proportion of those using the style
“of that Ilk” belonged, the owners took their names from lands
already so-called, and did not confer their names on the latter. The
writer of the Memorials of the Kilravock Family (Spalding Club:
Intro., p. 11) states that such “surnames had ever the word ‘De'
prefixed to them,” and that to within “little more than an age”
prior to his writing, which was in 1683-84.
The first documentary
evidence of the occurrence of Blackhall as a surname in the Garioch
is in 1398, when it occurs with this prefix as “de Blakhall,” On the
10th of August in that year, Willelmus de Blakhall sat on an inquest
to retour William de Tulideff (destined to fall at Harlaw), heir to
his father, John of Tulidefif. This William de Blackhall may or may
not have been the William Blackhall of that Ilk whom vve meet with a
few years later, because one of his companions on this inquest is
designated “Johannes de Abercrumby, dominus de Petmalky,” and
another “Jacobus de Malavilla (Melville)” (Reg. Episcop. Aberd., I.,
202). He was probably at least 21 years of age when he served on
this inquest, and his father probably bure the name before him,
which would take us back to the reign of David II., when, as I have
said, the style of that Ilk, or its Latin equivalent, is of frequent
occurrence.
If a Blackhall of
that Ilk existed at that time, as is most probable, his memory and
his name have perished, but the fact of a family of the name holding
place and power in the Garioch so soon after the date of the battle
of Barra (1307), would argue that the Blackhalls must have belonged
to the Bruce faction in the internecine struggle of the period, as I
have already suggested.
Documents giving the
date at which the Blackhalls first possessed Barra, where the battle
was fought, are missing, but it cannot have been later than the
commencement of the fifteenth century, and was quite possibly in the
fourteenth.
The family to whom
Bourtie in the vicinity of Barra belonged, at a very early period,
were the Lambertons (History of Aberdeen and Banff\ by William Watt,
p. 49). When and how the latter lost possession, I have not
discovered
Although the period
at which the Blackhalls acquired the estate longest in the family
cannot be precisely’fixed, there can be no doubt that they owned the
lands of Blackhall, from which they took their name, before they
possessed any others.
From one or other of
their holdings, the Blackhalls of that Ilk, Unlike many other old
families, also possessed the right of pit and allows. When John
Seton of Auquhorties received a charter in 1610 for Minnies (Reg.
Mag. Sig.), shortly afterwards (1614; erected into a free barOny
(Reg. Mag. Sig.), the grant was made “cum privilegio de infang
thief, outfang thief, sok, salt, thole/ thame, pitt and gallows,”
Those who resigned these lands and rights when John Seton acquired
them from the King, were William Udny, Senior, of that Ilk ; William
Udny, Junior, feudatory of the same; Robert Udny of Tulliquhortie;
Alexander Udny, son of the said William Udny, Senior, William Seton
of Mimy, and Alexander
Blackhall of that
Ilk. Minnies is in the parish of Foveran, and nearer.
Barra than Blackhall
We shall learn later that the Alexander.
Blackhall, here
termed of that Ilk, was the forfeited Alexander.
Blackhall of Barra,
who acquired Blackhall and the offices from a distant kinsman in
1590. It is interesting to note, in this connection, that Alexander
Blackhall, although at this date unconfirmed in the possession of
Blackhall, is nevertheless given his titular distinction “of that
Ilk” as a legal factor.
The Blackhalls, as we
shall learn in due course, possessed other lands besides Blackhall
and Barra, such as Fola, Finnersie and Cocklaw, and held wadsets
over portions of the Balquhain estate, but Blackhall and Barra must
be regarded as their original seats in the Garioch, and a short
account of the present condition of these places may be given before
proceeding further.
Of the manor house of
Blackhall no trace remains. All that bears the name now is the farm
of Blackhall—the Mains of Blackhall and Nether Blackhall. Usually
the native places the accent on the last syllable, an echo of Black
haw. It lies north-east of the principal part of the town of
Inverurie, at a distance of about two miles from the latter, and is
approached by a good road, which is named the Blackhall Road. A
small stone building roofed with tiles, and used as a smith’s
workshop or smiddy, represents the old farm house of the Mains of
Blackhall. These particulars arc all that can now be given of that
Blackhall which was, certainly from the commencement of the
fifteenth to the middle of the seventeenth century, and probably for
a still longer period, the seat of the hereditary Coroners and
Foresters of the Garioch.
In the immediate
vicinity of Blackhall, and lying west of it, is the estate of
Balquhain, pronounced Balwhyne, still owned by the Leslies (who have
assumed the name and descend through heiresses), whose ancestor,
John Leslie, the tenth laird or baron, intentionally or otherwise,
as will be shown, brought much misfortune on the Blackhalls.
Barra, on the other
hand, situated about three miles north-east of Inverurie, is still
marked by a well preserved and interesting example of the sixteenth
or early seventeenth century fortalice, which is fully inhabited by
a substantial farmer at the present day. Barra, after the forfeiture
of the Blackhalls, and their co-portioners, the Kings, passed into
the possession of George Seton, a member of the Meldrum family, and
some dates on the building indicate that it may have been altered,
repaired, or rebuilt during his tenure, or that of his immediate
successors. Portions of the building, however, seem very old;
exactly how old cannot be determined. There is a tradition, indeed,
that Robert the Bruce once slept in some portion of it, but this
cannot be regarded as having historical value. (Appendix.)
The castle, as it at
present stands, forms three sides of a shallow oblong, has a
crowstep gable in parts and round towers at the angles capped by
sharply conical roofs, and shows corbelling at one point. The oblong
or courtyard is closed in front by a simple and pretty facade,
ornamented by carved stone urns, and still more so by the moss and
houseleek which grow abundantly in the crevices of the masonry. To
the south lies a terraced garden with time-worn and moss-grown
flights of steps, and near the house there is an ancient dove cot
reminiscent of the seigneurial droit colombier. Altogether, it is a
beautiful old place, and well worthy of being, as it was in the time
of the Setons, the seat of a free barony. |