IX. Alexander
Blackhall of that Ilk (V. of Barra).
IT is not probable that Alexander Blackhall himself, although
declared his cousin’s heir, ever resided at Blackhall, or had actual
possession of his property. All the evidence points, as we have
seen, to his having been the son or grandson of Robert Blackhall of
Fola, burgess of Aberdeen, and the instrument of retour, although
illegible in many parts, states that the inquest was made in
Aberdeen, and among those sitting upon it, besides some county
gentry, there were several burgesses of Aberdeen. It is probable,
therefore, that this Alexander Blackhall’s interests were cast in
the royal burgh, and that his own future would have been that of a
burgess but for the death of his cousin without male issue. Mr.
Munro, in his examination of the burial registers of St. Nicholas
Church in Aberdeen, found that he died, and was buried in that
church in 1593, about three years after he had disposed of his
inheritance to Alexander Blackhall of Barra, who must henceforth be
regarded as Blackhall of that Ilk. The similarity of the Christian
name of these two Blackhalls and their contemporaneous existence has
led to some confusion between them, and I am indebted to Mr. Munro
for making the situation clear on this point. The correctness of his
conclusion is also proved by the terms of the charter of
confirmation of 1610, in which the Aberdonian Alexander Blackhall,
is referred to as the late Alexander Blackhall of that Ilk, and his
decease specifically mentioned.
By 1604 the representatives of the forfeited Blackhalls of Barra
were apparently recovering in a measure from the blow they had
sustained, and on the 29th of May in that year, as Alexander
Blackhall of that Ilk, the former laird of Barra witnesses a charter
given by James Gordon, apparent of Lesmoir, to his brother William
Blackhall in Leyes in liferent, and to Alexander and Thomas
Blackhall, apparently sons of the latter, equally afterwards, of a
considerable amount of land lying in the barony of Cults. (Reg. of
Sasiues, Aberdeen, Vol. III., fol. 374.J In October of the same year
he was a man of sufficiently established position to become surety
as Alexander Blackhall of that Ilk, for Patrick Leslie of Badifurrow,
that he would not fish for salmon in the Dec and Don “ in forbidden
time, with any kind of engine, under pain of horning." At the same
time he also became surety with Patrick Leslie of Kincraigy in 500
merks for Norman Leslie and others that they should desist from the
same pursuit. It is rather amusing to find the sedate Alexander
Blackhall of that Ilk acting in this capacity when, twelve years
previously, Burnet of Leyes seems to have been surety for him and
his brothers soon after the confiscation of Barra, that they should
not poach salmon in the Don and Dee (p. 56). He further witnesses,
in 1606, sasine on a charter of lands in the barony of
Culter-Cumining by Alexander Burnet of Leyes to William Blackhall in
Leyes.
In 1607 again he witnesses, together with Alexander Burnet of Leyes,
a charter of part of the lands of Auchterarne to Arthur Skene, also
as Alexander Blackhall of that Ilk. Curiously enough, the
documentary reappearance of Blackhall of that Ilk as witnessing a
charter of Auchterarne, may be correlated with an inquest concerning
the same lands, then named Ouchirarne, which was held at Aberdeen in
1504, and on which, among others, sat a previous head of the family,
namely, William Blackhall of that Ilk. (Antiquities of Banff and
Aberdeen, Vol. II., p. 11, quoting from MSS.)
But the year 1607 saw more than a witnessing of a charter, for in
January of that year Alexander Blackhall himself had sasine of the
town and lands of Meikle Cocklaw. (Aberdeen Sasines, Vol. VIII.) Two
years later he was the principal actor in an important family
compact to be now mentioned which for a time seems to have entailed
serious consequences on himself and others, if this transaction can
be regarded as the cause of a fresh forfeiture to be mentioned
presently.
On the 4th of September, 1609, and dated at Invercannie, Alexander
Blackhall of that Ilk granted a charter of Blackhall to his son,
William, and to the wife of the latter, Elizabeth Strathauchin or
Strachan, to whom he appears to have sold (vendidit) the place. This
charter was confirmed by the King on April 4th, 1620, when the
Blackhalls seem again to have been in unquestioned possession of
Blackhall and of the offices so long associated with their name. In
the interval, however, a fresh confiscation, possibly brought about
by this family arrangement having been come to without the knowledge
or permission of the King, had taken place, and Blackhall and the
Coronership and Forestership of the Garioch, as I shall relate,
passed for a time into the possession of Alexander Burnet of Leyes.
How Blackhall again came into the possession of the Blackhalls,
after the grant of both lands and offices to Alexander Burnet of
Leyes in 1613, can only be surmised.
If (and although possibly entertaining the best intentions in the
world towards some members of the Blackhall family) John Leslie, the
tenth of Balquhain, can be regarded as their evil genius, who, by
his interdiction of the Aberdonian Alexander Blackhall of that Ilk,
directly and indirectly brought misfortune on all, Alexander Burnet,
the twelfth of Leyes, and his immediate successors, may, without
doubt, be regarded as the good genii of Alexander Blackhall of Barra
and his children, who had become, as I have related, Blackhalls of
that Ilk, by the bargain of 1590 with the Aberdonian heir of the
laird who died in 1589. Alexander Burnet of Leyes, whose homely and
benevolent features are reproduced in the New Spalding Club history
of his family (p. 41), was a contemporary, and, as we have seen,
relative of Alexander Blackhall of Barra and that Ilk. He was the
laird or baron of Leyes from 1578 till 1619.
The period of the condonation of the feudal irregularity of which
Alexander Blackhall had been guilty, in negotiating the transfer of
the Blackhall property and honours in 1590, is marked by the charter
of confirmation of August 2nd, 1610. It is somewhat surprising,
therefore, to learn from the charter of July 30th, 1613, that
Blackhall and the hereditary offices were granted by the King to
Alexander Burnet of Leyes in consequence of a return of these to his
possession by reason of alienation without the royal sanction. This
should manifestly refer to a then recent alienation, for all the
older Blackhall forfeitures were now matter of a too well remembered
past. The only alienation one would say to which reference could be
meant was, therefore, that by which Alexander Blackhall of that Ilk
sold Blackhall to his son, William Blackhall, on the occasion of his
marriage with Elizabeth Strachan in 1609.
This transaction, which was not confirmed by charter, as I have
stated, till April 4th, 1620, took place on September 4th, 1609,
according to the original charter detailed in the confirmatory
charter of the above date. (Reg. Mag. Sig., Vol. 49, No. 386.) This
date, however, is not that given in the document recording this
transaction, which was handed in at the Mar trial. In this paper,
the date of the registration of the deed at Aberdeen is given as
Nov. 23rd, 1610, that is, a date later, not earlier, than the King’s
confirmation on August 2nd, 1610, of the transaction between the
Aberdonian and Barra Alexander Blackhalls. It is possible that the
retention by Alexander Blackhall of that Ilk (late of Barra) of the
hereditary offices, while he parted with the property to his son,
may have been due to the hope of minimising the scope of the
alienation, if objection were taken to it later, for as a family the
Blackhalls had had sufficient experience of feudal legal processes
to render needful every precaution against forfeiture in the
interest of impoverished or self-seeking persons having influence
with the agents of the Crown.
In any case, whatever precautions they took on this occasion were
not sufficient, for, as we have seen, confiscation again followed.
And yet, this quiet family transaction, similar to so many which
were invariably confirmed by the sovereign of the time, can scarcely
have been the essential cause of the fresh confiscation. The whole
matter, therefore, is one of surmise, and it is possible that the
regularisation of the transaction between Blackhall of Barra and his
kinsman of that Ilk, may have alarmed the Setons, or others
interested in the confiscated Barra estates. Such a supposition, if
valid, would throw some light on the motives which possibly prompted
the original action of Alexander Blackhall then of Barra, and now of
that Ilk, in seeking to obtain the family honours.
The charter by which the King gave Blackhall and the offices to
Alexander Burnet of Leyes in 1613, was not produced at the Mar
trial, nor was any annulment of it.
Among the favourite advisers of James VI. at this time was Alexander
Seton, the first Earl of Dunfermline, and Great Chancellor of
Scotland, a younger son of that Lord Seton who was so faithful an
adherent of Queen Mary’s during her misfortunes. He was one of the
Octavians, as has already been stated, and certainly, at the
commencement of the 17th century, entertained a warm friendship for
Alexander Burnet of Leyes, as is evidenced in a letter reproduced in
the history of the Burnetts (op. cit.). The grant of Blackhall and
the offices is made by the King to Burnet, his heirs and assigns
whatsoever (suisque heredibus et assignatis quibuscunque), on the
advice of this Karl of Dunfermline.
In view of subsequent events, and of the attitude of intimate and
helpful friendship shown to the young Blackhall family by the
Burnetts* on the death of their father, William Blackhall of that
Ilk in 1623, the conclusion is forced upon us that this transfer of
Blackhall to Alexander Burnet of Leyes was effected with the help of
the Earl of Dunfermline, and in the interest of the again forfeited
Blackhalls themselves.
As the charter restoring Blackhall to the Blackhalls, or its
registration, is not mentioned in the charter of confirmation of
1620, and was not produced at the Mar trial later, and, moreover, as
Alexander Burnet of Leyes died in 1619, it is legitimate to suppose
that it was never intended by Burnet and Dunfermline to be a
permanent forfeiture, and that the documents were intentionally torn
up or renounced by Alexander Burnet, an irregularity, if such were
the case, which could only evoke human sympathy, as tending to
rectify an injustice perpetrated under an iniquitous system. A
friend at Court was useful in those days, and if he evinced the
eternal quality of human sympathy, coupled with a sense of justice,
we do not feel disposed to criticise too severely such an instance
of official partiality, at which the King himself, now comparatively
rolling in riches, may have been induccd to connive.
It is difficult otherwise to account for the facts that, so soon
after this fresh forfeiture, the Blackhalls were again in possession
of Blackhall and their hereditary offices, and that no documentary
"The spelling of this surname with the double tt appears to have
become usual from the time of the first Baronet of Leys. Previously
to that period, it was spelt irregularly, but usually with one t.” A
like irregularity characterised the spelling of the name of the
property —Leys—before that time, and I have frequently reproduced
that used in the original source consulted.—A. M. evidence of their
rcacquisition of these is to be found prior to the confirmatory
charter of 1620 already mentioned, which makes no reference to the
important event which had occurred in the interval. The historian of
the Burnetts makes no attempt to explain the matter, but, very
naturally, appears not to have inquired into the transaction very
minutely, as it was only a collateral incident in the general stream
of his story.
Alexander Blackhall of that Ilk appears to have married Grissel (or,
as it is interlined in the source from which Macfarlane gets his
information, “Aegidia,” “Giles”) Leslie, a daughter of George Leslie
of Creichie, and grand-daughter of William Leslie of Wardes.
(Macfarlane’s Genealogical Manuscripts, edited by Clark, Vol. II.,
p. 68.) He seems to have had two children, William, his successor,
of whom more presently, and a daughter, Margaret, who married
Alexander Irving in Achmoir, and who had a feu charter, in 1606, of
the east half of the town and lands of Blackhall, conjointly with
her husband and to their heirs. (Register of Sasines, Aberdeen, Vol.
V., fol. 46.) In 1614, Alexander Blackhall of that Ilk resigned his
legal interest in Minnis, along with several others, to John Seton
of Auquhorties, when it was incorporated as a free barony under John
Seton, with the manor house of Minnis as its chief seat.
Alexander Blackhall survived his son William, and died some time
after 1634, for, in that year, he was a defendant, as we shall
learn, with his grandson, in the action for reduction brought
against them by the Earl of Mar. Like his friend Burnet of Leyes,
although (and perhaps because) descended from Janet Hamilton, the
natural daughter of the gay old Canon of St. Machar’s, Alexander
Blackhall’s sympathies were with the Reformed Church, for in 1592,
as Alexander Blackhill of that Ilk, he seems to have signed the Band
anent the Religion in Aberdeen, and we know that his descendants,
like the Burnetts, were Protestants. He was succeeded, therefore,
during his life-time by his son,
X. William Blackhall of that Ilk,
who was born probably shortly prior to his father’s acquisition of
Blackhall. How he was occupied after the Barra forfeiture does not
transpire, but in 1610 he appears on the scene possessed of
sufficient means to secure two wadsets on the estate of Leslie of
Balquhain.
On the 31st of May in that year, John Leslie, fiar of Balquhain,
wadset to him the lands of Auldtown of Knockenblews for 6000 merks
(History of the Family of Leslie, by Col. Leslie, Vol. III., p. 81),
and on the 9th of June, also in 1610, he acquired for 3200 merks a
wadset on Whitecross. John Leslie, fiar of Balquhain, redeemed the
latter by repaying William Blackhall 3200 merks on January 27th,
1619 (Ibid., Vol. III., p. 83), but the latter still held the wadset
on Knockenblews at the time of his unfortunately early death. One of
the documents produced at the Mar trial also shows that William
Blackhall had a grant of Knockenblews under the Great Seal.
The deed by which Alexander Blackhall of that Ilk parted with
Blackhall to his son, and in virtue of which the latter became
William Blackhall of that Ilk during his father’s lifetime, is in
the following terms:—It is a deed for the fulfilment of a contract
of marriage entered into by Alexander Blackhall and his eldest son
and heir apparent William Blackhall on the one part, and John
Strathauchin designed of Clune and sometime Tutor of Thornton and
his “sister german” Elizabeth Strachan as principals on the other,
with Mr. John Strachan, rector of Kincardine O’Neil, David Tulloch
of Craigneston and William Strachan sometime of Tillifroskie as
cautioner. This marriage contract is dated, as I have said, at
Invercannie on September 4th, H'09, and the deed was presented at
Aberdeen on November 23rd, 1610; the whole being confirmed by the
King, as I have stated, at Edinburgh on April 4th, 1620 (Reg. Mag.
Sig.), The sale of Blackhall to William Blackhall and Elizabeth
Strachan was in conjunct fee to them and without reversion ; also to
their legitimate heirs male, whom failing to the heirs male and
assigns whatsoever of the said William, whom failing Blackhall was
to revert to Alexander Blackhall, and his heirs male and assigns.
The latter reserved to himself, as has already been mentioned, the
life-rent of the Coronership and Forestership of the Garioch. It
will be observed that the heirs male whatsoever (heredibus suis
masculis et assignatis quibuscunque) and assigns of William
Blackhall had the precedence over any heirs male or assigns (heredibus
masculis et assignatis) of his father. That is, that the male
representatives whatsoever and assigns of William Blackhall took
precedence of the other male heirs and assigns of his father, who
were, as we shall presently learn, younger members of the Barra
family who had reacquired Finnersie, a portion of the old estate,
and his daughter and her husband, Alexander Irving. To this
arrangement Alexander Irving in Achmoir, to whom and his wife, as we
have learned, half of Blackhall was granted, assented. (Cum precepto
sasine directo Alex. Irving in Auchmoir.) Of Elizabeth Strachan, the
wife of William Blackhall and the mother of his children, I shall
write more fully presently. They had five children.
1. John, baptised on March nth, 1617.
2. Margaret, the eldest daughter.
3. Janet, the second daughter, b. 1615.
4. Jean, d. 1622.
5. Katharine, baptised on May 19th, 1622.
These particulars of his family have been preserved by the
fortunately extant private register of Mr. James Mill, minister of
Inverurie, now in the Register House in Edinburgh.
On July 10th, 1623, there is registered (Reg. of Sasines, Aberdeen,
Vol. IV., fol. 168) a renunciation by William Watt in Balquhain of
his right to “ the sunny four ox gait of the shaddow pleugh of the
town and lands of Blackhall to Alexander Blackhall of that Ilk and
his son William for 600 merks repaid to him by them. For this sum
Alexander Blackhall had wadset the land to William Watt in
Middletoun of Knockenblewis, the father of the renouncer.
William Blackhall of that Ilk died on the 27th of November, 1623,
and the same authority informs us he was buried in the Kirk of
Inverurie (also quoted in Davidson’s Inverurie, p. 209). Mr. Mill
has given some details of his will.
It is pleasant to find among the curators of his children some names
with which we are already familiar. These were Sir Thomas Burnett,
the first Baronet of Leys, the eldest son of his old friend
Alexander Burnet of Leyes, sometime of Blackhall, and during that
time Coroner and Forester of the Garioch, John Strachan again become
Tutor of Thornton, of whom we shall say more, Patrick Maitland of
Auchincrief, who married a sister of Sir Thomas Burnett’s, and whose
ancestor married, as we have learned, one of the Blackhalls of Barra,
John Seton, of the recently erected free barony of Minnis, Robert
Burnett, Advocate in Aberdeen, and James Burnett of Craigmyle, next
brother to Sir Thomas Burnett (Family of Burnett, New Spalding Club,
p. 113).
But the main charge of his children and estate was in the hands of
his widow, who wc have reason to believe was a woman worthy of her
responsibilities. “.....he leiffes his haill Barnes to his wyff,
Elizabeth Strachane, and Nominates and leiffes his said spous Tutrix
to his haill barnes, and nominates his said spous his executrix, and
to Intromet with his haill guidis and geiris, and she to pay all his
debtes.” (James Mill’s Register.)
The scanty remains we have of the career of William Blackhall leave
the impression that he was a man well calculated to restore the
fortunes of his family. To his widow and children, as the
representatives of old traditions and as individuals, his early and
probably unexpected death (for he made his will shortly before that
event “in his awin hous in Blackhall the 22 September, 1623 yearis”)
at a crisis of their fate, must have been a great blow. Old as the
story is, the impression of tears remains. His widow assumed his
task with her weeds, and that task, with its debts and
unaccomplished purposes, was not an easy one.
Elizabeth Strachan or Blackhall was the youngest daughter of
Alexander Strachan of Thornton in the Mearns. Her mother was Isabel
Keith, a daughter of her father’s powerful neighbour, William,
fourth Earl Marischal, by that wealthy heiress, Margaret, the eldest
daughter of Sir William Keith of Inverugie, who bore him nine
daughters and two sons. Among the numerous maternal aunts of
Elizabeth Blackhall, who all married the landed representatives of
old families, she who made the most historic match, or rather
matches, was Agnes, who first married James Stewart, created Earl of
Mar on that occasion, afterwards Earl of Moray and Regent of
Scotland. The Regent’s widow married, as her second husband, the 6th
Earl of Argyll, As the representation of the main line of the
Strachans of Thornton, the acknowledged chiefs of a once powerful
family, passed into female representation, either in Elizabeth
BlackhalFs time or soon afterwards, it may not be amiss in this
place to say a few words about that ancient race, as we may gather
from her surroundings to some extent what manner of woman Elizabeth
Blackhall was.
It has already been mentioned that, in 1309, King Robert the Bruce
granted a charter of the lands of Thornton to Valens de Thornton.
The heiress of Thornton appears to have been Agneta de Thornton, who
married, in the reign of David II., Sir James Strathcean. From that
period till the date we are considering, Thornton remained in the
hands of the Strachans, and even at the present day, Thornton
Castle, lying about two miles north-west of Laurencekirk, though
much modernised, retains the old round tower and battlemented block
which recall the ownership of the Strachans by the sculptured armory
of the trippant hart. Close by is the home farm of Hauchead, where
the Tutor of Thornton and one of the curators of William Blackhall’s
children lived, and next that lies Halkerton, the old home of the
Falconers, one of whom had been a lady of Thornton.
When Isabel Keith married Alexander Strachan of Thornton, the
financial position of the family was as secure as that of most
considerable landowners in Scotland. Alexander Strachan’s eldest
son, Robert, who married a daughter of Sir William Douglas of
Glenbervy, the 9th Earl of Angus, had predeceased him. His grandson
Alexander Strachan, ultimately the first Baronet of Thornton, was in
his minority. Isabel Keith died in 1595, and apparently in 1600-01
her husband married as his second wife Anna Mercer of Meikleour, the
widow of James Learmonth of Balcomie. Alexander Strachan of Thornton
himself died in May 1601, and his will is dated on the 14th of the
same month in that year. His sole executors were his wife and his
second, but eldest, surviving son John Strathauchine, who, his
father being dead and his nephew in his minority, was thus Tutor of
Thornton, until the birth of Alexander Strachan, his grand-nephew,
and the future second baronet. At the time of his death Alexander
Strachan of Thornton left three unmarried daughters and another son,
George Strachan, all of course children of his first wife. He wills
that his said spouse shal1 have the enjoyment, maintenance and
possession of the place of Thornton and orchards thereof with the
said son (John), she upholding and maintaining the same so long only
as she and he agree together in the household. He also bids his
three daughters, Magdalene, Katharine and Elizabeth, remain with his
said executors, so long as they hold house together in Thornton or
elsewhere, “ at least until marriages be provided to them by his
said sons and others their friends.” He also gives directions to his
executors to pruvide for some old and faithful servitors until his
grandson and heir should reach his majority, when the latter was to
assume their responsibilities in this particular, a touch of the old
patriarchal solicitude for dependants which a more emancipated age
does not always evince. (Edinburgh Commissariot of Testaments, Vol.
370
Immediately after Alexander Strachan’s having made his will, namely
on the 15th day of May, 1601, there is an instrument of seasing,
giving to Elizabeth Strachan, the youngest daughter, half the lands
of Petgarvie, one of the possessions near Thornton, which had been
in the family certainly since 1458 (Reg. of Sasines, Kincardine,
Vol. 45 ; also Reg. Mag. Sig.). The efforts of the brothers and
friends of the young ladies above mentioned were not unsuccessful.
Magdalen Strachan is stated by Rogers (.Memorials of the Strachans,
p. 36) to [have married William Rait of Halgreen. Katharine married
Robert Middleton of Killhill in the Mearns, and was by him the
mother of a doughty soldier of somewhat riotous character, once the
companion in arms and afterwards the opponent of that “glory of the
Graemes,” the great Marquis of Montrose, whose overthrow he helped
materially to accomplish, namely, General John Middleton, who opened
with his sword the world-oyster of his time, and died John, first
Earl of Middleton.
Elizabeth, as we know, married William Blackhall of that Ilk. It is
not difficult to conjecture how Elizabeth Strachan became acquainted
with William Blackhall. Her step-mother married, as her third
husband, Gordon of Lesmore, and the wife of Alexander Burnet of
Leys, the stanch friend of the Blackhalls, was Katharine Gordon, a
daughter of Gordon of Lesmore. There were also other sources of
mutual acquaintance. Thus, in 1610, Sir Thomas Burnett of Leys
married the daughter of that Sir Robert Douglas of Glenbervie, whose
sister had married Elizabeth Strachan’s eldest brother Robert. But,
in those days, the fixity of land tenure and the absence of
international communication, made a whole country side more or less
acquainted or kin.
Executor and brother John, who constantly appears in records,
looking after the interests of one or other member of his family,
had done his work very well On one occasion, when these interests
appear to have required protection, he and his friends, including
his nephew,
Alexander Strachan, the laird of Thornton, in 1613, seem to have
taken the law into their own hands, and caused Captain Alexander
Wishart of Phcsdo to disgorge an important document, “invironed
about on all sydis be a nomber of men convocat and assemblit
togidder be the said Alexander Strauchane, being in nomber auchtein
personis, and airmed with hagbutis and pistolletis prohibite to be
worne be the Lawis of this realme” .... (Reg- Sec. Sig.). Captain
Wishart gave up the document, under the influence of such cogent
argument, but brought an action against his assailants afterwards.
The lords of Secret Council, however, absolved the defendants in the
action, and the affair soon blew over. In 1617, John Strachan,
called of Corskie, was engaged in the gentler procedure of playing
sponsor or witness at the baptism of William Blackhall’s only son,
John, at Inverurie. (James Mill’s Register; Davidson’s fnverurte, p.
213.)
With these traditions it is not a matter of surprise that Elizabeth
Blackhall assumed the difficult task in her widowhood of rearing her
young family and nursing the ailing fragment of a sick estate, with
a watchful vigour which nevertheless ultimately proved futile. She
had sasme as a widow of her terce of the lands of Auldtown of
Knockin-blews on August 5th, 1625. (Aberdeenshire Sasines, Vol V.)
With this exception, in the interval between 1623, the date of
William Blackhall’s death and 1631, no documentary fact of
importance concerning his family transpires. The children were still
young. Even if the eldest daughter, Margaret, was born the year
after the marriage of her parents, she could not have been more than
twenty in 1631, and the youngest child Katharine, probably named
after her aunt, Katharine Middleton, or after Katharine Maitland of
Auchincrief, the wife of one of her guardians, would only have been
nine years of age. Margaret, to whom we shall return, may or not by
this time have married Patrick Forbes. There may have been some
fresh mortgaging of the scanty property left to the family, but of
this there is no positive evidence. The incident which again brings
the mother of the family on the scene is one which created much
interest in Scotland for some time after it occurred, and has never
been quite satisfactorily explained. On the morning of October the
8th, 1630, the tower of Frendraught House wa» burned down, and some
notable guests of James Crichton, the laird of Frendraught, perished
in the flames. These included Viscount
Melgum, the second son of the Earl of Huntly and the young laird of
Rothiemay—an important cadet of the Gordons, who had just succeeded
his father, slain in a broil with the Crichtons. In the exhaustive
investigation made into the affair, the assertions of a serving girl
called Margaret Wood, who seems to have lied freely, had to be
sifted.1 This Margaret had been in the service of Elizabeth
Blackhall shortly before the tragedy, and for one cause or another,
it appears to have been insinuated that the “Lady Blackhall” might
be able to afford some information on the subject. Accordingly, on
the 13th of January, 1631, Elizabeth Strathauchin, “Lady Blackhall,”
was summoned before some representatives of the Privy Council at
Legatsden, near Pitcaple, to answer certain questions put to her by
“ane nobill and potent lord, George, Lord Gordon.” In her replies
she denied all foreknowledge of the tragedy. “Lastlie, being
demandit, quhat moneyis the said Elizabeth Strathauchin gef at that
time to the said Margaret Wood (she) ansuerit—Nocht one penny.”
There is an emphasis about that “ nocht one penny” which reveals
both dignity and character. The document chronicling the
investigation is endorsed “Declaratione, Elizabetli Strathauchine
for cleiringe of hirself against the assertions of Margaret Wood.”
The Crichtons themselves being Protestants at that time, were freely
accused by some, especially the Roman Catholic party, of having
immolated their own guests on the altar of religious fanaticism or
of having murdered them in order to curry Royal favour, but as
Crichton was a considerable loser by the destruction of his own
property, there is no positive evidence of his having been guilty of
such perfidious conduct. (Reg- of the Privy Council, Vol. IV.,
Second Series, p. 607.)
On July the 12th of the same year (1631) a supplication was made by
Alexander Abercromby of Birkenbog and Hector Abercrombie of
Eetterncir for the protection of the law against Sir John Leslie of
Wardes and others. Among the persons asserted to have conceived a
deadly hatred and malice against them, and to have determined to
“dwang and oppress” them and their tenants, and who threatened them
“with all manner of personal violence,” appears the name of
“Elizabeth Straquhane, Ladie Blakhall.” She, together with the
lairds of Wardes, Cluny and Lesmore, the Leiths of Harthill and
several others, were bound, “ under the pain of one thousand
pounds,” not to molest the Abercrombies. The cause of the
unpopularity of this family at this time does not transpire, but,
twenty-six years later, Blackhall passed into the possession of
Francis Abercrombie, the eldest son of Abercrombie of Fetterneir,
and it may have been that there was some sympathy in the countryside
with the widowed “Ladie Blackhall” in her fight against
circumstances, as the names of those included in the indictment
suggest relationship with her.
In 1635, John Blackhall, the only son of William Blackhall of that
Ilk, was still a minor, and Blackhall and the other lands which
belonged to his father, together with the offices, were, pending his
majority, in the hands of his mother. In that year the Blackhalls,
little as they could afford it, had to defend themselves against the
action for reduction brought against them by John, Earl of Mar. |