IT remains to say a
few words concerning other members of the partially and temporarily
resuscitated Blackballs of Barra. It will be remembered that the
mother of Alexander Blackhall of Barra, later of that Ilk, whose
estate was forfeited, was Agnes Burnet, the daughter of Alexander
Burnet of Leys (p. 34). It will also be remembered that it was the
laird of Leys of the time who became cautioner for Alexander
Blackhall and his brother James, against their co-portioners the
Kings, during the period of enmity between these families, which
followed the threat and the accomplishment of the forfeiture. It is
not, therefore, surprising to find that the forfeited Blackhalls of
Barra appear to have taken refuge for a time on Leys’ estate
apparently as tenant farmers, or in any case as residents, when the
long-suffering Alexander Burnet again became surety in 300 merks
each for Alexander, William and Adam Blackhall all in Leys, that
they should not invade the interests of a salmon fishery (p. 56).
This occurred in 1592, and the above Alexander was in all
probability the late portioner of Barra, who had recently acquired
Blackhall, but was not yet acknowledged as of that Ilk, while
William and Adam were his brothers. With Alexander I have dealt
fully in the preceding chapter. Of Adam we learn no more. William,
the tenant of Leys, appears to have been a man of energy like his
nephew, namesake and fellow in family misfortune, William Blackhall
of that Ilk. At the time of his death, in 1623, William Blackhall of
that Ilk owed this William Blackhall “ in the Leyes,” one thousand
pounds “ borrowit money.” (James Mill’s Register.) After the
Blackhalls had relinquished Barra, part of Finnersie appears to have
belonged for a time to Gilbert Keyth, the eldest son of Magnus Keyth,
who had a charter under the Great Seal in 160*5 of the third part of
Meikle and Little Finnersie and Monecht.
With the mill of Finnersie and of the mill-lands astrieted and
multured, and the sucken and knaveship of the same, in the parish of
Echt. They are stated to have been held “per servitum warde” by
Alexander Blackhall of that Ilk (formerly of Barra) and James Keith
of Kinnadie, and resigned by them in favour of Gilbert Keith. (Reg.
Mag. Sig.) The William Blackhall, whom we are now considering,
acquired Finnersie, which had formed part of the forfeited Barra
estates, and deserves separate mention as the first of three
generations of lairds of Finnersie, who did something to repair the
fortunes of their family.
I. William Blackhall of Finnersie.
It was not till 1622 that William Blackhall himself had sasine of a
fraction of the old home of his family. Before that date, however,
he had acquired land in other parts of the country. He had sasine on
June 11th, as has already been stated (p. 59), on a charter of
alienation by James Gordon, apparent of Lesmoir in life-rent, and to
his sons, Alexander and Thomas, and their heirs and assigns
whatsoever, of the lands of Meikle Cults, Overtown of Cults,
Nethertown, Auldtown of Cults, Milntown, Tullichardo, &c., lying in
the barony of Cults and parish of Tarland. On June 29th, 1605, he
also had sasine of the town and lands of Easter Eschintullis with
the woods and salmon fishing on the water of Dee, &c., in the barony
of Maryeulter and Sheriffdom of Kincardine. Alexander Blackhall, son
of John Blackhall in Drum-schelock, and probably a cadet of Barra,
is witness. On November 12th, 1606, he had sasine on a charter of
alienation by Alexander Burnet of Leys of the Mains of Culter,
called Culter Cuming, and of the lands of Over Cantley, in the
barony of Culter Cuming and parish of Peter-culter. On the 18th of
February, 1622, however, he had sasine of the sunny third of the
lands of Meikle and Little Finnersie, the sunny third of the lands
of Monecht, and third part of the mill of Meikle Finnersie or
Finrasies, as it is spelt in the deed, which formerly pertained to
William Wood of Colpnay (Aberdeenshire Sasines), who was one of
those present at the baptism of John Blackhall of that Ilk (James
Mill’s Register). Ilis son, Alexander, appears to have been a co-portioner
with his father of Finnersie. as he is a witness to this deed, and
is designed portioner of Meikle Finnersie. Saline was given to
Thomas Blackhall as his father’s attorney. I have not discovered the
name of the wife of William Blackhall of Finnersie, but he certainly
had three sons :—
1. Alexander of Finnersie.
2. James, who witnessed a charter of his father of Little and
Meikle Finnersie, &c., in 1621, to his eldest brother, Alexander.
William Blackhall is designed in this document, “late in Ley, now in
.Lochtown ” (Aberdeenshire Sasines, Vol. V., fol. 408). He appears
to be the same person as “ James Blackhall, burgess in Aberdeen, who
witnessed a charter of Alexander Blackhall of Finnersie, with
consent of Francis Fraser of Kinmundic, to Robert Blackhall at Mill
of Cruden.” Of his subsequent history nothing is known.
3. Thomas. He appears to have had an interest, as already stated,
in the lands his father acquired from Gordon of Lesmoir (p. 59). He
is the Mr. Thomas Blackhall, burgess of Aberdeen, of whom I have
already given some particulars (p. 48). He was married, as already
stated (p. 49), and had issue, apparently two daughters, as also
already mentioned.
I have not discovered the date of William Blackhall’s death, but he
was succeeded by his son.
II. Alexander Blackhall of Finnersie.
Like his brother Thomas, he had an interest in his father’s property
in the parish of Tarland, and was a Master of Arts of King’s College
in 1616 (loc. cit.). He seems to have been portioner of Finnersie in
16.22 (loc. cit.). He had sasine on a charter from his father of
Finnersie, &c., in 1626, the original grant being dated 1621 (loc.
cit.), but his own most considerable transaction in land appears to
have been in 1636, when for 10,500 merks, Francis Fraser of Kynmundy,
with consent of Marion Elphinstone, his spouse, and Andrew, Master
of Fraser, his brother, infefted Alexander Blackhall of Finnersie in
the lands of Tarduff, and others in the parish of Longside, the
lands being redeemable by the said Francis on the repayment of the
said sum. This is that “ cousin ” of Father Blakhal’s, to whom the
priest betook himself as a substantial person when he needed a loan
for the widow of Lord Melgum, who perished at the burning of
Frendraught House. The narrative of the whole of this transaction is
so characteristic of the shrewd kindliness of the worthy priest, and
apparently of his cousin’s also, that one is tempted to quote it at
length, but it is too long for this purpose, and the reader must be
referred to the original ('op. cit., pp. 71-75). In short, Father
Blakhal not only received the money he required from his well-to-do
cousin, Alexander Blackhall of Finnersie, but paid it back with ten
per cent, interest when it had served his purpose. “ And this is the
ground,” he adds, “whereupon she did found my chamberlanshippe ”
(op. cit., p. 75). Robert Blackhall of Cruden did not contribute to
this loan, as he stated he had no spare cash in consequence of
having to give 2000 livres to Alexander Blackhall of Finnersie.
These two cousins seem, indeed, at this time to have had
considerable financial transactions, for the charter on which
Alexander Blackhall had sasine on May 18th, 1636, was transferred on
July 5th in the same year, with consent of Francis Fraser of
Kinmundie, to Robert Blackhall of Cruden (Aberdeenshire Sasines,
Vol. X., fol. 199). Whom Alexander Blackhall of Finnersie married
does not transpire. He appears to have had three children :—
1. William, who is designed portioner of Finnersie in 1638.
2. James, tenant of “ Ley.”
3. Margaret, who, as his third wife, married John Farquharson
of Tulliecairne, who, together with Donald Farquharson, the son of “
his first spouse,” Elspet McIntosh, granted a charter to her and the
lawful heirs of the marriage, of “ two ploughgates and four oxgaits
of the town and lands of Tulliecairne with the lands, &c., lying in
the parish of Glentanner. The deed was signed at Kincardine O’Neil
on June 4th, 1641, with sasine on June 13th in the same year. It is
witnessed by “ William Blackhall, lawful son of Alexander Blackhall
of Finnersie” (Aberdeenshire Sasines, Vol. XII., fol. 27). There
appears to have been a son of this marriage, who was retoured heir
to his father in 1692. In the retour (General Retours), Margaret is
designed the third wife of John Farquharson.
Alexander Blackhall of Finnersie was succeedcd by :—
III. William Blackhall of Finnersie.
In July, 1638, he had sasine on a charter granted to him and his
wife, Margaret Burnet, and the survivor of them in conjunct fee and
life-rent of the shadow third part of the town and lands of Monecht,
in the parish of Echt and barony thereof. The grantors of the
charter were Mr. Robert Forbes, portioner of Finnersie and Monecht,
minister of the Kirk of Echt, and Mr. Alexander Forbes, W.S., his
son, with the consent of their respective wives, Elizabeth Arbuthnot
and Janet Simpson (Aberdeenshire Sasines, Vol. XI., fol. 141). The
lands given to the grandfather of this William Blackhall were
incorporated into the free tenandry of Meikle Finnersie, the chief
mansion house on the portion of Finnersie thus incorporated being
ordained as the chief messuage (Reg. Mag. Sig., 1619). These lands
were inherited by Alexander Blackhall, and then by William Blackhall
now under consideration. In 1649, Finnersie appears finally to have
left the possession of the Blackhalls. In that year Hugh Irving of
Beilsyde had a charter under the Great Seal of the sunny third of
the town and lands of Meikle and Little Finnersie and of the sunny
and shadow thirds of Monecht with the mills and fishings. They are
stated in this charter to have belonged previously to Alexander
Blackhall, some time of Lochton of Dores and then of Finnersie, and
“ cum aliis terri.-> et juribus decimarum ” are stated to have been
worth “970 lib. 13 sol. 8 den.”, and “48 lib. 10 sol. 8 den.”, on
17th of October, 1646. After this date there is no mention of the
possession of Finnersie by the Blackhalls, or of their possessing
other lands, and it may therefore be assumed that it records their
final appearance as a landed family in the county. Of their
descendants, with the exception of the retour of Farquharson of
Tillicairne in 1692 already mentioned, I have failed tc learn
anything positive. Mr. Munro indicates William Blackhall, Armorer in
Aberdeen, as a descendant either of William Blackhall of Finnersie
or of his brother, the tenant of Leys. He became a burgess of Old
Aberdeen on December 4th, 1683, and a burgess of trade of Aberdeen
011 November 25 th, 1685. As in the case of the head of the house,
so in that of these cadets of Barra, the recovery from the
forfeiture and its consequences was but transient.
This short account of the Barra Blackhalls of that Ilk and of the
Blackhalls of Finnersie, imperfect as it is, would, however, be
still more so, did we not deal at a little greater length with the
personality and relationship to this branch of the family, of Father
Gilbert Blakhal or Blackhall, whose short but lucid and interesting
work already mentioned, has done more to perpetuate the memory of
the name he bore, than any accidental connection with acres,
possessed by genealogical succession. Not that the continuous
possession of acres, undisturbed by extraordinary circumstances,
such as the forfeitures we have been considering, is without value
as an indication of the moral and physical stability of a family. A
small estate long preserved in the same race, is direct evidence of
a long line of ancestors of more than average prudence, whose
collective virtues have been strong enough to counteract the
hairbrained escapades of an occasional heritor, whose malign little
day is to be found chronicled in the annals of most old families. It
must be admitted, however, that the law of entail came at times to
the aid of virtue, or even helped to obviate the natural
consequences of improvidence.
Mr. John Stuart, the Editor for the Spalding Club of Father
Blackhall’s Brieffe Narration, had evidently little material to hand
concerning the origin of the writer of the story. He makes some
reference to the Blackhalls of that Ilk in his preface, states that
Father Blackhall nowhere mentions that he was connected with this
family, but that he claimed kin with Alexander Blackhall of
Finnersie and Robert Blackhall in Cruden (p. vii.) He claims descent
likewise from the Leslies of Balquhain and the Ogilvies of Findlater.
The silence of the priest as to his relationship with the Barra
Blackhalls of that Ilk, to whom he must have been related if a
cousin of Finnersie’s, may perhaps be regarded as corroboration,
rather of the Protestant heresy of that family, than as evidence of
Father Blackhal’s not being of the same stock.
The Blackhalls of Finnersie were, we have learned, cadets of the
partially resuscitated Blackhalls of Barra, and we know that several
members of that family, as well as of the original Blackhalls of
that Ilk, were Roman Catholics. In 1589, Alexander Seton of Meldrum
became surety in 1000 merks for Alexander Blackhall, portioner of
Barra, that he, among others, would “attempt not) mg in hurte or
prejudice of his Majestie, his authoritie, the present estate,
realme and legis, nor the religion presentiy professit within the
same, &c.” (Register of the Privy Council, Vol. IV., p. 378). We
cannot, however, infer from this reference that Alexander Blackhall
of Barra was an obdurate Papist. Indeed, as has already been stated,
he, in all probability, it was, who three years later as Alexander
Blackhall of that Ilk, signed a Protestant Agreement in Aberdeen (p.
63). The refractoriness to which this injunction refers was, much
more probably, connected with the troubles between the King and the
first Marquess of Huntly, as a very large number of persons had to
find security for peaceful allegiance at the same time. This is
pointed out by the editor of the Privy Council Register. But an
extract taken from the Book of Bon-Accord (p. 229) is also published
by the editor of the Narration in his prcface (xix.-xx.) to the
effect that “Even in the reign of Charles I., the ancient faith was
held by the Marquis of Huntly and the chief men of his name, such as
the Lord Aboyne, the Lairds of Craig, Gight, Abergeldie, Lesmore and
Letterfourie ; by the Earl of Errol and his kinsmen of Delgaty and
Fetterletter ; and by many other ancient or powerful houses, such as
the Leslies, the Bissets and the Blackhalls in the Garioch; the
Irvings and Couttses in Mar; the Cheynes, the Cons and the Turings
in Buchan.” The Blackhalls here referred to must be the Barra
Blackhalls of Finnersie, for we know that the Barra Blackhalls of
that Ilk were Protestants certainly from the date on which Alexander
Blackhall of that Ilk signed the Band anent the Religion and
afterwards. His son, it will be remembered, was a parishioner and
friend of Mr. James Mill of Inverurie, and was buried in the kirk
there. There can be little doubt, however, that Father Blackhall
belonged to the Barra branch of the family. The question then is,
what was his precise position on that tree. The only other Gilbert
Blackhall with whose name I have met was tenant of Colohorsie, and
witness to a charter of Alexander Blackhall of that Ilk (who was
also the head of the house of Barra) to Alexander Irvine and his
daughter, Margaret Blackhall, in 1605 (Aberdeenshire Sasines, Vol.
V., fol. 46). He may or may not have been related to Father Gilbert
Blackhall, for Gilbert was not commonly in use among the Blackhalls
as a Christian name. If the priest was a “cousin german” of
Alexander Blackhall of Finnersie, he was probably descended from
Adam or James Blackhall, brothers of the forfeited laird of Barra.
If he was not, there were, as we have learned, several younger sons
in the immediately preceding generations, from one or other of whom
he must have been descended, and used the term “cousin german” in
its more elastic sense as a paternal cousin.
As his narrative was written in Paris in 1666-67, when he was over
seventy years of age, and he became a student at the Scotch College
in Rome in 1625, it may be inferred that he was born towards the end
of the 16th century. He continued to study in Rome for four years,
and “was ordained sub-deacon on the 23rd of February, deacon on the
16th, and priest on the 30th March, Easter Eve, 1630” (loc. cit.,
ix.). In the following year he became confessor to Lady Isabella
Hay, in Paris, on the recommendation of his cousin, Mr. James
Forbes, who soon afterwards, for quite sufficient reasons, became
his avowed enemy.
His narrative commences with a dramatic explanation of the causcs of
this quarrel, and proceeds to recount his adventures in the service
of the three noble Ladies Isabella Hay, Lady Aboyne and the daughter
of the latter. From the first and the last of these the worthy
priest had little thanks. Lady Aboyne, however, appears to have been
much attached to him, and he to her, and the narrative which is
dedicated to her daughter is a pathetic and indignant justification
of his services to her relatives, and a dignified upbraiding of her
insulting ingratitude. The whole work is regarded, by those capable
of forming an opinion, as a very valuable contribution, by an
observant eye-witness and trenchant writer, to the knowledge of some
interesting bye-paths in the history of his time. It also shows
Gilbert Blackhall in his various relations as priest, chamberlain
and soldier or “captain,” as he terms it, to have been, what he set
much store by, an honourable and brave “gentleman.” When the
relations between Lady Aboyne’s daughter and himself had grown
strained, he appears to have called at her house to ask for an
explanation, and to have been kept waiting at the door in a manner
which offended his self-respect. He bade her "laquay” inform her
that her mother was as great a lady as herself, “who,
notwithstanding, never did hold me, nor no other, aither priest or
gentleman, at her dore, and you know I was both, whom you did hold
at yours.” He was now “passed threescore and tenne,” and repelled
with indignation some unworthy insinuations made by Madame de
Gordon—adding “But, Horn soil qui mal y pens'
The narrative is full of graphically told dangers on land and sea—
by field and flood, and is not devoid of a sense of grim humour on
the part of the much tried traveller, but ever shows a duty kept
steadily in view as a lode star, which led through many difficulties
to the desired end. Those who have not read the “Brieffe Narration
of Services rendered to Three Noble Ladyes by Gilbert Blakhal,
Priest of the Scots Mission in France in the Low Countries and in
Scotland,” have a pleasure in store for them.
Where or when Father Blackhall died is unknown, but that he had
lived man’s allotted time may be gathered from what has been stated,
and like many another agent of the Great Organisation of which he
was, in his own sphere, an active and intelligent member, he
doubtless fell asleep in peace, knowing that his task would be
continued by younger and more active hands, until they too laid down
the cheerfully borne burden, to be assumed by yet others. |