John Sinclair, who was slain in Orkney, was succeeded
by his son George, who married Elizabeth Graham, daughter of the Earl of
Montrose. [In Barrogill Castle, the seat of the present Earl of
Caithness, there is a wood carving of Caithness and Montrose. At the
upper side are the initials G. S. and E. G. One supporter is a crane,
the other a griffin, with the mottoes "Commit thy wish to God," and "Ne
oublie" (Don't forget), and the arms of Montrose are impaled on the
escutcheon with those of Caithness. These arms are no doubt those of
George, fourth Earl of Caithness of the Sinclair family, and of his
Countess, Elizabeth Graham, daughter of William, Earl of Montrose.] This
George was distinguished for talent and political intrigue, and became
possessed of greater influence in the north than any of his
predecessors. All his authority, however, was inadequate to suppress the
intestine feuds that from time to time broke out in the county. In the
autumn of 1561, William and Angus Sutherland, of Berriedale, committed
some gross outrages in Caithness, and killed several of the inhabitants
of the name of Clyne, against whom they had a grudge. For these acts the
Earl of Caithness banished them from the county, and took possession of
their castle of Berriedale. But they soon returned again; and
being assisted by Hugh Murray of Aberscross, in Sutherland, they retook
the castle, and by the admission of Sir Robert Gordon, "brunt and wasted
all the country next adjacent, and molested Catteyness with divers
incursions." John, Earl of Sutherland, it was believed, countenanced
these proceedings. At all events, he threw his protecting shield over
the aggressors; and by his interest at Court obtained from Queen Mary,
then newly arrived in Scotland, a pardon for William and Angus
Sutherland and their accomplices. This interference on the part of the
Earl of Sutherland greatly exasperated Earl George, and laid the
foundation of that hatred which the two houses of Sutherland and
Caithness for a long period after bore to each other.
In the year 1566, the Earl of Caithness obtained an
hereditary grant of the office of Justiciary, with full power of life
and death over Caithness and Sutherland. "The charter conferring these
rights," says Sir Robert Gordon, "was obtained by the credit and means
of the Earl of Bothwell, because the Earl of
Caithness was then a plotter with him of King Henry's death, and was
thereafter a partner with him in the execution of that enterprise with
the Earl of Bothwell, whose sister [The lady that he married is by other
writers said to have been Jean Hepburn, widow of John Stewart of
Coldingham, the niece, and not the sister of Bothwell. But Laing, in his
dissertation on the murder of Darnley, states explicitly that she was
Bothwell's sister.] the Earl of Caithness' eldest son married."
Sir Robert loudly accuses Buchanan of prejudice and
partiality in his history of Scotland; and there is no doubt of the
truth of the charge. But, unfortunately, the worthy baronet is guilty of
the very same fault which he imputes to that historian. He evidently
bears no good feeling to the Caithness family, and throughout he makes
the most of their misdeeds, and paints them in the very blackest
colours. The first George, Earl of Caithness, was certainly not
over-burdened with principle; but it does not appear from the history of
the period that he had any participation in the murder of Darnley. It is
true that at the trial of Bothwell he was chancellor of the jury that
acquitted him; but although there can be no doubt of the guilt of
Bothwell, the jury under the circumstances could not have given any
other verdict. Robertson, the historian, allows this, and says that "the
Earl of Caithness protested in their name that no crime should be
imputed to them on that account, because no accuser had appeared, and no
proof was brought of the indictment." It is also true that after the
mock trial—for it was nothing else—the Earl of Caithness, along with the
other Popish and Protestant lords present, subscribed the bond
acquitting Bothwell of the crime with which he was charged, and
recommending him as a fit husband for the Queen; but so did John, Earl
of Sutherland. Both were members of the Privy Council, and both were
equally friendly to Bothwell. It further appears, that immediately after
the murder of Darnley, the Earl of Sutherland, as well as the Earl of
Caithness, signed the letter [See a duplicate of this letter in the
Appendix No. 5 to Laing's History of Scotland. ] written by the Privy
Council (1567) to the queen-mother of France, in which a delusive
account is given of this shocking tragedy. Sir Robert Gordon, however,
while he would fain fasten on the Earl of Caithness the serious charge
of aiding and abetting Bothwell in the murder of the King, is discreetly
silent with regard to the conduct of the Sutherland chieftain throughout
the whole of this affair.
In the month of July this same year, the Earl of
Sutherland and his lady were both poisoned at Helmsdale, at the
instigation, it was alleged, of the Earl of Caithness. The Earl and
Countess, with their son Alexander, were at the time passing a few days
at a hunting lodge near the river of Helmsdale, the ruins of which are
still to be seen. The poison was administered to them at supper by
Isobel Sinclair, wife of Gilbert Gordon of Garty, and daughter of
William Sinclair of Dun-beath. Alexander, for whom the deadly draught
was chiefly intended, had not returned in time from a hunting excursion
in Kildonan to join them at supper, and thus had a very narrow escape.
When he arrived at the lodge, his father, fully sensible of the danger
of his situation, would not allow him to taste anything, and sent him
home that very same evening to Dunrobin. By a singular retribution,
Isobel Sinclair's own eldest son, John Gordon,' became the victim
instead of Alexander. Happening to call at the lodge, he complained of
thirst, when one of the domestics, not aware of the deadly nature of the
preparation, handed him some of the poisoned liquid, which he drank. He
died in the course of two days after; and the appearance of the body,
along with other circumstances, afforded a clue to the discovery of his
mother's guilt. The Earl and his lady, after a lingering illness of
eight days, expired at Dunrobin. Isobel Sinclair was apprehended and
sent to Edinburgh, where, after being tried and condemned, she died, or
as it was generally believed, committed suicide on the morning of the
day appointed for her execution. Although she accused, it is said, her
relative, the Earl of Caithness, of having instigated her to commit the
horrid crime, her mere assertion in this case is no proof, and cannot be
credited. The ambitious and cruel woman had a sufficient motive of her
own. Her eldest son was the next male heir to the earldom, and had she
succeeded in her diabolical scheme, he would have become Earl of
Sutherland. [Isobel Sinclair's husband, Gilbert Gordon of Garty, was the
fourth son of Adam Gordon, the late Earl.]
Influenced no doubt partly by political motives, the
Earl of Caithness managed to become curator or guardian of the young
Earl of Sutherland, then only fifteen years of age. He brought his ward
to Girnigoe, where the latter remained for some time, and married his
lordship's eldest daughter, Lady Barbara Sinclair, a woman past thirty
years of age. The young Earl and his bride then removed to the castle of
Dunrobin, where his father-in-law also took up his temporary residence.
By this family alliance, and his office of Justiciary of Sutherland, the
Earl of Caithness acquired immense power in that county, which he
exercised, it is alleged, in a very oppressive and tyrannical manner. He
was cordially detested by the inhabitants and by some of the principal
families, who took every method of thwarting his schemes and resisting
his authority. The Murrays of Dornoch, in particular, were his
inveterate enemies. By representing to the young Earl, who was still a
minor, that his father-in-law had a design upon his life, and intended
to make his son William Earl of Sutherland, they made him hurriedly quit
Dunrobin, and fly to Strathbogie, that he might be under the protection
of his relative the Earl of Huntly. When Earl George heard of the flight
of his ward, and how it was caused by the malicious counsel and
insinuations of the Murrays, his rage knew no bounds, and he resolved to
inflict a signal chastisement on them and their adherents. With this
view he solicited assistance from Mackay of Strathnaver, which that
chieftain readily agreed to give. The Earl's eldest son, John, commonly
called the Master of Caithness, was forthwith despatched from Wick with
a strong body of men. He and Mackay joined their respective forces on
the borders of the county, and then marched to Dornoch, where the
Murrays and their confederates had assembled. After some hard fighting,
the assailants set fire to the town, when the Murrays betook themselves
for safety, some of them to the castle, and others to the steeple of the
Cathedral. After holding out in both places for nearly a week, the
besieged at length agreed to surrender on certain conditions, for the
due performance of which they delivered up three of their principal
young men as pledges. Earl George, however, refused to ratify the
agreement, and because the Murrays would not yield to his terms, he
ordered the three hostages to be put to death. The Laird of Duffus, his
son-in-law, whose lands the Murrays had lately ravaged, superintended
the execution. The Master of Caithness and Mackay, with a humanity of
spirit not very common at the period, would have nothing to do with such
a cruel affair. This highly incensed the Earl of Caithness, and from
that time he contracted a deep-rooted prejudice against his son, who, in
order to avoid his father's displeasure, went with Mackay to Strathnaver,
where he continued to reside. At length certain rumours reached the
Earl, that his son and Mackay were in conspiracy against him, and were
devising schemes to put an end to his tyranny and oppression. Nay, it
was even hinted that his life was in danger from them. Suspicion and
jealousy were now added to anger, and he secretly resolved to inveigle
them to Girnigoe, and if they could not clear themselves of the alleged
conspiracy, to punish them by imprisonment. In order to accomplish his
purpose, he sent repeated messages to Mackay, to come to the castle with
the Master, and visit him, professing the utmost anxiety to be
reconciled to his son, and to be on the usual friendly terms with Mackay
himself. They at last, after some hesitation, agreed to pay him a visit,
and accordingly set off on horseback without any escort. On their
arrival at Girnigoe, they were met by the Earl himself, who saluted them
with a show of much kindness. On passing the drawbridge, however, Mackay
observed—what struck him as somewhat singular—a more than usual number
of armed men about the castle. Suspecting treachery, he immediately
turned round, set spurs to his horse, dashed across the bridge, which
was still down, and galloped away as fast as the animal could carry him.
In the meantime the Master was seized—though not without a severe
struggle, being a man of great bodily strength—fettered and cast into a
dark and noisome dungeon, where he lay for several years. There were
three keepers appointed over him, namely, Murdoch Roy, and two brothers,
Ingram and David Sinclair. Roy was the person who regularly attended
him, and did all the menial services connected with the office. The
other two, who were kinsmen of the Earl, and had a bend sinister in
their escutcheon, might be said to be inspectors or head jailers. Roy,
it would appear, was not altogether a hardened miscreant, and steeled
against the ordinary feelings of humanity. His heart was touched with
pity for the unfortunate nobleman, and at the earnest and oft-repeated
solicitations of the latter, he agreed to endeavour to set him at
liberty. Unfortunately, the scheme was discovered by John's brother,
William, who bore him no goodwill, and who informed his father of the
meditated escape. The Earl immediately ordered Roy to be executed; and
the poor wretch was accordingly brought out and hanged on the common
gibbet of the castle, without a moment being allowed him to prepare for
his final account. Soon after, in revenge of Roy's death, and of his
brother William's unnatural enmity towards himself, the Master, whose
mind was affected by the long confinement, and the bad usage which he
had received, managed to seize William on the occasion of a visit to the
dungeon, and strangled him. This deepened the father's antipathy towards
his unhappy son. He had now been nearly six years in confinement; and
his keepers, tired of watching him so long, resolved with the
concurrence, it is said, of his inhuman parent, to hasten his death. The
plan adopted was such as could have entered only into the imagination of
fiends. They withheld food from the poor man for the space of five days.
They then set before him a piece of salt beef, of which he ate
voraciously. Soon after, when he called for water, they refused to give
him any, and he died of raging thirst. Another account says that they
gave him brandy, of which he drank so copiously that he died raving mad.
There can be no doubt, however, that he was barbarously murdered. His
remains were interred in the "Sinclair aisle," in the churchyard of
Wick, which his father had built some years before. The inscription on
the stone over his grave is still legible. It says, "Here lies entombed
ane noble and worthie man, John, Master of Caithness, who departed this
life, the 15th day of March, 1576." By his lady he had three sons,
namely, George, who succeeded to the earldom, James Sinclair of Murkle,
and John Sinclair of Greenland and Rattar.
The tragic event which we have just described was not
the only misfortune which about this period befell the family of the
Earl of Caithness. The marriage of his daughter, Lady Barbara, with the
young Earl of Sutherland, as might have been anticipated from their
great disparity of age, turned out unhappily. Independently of this, the
conduct of the Countess herself was far from being correct. On the
flight of her husband to Strathbogie, she carried on an improper
intercourse with Mackay of Strathnaver, and indeed for some time openly
lived with him. Accordingly, when Earl Alexander came to his majority he
divorced her, and curiously enough, afterwards married Lady Jean Gordon,
[She is said to have been a beautiful, and altogether
a very superior woman. She was one of the heroines of the fine old
ballad (admired by Burns) called "The Lord of Gordon's Daughters," and
commencing thus:—
" The Lord of Gordon had three daughters— Elizabeth,
Margaret, and Jean. They would not stay at bonny Castle Huntly, But they
would go to bonny Aberdeen."
After the death of the Earl of Sutherland, she
married Sir George Ogilvie of Boyne, in Banffshire. Her father, George,
fourth Earl of Huntly, was killed at the battle of Corichie in 1562.]
the sister of the Earl of Huntly, whom Bothwell had
divorced to pave the way for his marriage with Queen Mary.
George, Earl of Caithness, died at Edinburgh in the
month of August, 1583, and was buried with great pomp in the High
Church, where a monument was erected to his memory. His heart, which was
extracted and put in a casket of lead, was sent to Caithness, and
deposited in the church of Wick. This was done at his own dying request.
He had been fifty-four years Earl of Caithness, and being of an
avaricious and grasping turn, had amassed much wealth, and greatly
enlarged his hereditary property. The whole of his money he bequeathed
to his youngest son, George Sinclair of Mey. [The
Earl's second son, William, who was slain by the Master of Caithness in
Girnigoe, was first Laird of Mey, and ancestor of the Ulbster family. He
was succeeded in the property by his brother George, the founder of the
family of Mey. George's son "William (afterwards Sir William Sinclair of
Mey) acquired some notoriety by shooting an Edinburgh bailie in a mutiny
of the boys of the High School, in the month of September, 1595. For a
particular detail of this affair, taken from Robert Chambers' " Domestic
Annals of Scotland," see Appendix No. 7, in which the pedigree of the
Mey family, and of one or two other collateral branches, is also given.]
The deceased earl was undoubtedly a nobleman of high
standing and influence in his rank, and possessed of very considerable
talents. He was a member of the Privy Council, and one of the Lords of
the Articles, and was much at Court, especially during the brief and
troubled reign of the unfortunate Mary. Tytler says—and its truth cannot
be denied— that "he was of accommodating principles both in politics and
religion." There were, indeed, few intrigues of the day in which he did
not bear more or less a part,—at one time supporting the Reformers, and
at another the abettors of popery,—but in this respect his conduct was
not worse than that of many of his brother peers. At heart, however, he
seems to have been attached to the Church of Rome, and in 1560 he
dissented, along with the Earls of Athole, Borthwick, Somerville, and
Cassillis, from the confession of the Reformers, when it was laid before
Parliament. One league into which he entered does credit to his memory.
In 1567 he joined the lords who had banded together and taken up arms
for the young prince against Bothwell, and he was thus so far
instrumental in driving out of the kingdom a man who had disgraced
Scotland, and rendered himself odious to all parties by the enormity of
his crimes. In 1581, only two years before his death, he was one of the
principal leaders in the confederacy against Morton.
The great object of this Earl had been to aggrandise
his house; but with all his policy and intrigue, he was not
successful in some of his most ambitious schemes. The heaviest charge
against him is the long imprisonment and death of his son, the Master of
Caithness, in the Castle of Girnigoe. I have given the account of this
shocking crime, as it is handed down by tradition, and recorded in the
history of Sir Robert Gordon. But atrocious and unjustifiable as was the
deed, there would appear to have been some extenuating circumstances in
the case. It is contrary to human nature that the Earl, unless he was a
perfect monster of wickedness, totally devoid of the usual parental
feeling, could have been guilty of such barbarous cruelty towards his
son, without having what he at least considered a sufficient cause. Now,
it appears that while the Master of Caithness resided with Mackay,
information, which the Earl believed to be correct, reached him that
they were plotting against his life. Nor can this alleged conspiracy be
considered at all improbable. Mackay was, from every account, a most
unprincipled man. He had been guilty of two crimes of the deepest
dye—murder and adultery. Having conceived a violent passion for the wife
of a neighbouring chief, named Mac Ian-More, he seduced her and slew her
husband. An improper intimacy, as has been already mentioned, existed
between him and the Countess of Sutherland; and the better to carry on
the criminal intercourse, he repudiated his own wife, Christina
Sinclair, daughter of the Laird of Dunn. Now, we think that a man who
could unblushingly do all this was capable of anything; and, therefore,
it is not at all unlikely that he might have counselled the son to take
away the life of his father, whereby he would rid the county of a
tyrant, and thus become earl himself. There is, indeed, every reason to
conclude that it was not so much the disobedience of orders in the
affair at Dornoch, as the apprehension of a conspiracy against his life,
which he regarded as an unpardonable offence, that made Earl George
visit his son with such a cruel and barbarous punishment.