THE parish of Tulliallan
belongs ecclesiastically to the Presbytery of Dunblane, and under the sway
of Episcopacy was, along with Culross, included in the diocese of the bishop
of that designation. A large portion of it formed also, in ancient times,
part of the parish of Culross; but about the middle of the seventeenth
century the barony of Kincardine, with the lands of Sands, Kellywood, and
Lurg, were disjoined from the latter and annexed to the parish of Tulliallan.
We have already, in discussing the ecclesiastical history of Culross, seen
the reasons assigned for that disjunction,—the distance of the places in
question from the parish church, and their proximity to the little church of
Tulliallan, which, however, was now far too small to accommodate the large
access of worshippers. It was necessary, therefore, that it should either be
enlarged or a new church built; and the latter measure was adopted as the
more suitable for the convenience of the congregation, the greater part of
which, as connected with the coal and salt works on the Kincardine estate,
inhabited the village that afterwards increased into the small town of
Kincardine. The old church was a very small building indeed, being only 36
feet in length, 16 feet in breadth, and 8 feet in height, and had been a
Roman Catholic place of worship prior to the Reformation, when the powerful
family of Blackadder were the lords of Tulliallan, and occupied the old
castle in the vicinity. It was afterwards converted into a mausoleum by the
Keith family; but scarcely any trace of the old building now remains, though
the old burying-ground, with the modem vault in its centre, still exists in
a secluded comer of Tulliallan park, about a mile to the north of the more
recent church. This last, standing on a picturesque eminence overlooking the
Forth, has also in its turn become a ruin, and been supplanted by the
present parish church at a little distance below. Like its predecessor the
old church, it had about fifty years ago become too small to accommodate its
congregation, which had thus for a second time to change its quarters. There
are, accordingly, three edifices in three different localities in the parish
of Tulliallan which have all enjoyed successively the status of church of
the parish. To the first of these belongs, par excellence, the title of the
“old church”; but the same epithet is equally applicable to the second, with
which the session records, now to be considered, are for the most part
exclusively connected. It will therefore be understood that all the
allusions there
The Old Church of TULLIALLAN.
The Cross of Culross and “ he Study.”
to the “old kirk” refer to
the original church of Tulliallan, whose contracted dimensions had
necessitated the erection of a larger building to accommodate the influx of
members from Culross. It was erected in 1675, and the existing records
commence two years previously, the heading of the first volume appearing
thus:—
“The Register of the Acts and
Meetings of Session since 24 of Angt 1673, Mr Alexr. Williamsone being
minister.”
In the year above mentioned,
James Ramsay, formerly minister of Linlithgow, afterwards parson of Hamilton
and Dean of Glasgow, had succeeded the celebrated Leighton as Bishop of
Dunblane. Though he had figured somewhat prominently at the burning of the
Solemn League and Covenant some years before at the town cross of Linlithgow,
he seems yet to have been, on the whole, a man of moderate sentiments, and
gave such offence by his advocacy of mild measures and opposition to the Act
of Supremacy, that, at the instigation of Archbishop Sharp, he was removed
from the bishopric of Dunblane to that of the Isles, but was restored again
to his old see in 1676. After this, whilst still acting as Bishop of
Dunblane, we find him, as has been elsewhere detailed, acting for a while as
the incumbent of the first charge of Culross, as successor to Mr Burnet. In
1684 he was translated from Dunblane to the see of Ross, which he held till
the Revolution. He was then deposed, and died a few years afterwards in
great poverty, as is alleged, at Edinburgh in 1696, and was buried in the
Canongate churchyard. He was succeeded in the see of Dunblane by Robert
Douglas, who continued in that office till the Revolution, but whose
subsequent history I have not been able to trace.
As far as can be ascertained
from the records of the Tulliallan kirk-session, the inhabitants appear to
have been, throughout the period between the Restoration and the Revolution,
much more favourably situated than their neighbours of Culross in regard to
provision for their spiritual wants, and there seems also to have been a
good deal of activity in the exercise of ecclesiastical discipline. Though a
Prel-atist and conformer to the Church government of the day, there is no
reason to doubt that Mr Williamson was both an honest man and a zealous
minister, whilst he gave unequivocal evidence of his sincerity by suffering
deposition at the Revolution for refusing to read the Declaration in favour
of the new Government.
The minutes of the Tulliallan
kirk-session are for the most part of a domestic character, and bear little
or no reference either to the troubles of the persecuting times which were
then afflicting Scotland, or any public event which might be agitating the
great world beyond the limits of Tulliallan. Something, indeed, of the same
humdrum depressing influence clings to them that characterises at the
present day the town of Kincardine itself. With all her quiet and
sleepiness, Culross can still claim for herself a character and idiosyncrasy
which are alike impressed on her houses and streets, and on the pages of her
burgh and kirk-session records. But no such attractiveness clings to
Kincardine—though in making such a statement some allowance must certainly
be made for the predilections and prejudices of a native of Culross.
In the same manner as the
“middings” were the nightmare of the civic mind of Culross—a horrid incubus
that could not be got rid of, or if they occasionally were made to disappear
under a stem carrying out of the letter of the law, were yet sure, like the
hydra, again to raise their head after a temporary suppression—did the
“cruives” prove a perennial source of vexation to the ecclesiastical
overseers in Tulliallan. These “cruives” were extensively used on the upper
banks of the Forth, and more especially on the shores of the parishes of
Culross and Tulliallan, for the purpose of fishing, and furnished a
favourite occupation for the people. They consisted of a crib or framework
of wood or wicker placed within low-water mark, from which the fish, after
entering, were unable to escape, and were captured on the ebbing of the
tide. Till very recently some of them were to be seen still at work near
Kincardine; but their use, along with that of stake-nets and fixed apparatus
of any kind, has been finally inhibited by the inspectors of fisheries in
all parts of the Forth above Queensferry. This has emerged in consequence of
the necessity of adopting measures for the preservation and increase of
salmon in Scottish rivers. In bygone days, however, the cruives constituted
an important branch of industry, and formed a valuable perquisite to the
monks of Culross, who had a right reserved to them in the feu-charter of the
adjoining lands of having the benefit of the cruive - fishings on Wednesdays
and Fridays. After the Reformation we find a constant struggle maintained
between the Church and the laity, in the endeavours of the former to enforce
a more decorous observance of the Sabbath and an abstinence from the
ordinary occupations of the week. I have elsewhere entered into this subject
more fully, and so need not pursue its discussion further here. Suffice it
to say, that in nothing did the ecclesiastical authorities of the district
under consideration find it more difficult to restrain the populace than in
preventing Sunday labour at the “cruives.” The first entries of any interest
in the Tulliallan session-book have reference to them. Here they are:—
“11 October 1674.
“Which day the session met,
and Burnbrae’s servant being delated for fishing the cruives upon the Lord’s
Day, was appointed to be summoned against the next session day.”
“29 Novr.
“Which day the session met,
and the above-mentioned person being cited, compeared not; wherefor thought
it fit to acquaint the presbyterie with her obstinacie ”
“4 April
“Which day the session met,
and Bumbrae’s woman com-peired, did supplicat the session, intreating that
she might be censured by the minister and elders, and confessing her sin of
fishing the cruves on the Sabboth. She was exhorted to repent for that
heinous sin. She was cited apud acta to be present the next session day.”
The new church seems to have
been nearly completed by the end of 1676. Contrary to what obtains at the
present time, it does not appear that the seating of a church was regarded
then as incumbent on the heritors of the parish, but was left to individual
worshippers. The extraordinary diversity and irregularity of pews, which
used to be so conspicuous in old-fashioned churches, are hence doubtless in
great part to be accounted for. Those who were unable to provide pews for
themselves, had either to stand or bring stools with them, as is said to
have been a common practice with the females of a congregation. These on one
memorable occasion were turned to useful account in St Giles’s Church,
Edinburgh, when Jenny Geddes set the example of revolt against the
introduction of the Service-book by hurling her stool at the head of the
Dean of Edinburgh. The following entries refer to the seating and other
arrangements consequent on the opening of the church of Tulliallan:—
“16 October 1676.
“Which day it was ordained
that the seats in the old kirk should be transported to the new kirk, upon
the session’s expenses.”
“22 October 1676.
“Which day the session
ordained that those who claimed right to the old seats should show their
rights to manifest the truth of them.
“It is also ordained that
each person should pay to the box £2 Scots for the ground meal of their dask
”
“12 Mar. 1076.
“Which day the session,
considering the paucity of their number, elected the persons following as
verie fit to be administrators in church affaires, their life and
conversation (for ought known) being honest, and not repugnant to the
doctrine of truth—viz., for Kingcardine, Will Livingstone, Jo. Mershel,
David Wannan; for the Sands, Will Sands; for the Lurge, Jo. Cumming in the
Myres.”
“31 Oct. 1676
“Which day the session
appointed that the two collectors of the offering should in time of the
forenoon sermon search the town of Kincara, and who collected the Sabbath
preceding should search in the tyme of the afternoon sermon.”
“January 1677.
“Which day the session met,
and ordained that WilL Mill, thesaurer, should draw up an account of the
expences out of the box for repairing of the old seats, or any other way,
and present the same to them, with an extract of those who intend to have
seats in the new kirk; as also that the Reader give ane extract of those who
were booked in the old session-book as having right to the seats of the old
kirk: which was done accordinglie shortlie thereafter.”
The first Communion in the
new church appears to have been celebrated on 15th July 1677. The following
order had preceded it, and shows that the old Presbyterial rigour of
discipline regarding personal examination was maintained, in Tulliallan at
all events, even in the days of Prelacy:—
“2 Judy 1677.
“Which day the session met:
the minister declared how some in the parish, but especially in the town of
Kincame, absented themselves from the examination; and therefore intreated
the elders in their respective quarters to exhort all who wilfully absent
themselves from the aforesaid discipline to repair to the kirk to be
examined at the dyats prescribed in the following week, with certification
that if they neglect so to do that they shall be censured for their contempt
as the session shall think fit/’
The following orders are
directed against Sabbath desecration:—
“ 24 March 1678.
“Which day the session
convened, the minister declared that he was informed of several abuses acted
in the town of Kingcam by multitudes meeting together and exercising
themselves in and sinful speeches on the Lord’s
Day; as also that others
resorted to ale-houses. Wherefor the session, considering these abuses,
ordained that if any be found guiltie of the aforesaid offences they should
be censured as open prophaners of the Lord’s Day; which Act the minister
intimated publickly the Sabbath following.”
“16 March 1679.
“Which day the session met,
and no faults were delated, but the minister exhorted the elders to be
diligent in searching and trying out all prophaners of the Lord’s Day, that
they may be censured.”
“25 Jrdy 1680.
“Which day the session mett,
and was informed that people within this parioch usually flocked together on
the Sabbaths most scandalously. Wherefore the session ordained, and did
enact, that herefter no person nor persons should be found in the fields or
streets, but specially in ail-houses, after six a’cloak at night on the
Sabbath-day, without a warrantable occasion, with certification to the
transgressors of these said Acts that they shall be censured as profaners of
the Lord’s Day; which Act is to be publicklie intimated by the minister next
Sabboth, that none pretend ignorance, —which was done accordingly”
And the following refer to
some parochial matters which are not without interest after the lapse of two
centuries:—
“31 August 1679.
“Which day the session met,
and ordained that the kirk-yeard dyke should be perfyted by the workmen in
all haste.”
“19 October 1679.
“Which day the session met,
and appointed collectors for the money which the inhabitants of this parish
have willingly offered to buy a bell to the kirk”
“5 October 1679.
“Which day the session met,
and desired John Calendar, bailie, to search out a mortcloath of good velvet
for the session’s use, who have wholly resolved to imploy their box-money
for buying therof.”
“7 December 1679.
“Which day the session met,
and the new velvet mortcloath (which was appointed to be bought by the
bailie on the session’s account) was appointed to be let out to any burial
within the parish for 1 lib. 10 sh. Scots, and to strangers for 1 lib. 16
sh.2 The pryce of this said mortcloath was 185 libs.
6 sh 4,8 which was taken out of the kirk box as said is before.”
“8 October 1682.
“Which day the session met,
the minister produced a letter from the bishop in order to a collection for
building the bridge betwixt Grange and Salen; which, being approved, was
appointed to be publickly intimat, which was done.”
It is satisfactory to find
that unfounded allegations against any one in the matter of Sabbath a
desecration were severely dealt with:—
“7 January 1683.
"Which day the session mett,
compeared Marjorie Drysdale, being cited for slandering of persons whom she
said fished the creeves on the Sabbath, and could not prove it; she was
appointed to satisfie publickly as a slanderer, which she did accordingly
the next Sabboth.”
On 11th May 1684 a curious
case is reported, in which a collier is brought up and “ sharply reproved ”
for, among other offences, “causing his son write disgraceful words in
imperfect Latine and English,” by way of libel on a neighbour.
An uproar breaks out among
Lord Kincardine’s colliers in reference to their kirk loft:—
“13 February 1687.
“Which day the session did
meet. Tho. Younger declared that the colhewers had taken the loft door-key
from [him] violently; wherefor the said Thomas was appointed to go to John
Halowday, bailie, to desire him to cause them render gance with our
ancestors both in the church and the playhouse. The epilogues to tragedies
in Shakespeare’s time were generally spoken by one of the players habited in
a splendid cloak of black velvet, for which enonnous sums were frequently
paid.
“13 March 1687.
“The insolencie of the
colehewers is referred to the civil magistrate.”
The following very brief
entry of the same date as , the foregoing will be interesting to all who
have read ‘The Antiquary ’:—
Which day Will
Archibald, blew gown, is appointed to be inrolled among our poor.”
A great change has now taken
place, and Presbytery has again come into the ascendant. Mr Williamson
having refused to read the Declaration recognising the new government of
William and Mary, he is deposed by the Privy Council; and Mr John Forrest,
who had been deprived of the living in 1665, returns to his old charge of
Tulliallan.
“1690.
“In which year this parish
wrote a call to Mr Jo. Forrest, then residing in Dantzick, to return to his
charge of the ministrie in Tilliallan (out of which he was violently deposed
by the prelats anno 1665), according to Act of Counsell; who accepted of the
said call, and returned here on Septr. 27,1690.”
Though, as already stated,
Tulliallan seems to have been more favourably situated as regards spiritual
matters than most other parishes during the reigns of Charles and James II.,
there is undoubted evidence that, even in the best-regulated communities
during that period, there was a great decay of ecclesiastical discipline,
and doubtless also of general morals. Whilst the Presbyterian charioteers
held the reins too tight, the Prelatists guided the team with such laxity
and remissness, except when nonconformity was concerned, that there was
great danger of a reckless course being entered on of irreligion and
profligacy. The Presbyterians were now again in power; and the more zealous
spirits among them were doubtless indulging the vision of a return of those
palmy dap, in the years immediately following the subscription of the
Covenants, when something like the re-establishment of a theocracy seemed
almost on the point of attainment. But by the end of the century things were
considerably changed, and the new theories as to constitutional government
and personal freedom which were coming into vogue, and had tended in great
measure to bring about the Revolution, were also strongly assertive of the
right of private judgment, and liberty of thought and practice, in so far as
these were in unison with the maintenance of public order and morality. The
Presbyterians, like other religionists of the old school, were not only slow
in recognising the truth of these positions, but were likewise resolute to
the utmost of their power in combating and delaying their reception. But, in
fairness, the charge of bigotry and narrow-mindedness cannot more reasonably
be laid at their door than against other communities of the time, both
secular and ecclesiastic. They had had, it must be remembered, to wage a
struggle between life and death; and they could neither be expected to have
shown themselves possessed of a superhuman spirit of forbearance in the hour
of victory, nor animated by ideas in advance of the age in which they lived.
Imperfect as both their notions and practice were, there can be no doubt of
the foundations of the liberty and security which we now enjoy having been
laid by the English Puritans and Scottish Covenanters. Had they failed, or
been less resolute in the struggle, the consequences could have been nothing
short of a career of misery and degradation for Great Britain.
Let us now revert to the
Tulliallan kirk-session, and see how they endeavour to regulate matters of
religious observance and public morality.
“10 March 1691.
“The which day the session
appointed that no person should fish their crowes, bring in cail or water,
haunt or go to host-ler-houses, or go to the backwood, or go in companys to
the ash brays in Kingcardine on the Sabbath-dayes, certifying all such who
shall be found guilty of any of the foresaid sins of Sabbath-breaking, they
shall be both lyable to Church censure, and also committed to the hands of
the civil magistrate; for which cause the elders are appointed (who collect
that day) to go and search Kingcardine in time of divine service, and to
wait on the crowes on the Sabbath, and to report or delate delinquents whom
they shall find to the next session: which Act is to be read publickly by
the minister, that none pretend ignorance, the next Sabbath; which was done
accordingly after the first sermon.”
The “ash brays” or “ash
braes” is a locality which still bears the same name in Kincardine. It does
not denote, as might be supposed, an eminence planted with ash-trees, but
the heaps and hillocks formed of the ashes of the salt-pans, which in time
became overgrown with grass. A great portion of the modem town of Kincardine
is built on a stratum of these ashes.
“31 October 1693.
“Which day the session mett,
compeared James Wannan, and acknowledged his guilt in drinking, without any
limitation, the confusion of the inhabitants of Tulliallan, which was also
evidenced by witnesses; which the session considering, appointed him to be
publiquely rebuked upon the next Sabbath-day, which was intimate to him.”
The parish schoolmaster was,
in former times, regarded as holding a monopoly in imparting instruction.
Sewing-schools were, of course, excepted.
“25 July 1694.
“The qlk day the session,
considering that there are some privat schools kept within this parish, to
the discouragement of the ordinary schoolmaster, does hereby prohibit and
discharge any person whatsoever from keeping any privat school for learning
or educating of youths within the congregation, except for lasses; and this
to be intimat from the pulpit next Lord’s Day.”
“25 November 1695.
“The session, considering the
abuses committed at penny bridalls, and the offence given by promiscuous
dancing, have resolved, and hereby do appoint, that the minister admonish
publickly from the pulpit next Lord’s Day, that persons to be married shall
not call nor invit such confluences of people to their marriges, and that
the minister shall not solemnize the marriage of any parties, being
pariochiners, but such as shall engadge there shall be no promiscuous
dancing at their marriage.”
Here is a curious and
characteristic reason assigned for the erection of a church dock:—
“25 November 1695.
“Which day the session,
considering how usefull a clock would be in the steeple of the church,
especiallie to regulate the fishers of the croves, who frequently are guilty
of breach of Sabbath, and when challenged pretend ignorance as to the time,
have hereby resolved to have one; and for that end appoints the minister and
John Crockett to agree for a workman for a clock to the said steeple, hereby
engadging that what they expend for the same they shall see them
reimbursed.”
An irreverent shoemaker
beards the kirk-session:—
“19 Decr. 1695.
“After prayer, session mett.
Compeared John Peacock, shoemaker in Kincardine, and confessed his fishing
of the croes on the Sabbath-day, and endeavoured to vindicate the lawfulness
thereof, alledging that it was as lawful to fish the croes on Sabbath as
milk a cow, with other irreverent actes; therefor was summoned apud acta to
the next presbetry, and the session refer the same to the presbetry to
determine thereon. Appoints David Wannan, Gilbert Millar, James Davidson, to
be cited against next session day”
“16 Septr. 1696.
“Qlk day session mett. John
Penny being called, compeared, and being interrogated anent his going to the
mill on Sabbath evening, and of his carrying a pock beneath his arm,
acknowledged his going to mill betwixt 7 and 8 o’clock at night, and his
having of a pock, but nothing in it; and it being laid seriously home to him
by the minister, in name of the session, confessed his fault therein, was
grieved that it should have given offence, and promised never to be seen in
the like in time coming.”
The kirk-session records of
Tulliallan, like those of Culross, testify frequently to the scarcity and
distress that marked the close of the seventeenth and beginning of the
eighteenth century:—
“9 December 1696.
“The qlk day the session,
considering the heavy strock of scarcity and sickness that the parish are
lying under, and the abounding sin thereof, have resolved to keep a day of
fast and humiliation, to plead with God for the removal of the same; and for
that effect have set apart this day fourth night for a day of humiliation in
this congregation.”
On 7th March 1697 some cruive-fishers
axe again brought up, and make the old excuse of horological ignorance:—
“The session, considering
that they could not specify the precise time, whether it was Sabbath night
or Monday morning, as they alleged, resolved they should be all called in
and rebuked for going to the croves at least so near the Sabbath-day, if not
upon it, and admonished to be more tender in time coming, otherways to be
proceeded against by publique censure; who accordingly were called in,
rebuked and admonished by the minister, and dismissed.”
So this case ends, but fresh
ones soon appear.
“20 November 1697.
"The session are informed
that Longannet croves were fished Sabbath last at night; appoints the
officer to cite such persons as fished them, particularly David Lyell.”
“12 December 1697.
"Which day the session met.
After prayer, the officer reports that he had cited David Lyell, who, being
called, compeared, and charged with fishing of the croves lately upon the
Sabboth-day, denyed the same, but acknowledged that he went there about nyne
o’clock at night to preserve his own croves from some people that had come
out of Culross to steal fish, whom he professed he knew not; he was exhorted
to a conscientious observation of the Sabbath, and to inform the session
when he should see any fishing them on the Sabbath, in regard he lived hard
by them, which he undertook to do.”
“15 February 1698.
“Which day session mett After
prayer the session, considering the great strait the poor are in, the meal
being at 16s. or 18s. per peck, have resolved to give the double allowance
unto all the poor of the parioch until the Lord be pleased to send plenty;
and for that end allows the thesaurer to give to the poor of the parish
according as he understands their straits, in the intervalls betwixt
sessions, and to lay his depursements every day before the session to be
judged by them.”
The above entry exhibits the
terrible scarcity which prevailed in Scotland at the close of the
seventeenth and opening of the eighteenth century. The price stated of the
peck of oatmeal—16s. to 18s. Scots, or Is. 4d. to Is. 6d. sterling—would be
equivalent to at least 4s. at the present day. Many of us have heard old
people speak of a similar state of matters which characterised the years
1800 and 1801.
The elders appointed to watch
at the cruives on Sunday evenings are roughly handled by the fishers:
"3 January 1699.
“Which day sessione mett.
After prayer, David Wannan and John Turcan report they waited on Lord’s
night at the croves, with design to have keept them from being fished, bat
that about 10 o’clock at night there came above fourtie or fiftie persons,
so that they found it impossible to hinder them, and while endeavouring to
hinder them the rabble threatened to throw them into the sea. The session,
considering the same, appoints them to give up all the names of such as they
saw there to the baylie of the regality, and in name of this session desire
they might be punished according to law for their breach of Sabboth.”
The kirk-session of
Tulliallan seems to have been greatly exercised by the perverse conduct of
many of the parishioners in insisting in using the fishing-cruives on
Sunday. Repeated reproofs and exhortations had no effect, and to their
additional chagrin the civil magistrates refused their concurrence in
coercing and punishing the delinquents. A certain Bailie Halliday, overseer
of the Kincardine saltworks, is spoken of, in an entry dated 1st November
1699, as a person who had hitherto declined to in-terpone his authority, but
to whom the minister and kirk-session determine that a final appeal should
once more be made to induce him to do his duty, most of the offenders being
under his superintendence as salters. Apparently, however, the only weapon
left to the Church is the sentence of lesser excommunication, which is
ordered to be employed in future against those who persist in desecrating
the Sabbath evenings by cruive-fishing.
The word “cruive,” spelled
also “cruve” and “crove,” and generally pronounced like the French
participle cnt, seems to be identical with the English “ crib,” which comes
from the Anglo-Saxon crybbe, or the old Swedish krubba, an enclosure.
Probably also it is related to the Gaelic craobh, a tree. In ordinary
Scottish it means a pigsty, which is thus commonly designated a “sow croo.”
In further reference to the cruiye-fishing, it may not be amiss to quote the
following from the Old Statistical Account of Culross. After stating that
herrings and gar vies are extensively caught on the shores of Culross and
Tulliallan, more especially the latter, it goes on to say:—
“One of these cruives will
sometimes yield of herrings and garvies in a season to the value of £6, 8s.,
and in an extraordinary good year even £10. There are at Kincardine, 4 miles
west from Culross, 61 cruives; at Longan-net, a mile and a half nearer
Culross, 83; and at another new station midway between these, nicknamed by
the fishers Botany Bay, 35. In lucky seasons, such as was the year 1783, it
was computed that betwixt Kincardine and Longannet there were caught of fish
to the value of £10001 and upwards. The cruive-fishing season is from the
month of August till the beginning of March In the darkness and gloom of
winter, and even amidst all the horrors of the tempest, the fishing of the
cruives exhibits a veiy gay and enlivening scene; men and women of all ages,
and in different companies, resorting to them and carrying lamps of flaming
charcoal, which are seen at a distance through the dark, moving in all
directions, accompanied with the mixed cries of emulation, merriment, and
hope. The cruives belonged originally to the Abbot of Culross, but after the
Reformation, were parcelled out among the several proprietors who succeeded
to the Church lands.”
From the above glowing
account it is evident that the cruive-fishing must have had considerable
attractions for the inhabitants of the district, and presented at all times
a very gay and animated appearance. Whether by the end of the last century
—to which the date of the publication of the Old Statistical Account is to
be referred—these fishings still engaged the parishioners on Sunday
evenings, in defiance of the fulminations of the kirk-session, I am really
unable to say; but it is more than probable that the very fact of its being
a forbidden occupation gave it an additional zest, and that as the
prosecutions ceased, the practice of Sabbath desecration in reference to
this matter fell also into abeyance. Certainly there is scarcely any further
notice of it in the Tulliallan kirk-session records after the year
1700—though doubtless this absence, for many years subsequent to that date,
is primarily attributable to the circumstance of the ecclesiastical
authorities being denied the assistance of the civil power in enforcing
their prosecutions.
The Old Statistical Account
of Tulliallan gives also the following particulars regarding the cruives:—
“There are above 100 cruives
in the parish, in which are caught herrings, whitings, haddocks, sparlings,
sythe, sprats, cod, skate, with some few salmon and flounders. Of these last
there are four different species, called here the sole, the turbot, the
sand, and the bunnock flounders. The sole and turbot are esteemed the best.
The average of a cruive in good and bad fishing-seasons is estimated between
40s. and 50s. yearly. ... When the herring-fishery succeeds, it is a great
benefit to the place and neighbourhood. These, together with the potatoes,
support the poor people for some months in the end of the year.”
As already mentioned, the
cruive-fishing has participated in the general decay of industry which for
many years past has befallen the towns of Culross and Kincardine and the
surrounding district. How far it might be possible to resuscitate it is a
question of some uncertainty. It is said that fish of all sorts abound in
the deep channel of the Firth as far up at least as Kincardine, and persons
still living speak of having been regularly employed by the late Sir Robert
Preston of Valleyfield in procuring there, by means of nets, a supply of
fish for his table. The introduction of steam-navigation, however, in a
tract of water confined within such comparatively narrow bounds, may
possibly have caused the migration of its finny denizens to the freer and
more extended domain of the lower Firth and the German Ocean. People have
likewise become more particular in recent times as to the quality of the
fish they eat, and there can be little doubt that many of the fish that find
their way above Queensferry are spent and exhausted individuals.
“6 January 1703.
“Sederunt: Minister and all
the Elders. After prayer the minister informs the session that he having met
with the minister of Clackmannan, he complained upon John and Edward Bruce
in this parish, they having been at the laird of Clackmannan's house upon
the 25th of December last, at a feast which was offensive to the session
there, and desired they might do so no more, the said laird being an
excommunicat person; which the session considering, they appointed Thomas
Primrose, one of their number, to go and admonish them.”
“17 Feby. 1703.
“Sederunt: Minister and all
the Elders. After prayer Thomas Primrose reported he had obeyed the
appointment in rebuking and admonishing John and Edward Bruce.”
These two last entries
certainly give a strange idea of Presbyterial interference in those days,
when two individuals belonging to the congregation are subjected to
discipline for having eaten a Christinas dinner at the house of a
neighbouring proprietor, who was, moreover, in all probability a relation of
their own. The Bruces of Clackmannan were stanch Jacobites; and the then
laird had probably incurred the hostility of the Kirk by attending the
ministrations of one of the dispossessed Prelatist ministers of the rSgime
preceding the Revolution. They may possibly, indeed, have had more serious
charges against him; but doubtless the great provocation in the present
instance was the celebration of a Yule festival The lairds of Clackmannan
claimed direct connection with the family of King Robert Bruce, and even
maintained themselves to be an elder branch of the Bruce family, of which
the Scottish king was only a cadet. Their male line became extinct on the
death, in 1772, of Henry Bruce of Clackmannan, whose widow died in 1791, at
the age of ninety-five, and was visited by Robert Bums and Dr Adair on the
occasion of their excursion to Harvieston, a few miles from Clackmannan, at
the foot of the Ochils. The old lady bequeathed to the Earl of Elgin, as the
next representative of the Bruce family, the sword and helmet in her
possession, which were said to have been worn by King Robert at the battle
of Bannockburn. She was the last occupant of Clackmannan Tower, which
adjoins the town of that name, and forms a prominent object in the beautiful
landscape which spreads itself out, in looking down the Forth from Stirling
Castle, between the Ochils and the river.
Under date May 2, 1705, a
deliverance of the General Assembly is reported, reversing those of the
Presbytery and Synod, who had ordered the translation of Mr Buchanan from
the ministry of Tulliallan to that of Kilmadock. These translations appear
sometimes to have been made in a very arbitrary manner—as in this instance
both the minister and congregation were strongly opposed to the change, and
were subjected to the trouble and expense of two appeals before they were
allowed to exercise in peace their own wishes in the matter.
On 13th June an Act of
session is passed obliging parties about to be married to give a bond of £40
Scots that there should be no guests beyond a certain number, nor any “
promiscuous dancing ” at the wedding, otherwise the banns should not be
proclaimed.
“13 Feby. 1706.
“The said day the session,
understanding that several people are said to stay too late in taverns in
the town of Kincardin—especially on the Saturdays night—they resolve that
two of their number shall go weekly to every tavern in Kincardin every
Saturday for some time, and report if they see any guilty; and for that end
appoints Walter Stewart and John Wright to go upon Saturday nert.”
“21 Feby. 1706.
“Walter Stewart and John
Wright report that they visited all the taverns in Kincardin, but found
nothing censurable.”
“3 March 1706.
“Those who visited the
taverns of Kincardin repeat they saw nothing censurable”
Kincardine must have been a
very good place indeed in those days. Did the worthy elders ascertain the
goodness of the liquor sold, as well as the decorum preserved in the taverns
?
“14 December 1709.
“The said day the session are
informed that James Robertson, carrier in Kincardin, and William Wightman in
Gar-tairie, hath of late brought Episcopal ministers into their houses and
baptized their children; for which they appoint them to be cited to their
next meeting.”
“January1 January 1710.
“The said day the session
considering the abounding sickness, the great decay of trade, and that the
fishing in this parish is wholly decayed this year, and the great straits
the workpeople in Kincardin are reduced unto since October last, together
with the unfruitfulness under the means of grace, &c., they appoint a
congregational fast to be kept the eighteenth current.”
Of this date—19th November
1710—a deliverance of the Commission of the General Assembly is reported, by
which Mr Thomas Buchanan is ordered to be transferred from the charge of
Tulliallan parish to that of Dunfermline. The Presbytery of Dunblane had
decreed his continuance in Tulliallan; but an appeal being taken by the
parish of Dunfermline, the Commission of Assembly decided that he must be
removed.
“18 January
“The said day the session
appointed Janies Miln, one of their number, to attend the Presbytrie of
Dunblane Tuesday next, in their name, to petition them for supplie, and
particularly to intreat for a hearing of Mr Kalph Erskine, preacher of the
Gospel, for the time living in Culross; and to desire the said presbytrie to
grant a written warrand to this session to invite any neighbouring minister
to supply us in case of vacancy, and to report.”
Ralph Erskine was at this
time tutor and chaplain in the family of the Black Colonel, then residing in
the Colonel’s Close, Culross, as I have already had occasion to mention. He
received another call about the same time, to the second charge of
Dunfermline, to which he was preferred; and Tulliallan thus probably escaped
the honour of becoming afterwards the cradle of Dissent. Being thus
disappointed of Ralph, it set its affections on his brother, Ebenezer
Erskine, then minister of Portmoak, on Loch Leven.
Ebenezer Erskine was not
destined, any more than his brother Ralph, to make Tulliallan famous as the
scene of his ministry—an honour which was reserved respectively for Stirling
and Dunfermline. The subsequent history of the two brothers is well known—
their opposition to what they considered as an un-scriptural usurpation of
the rights of congregations in the appointment of their ministers, and a
generally lax and corrupt Bystem both as regards doctrine and the
maintenance of ecclesiastical discipline, and their refusal to recognise and
enforce certain obnoxious decrees of the Church courts,—all which culminated
ultimately in their secession from the Church of Scotland, and the
establishment of a dissenting community of Presbyterians, which from small
beginnings has grown to be a formidable rival to the mother-Church. These
two brothers, whose names are so inseparably connected with the great
secession in the last century, were the sons of a Presbyterian minister on
the Borders, who is said to have had a family of no less than thirty-three
children. He was a cadet of the Mar family, and related to Colonel John
Erskine of Camock, in whose household, as we have seen, his son Ralph acted
as chaplain previous to his appointment to the ministry of Dunfermline.
“6 December 1713.
“The session appointed George
Ramsay and James Dewar to repair to Culross to-morrow, and to converse with
Colonel Erskine in order to the settlement of this place, and to report.”
“11 July 1714.
“The said day given to
Mistress Crocket, for maintaining fifteen probationers, twenty pounds Scots;
and for five Bibles of London print, six pounds thirteen shillings four
pennies Scots”
"21 July 1714.
“The Presbytery of Dunblane
being convened here, Mr Hugh Walker, minister at Lecropt, after sermon
admitted Mr George Mair minister of this congregation, in face of the said
presbytrie and congregation.”
Mr Mair, it will be
remembered, had been one of the ministers of Culross. Let us now return to
our small-beer chronicles:—
“6 Octr. 1714.
“The session appointed Robert
Coult, one of their number, to thatch the schoolmaster’s house with hather,
and make the same water-tight, and the treasurer to pay him for his pains.”
Heather seems then to have
been in common use for thatching, and doubtless it formed both a picturesque
and sufficiently comfortable roof. Culross Moor furnished the material in
abundance; and so sensible were the burgh authorities in Culross of the
importance of the privilege, that we find, in the feu grants by the town to
the Dundonald family, an express reservation to the inhabitants of access to
the portion of the moor thus conveyed, at all times, for the purpose of
pulling heather. At the present day little use is made of the plant, except
for ornamental purposes; but in former times it was really a useful growth,
and turned to account in many different ways. Besides being employed for
thatching, an extensive industry was carried on in the manufacture of
heather reenges and besoms. The former consists of a number of stalks of
heath bound together, and .has long been in repute as a most useful
implement for rinsing and cleansing pots and pans. The latter term explains
itself as a broom or besom, made of a bundle of heather-stalks fastened to
the end of a stick. The cutting and manufacture of these used to constitute
a great business for itinerant vendors of the articles in question, and the
occupation is not yet extinct. The reenges were always of heather; the
besoms were sometimes of heather and sometimes of broom. The following cry
used to be well known:—
“Buy broom besoms, better
never grew;
Bonnie heather reenges, wha’ll hae them noo
Besoms for a penny, reenges for a plack;
An ye winna hae them, tie them on my back! ”
From the details of a session
case about this period, it appears evident that Colonel Erskine of Camock
enjoyed at this time a heritable jurisdiction over the town and barony of
Kincardine, as coming in the room of the earls of that title. The delinquent
in question denied the authority of the session, and refused to show an
extract of his alleged marriage; whereupon “ the session refers him to the
civil magistrate, that he may cause him subject himself to the session; and
appoints an extract hereof to be sent to Colonel Erskine.”
"22 February 1716.
“After prayer—sed., minister
and elders—William Wight-man called, and compearing, persisted in his former
denial; whereupon the witnesses being sworn and examined, unanimously agreed
that he was not mistaken with drink in John Miln’s house the 20th of January
last, neither drunk any there that day, save two gills of aquavitoe; but
some of the witnesses deponed that he proposed to drink the name of
Erskine’s good health: which the session considering, they ordered him to be
admonished, to walk more circumspectly, and to wait more punctuallie upon
the ordinances; which was done accordingly, and he dismist.”
Mr Mair dies shortly after
this, having exercised the ministry at Tulliallan for about two years:—
"9 Jun1717.
“The session being informed
that in May last James Wannan was found melling and breaking land on the
Sabbath-day, appointed him to be cited to the next session.”
“21 July 1717.
“James Wannan cited, called,
and compearing, contest that he was at his work upon the Saturday, and going
home his horse cast him, and he bled much at the nose, and thereafter fell
asleep, and when he awaked on the Sabbath morning he did not know but it had
been Saturday, and so he went away to break the clods unwittingly, for which
he profest great grief; who being removed, and the session considering the
same, he was called in and exhorted to a more cautious afterward, and
dismisk”
“17 August 1718.
“Wm Scotland and George
Bamsay report that they collected this day £21 Scots for the Lithuanian
churches.”
“1 January 1719.
“Sed.: Mr John Taylor,
moderator pro tempore, and all the elders.
“The session considering that
they have this day unanimously elected and chosen Mr Thomas Thomson to be
their minister, appointed James Dewar and Wm. Scotland to repair to the
Presbytrie of Dunblane Tuesday next, and present their call to them, and
intreat for their concurrence therewith, and to report.”
There is no notice of the
settlement of Mr Thomson, but he appears as minister of Tulliallan and
moderator of the kirk-session on 10th May of this year. There were
frequently long vacancies in charges in those days, and here we find that
that of Tulliallan had been unprovided with a regular incumbent for nearly
three years. One advantage, indeed, resulting from the restoration of the
rights of patrons, was that of making compulsory the presentation to the
benefice within six months of the first occurrence of the vacancy, otherwise
the appointment of a minister - accrued as a jus devolutum to the
presbytery.
Of this date—16th May 1725—Mr
Thomas Turner appears as minister of Tulliallan and moderator of the
kirk-session. He was the successor of Mr Thomson, who had died in the
preceding year.
“27 March 1726.
“The session appointed the
minister to advertise the people from the pulpit Sabbath next to give no bad
coin to the collection, and not to stand in the kixkyeard, but go straight
into the kirk when they come.”
Two women who are brought
before the session on this day—17th November 1728—“confest that they did not
keep the kirk so well as they could wish, in regard they had not plaids to
take about them.”
“30 Decr. 1737.
“Jean Coult cited, called,
and interrogate, confest that Sabbath last, 25th instant, she did give a
blow with her Bible to Grisill Coult when she attempted to come into her
seat, profest her great grief for the same, and promised never to do the
like again; and (she being removed, and the affair considered, and she being
called in again) was rebuked and dismist.”,
As in Culross, the session
records of Tulliallan begin at this period to show a great many censures
passed in consequence of irregular and clandestine marriages:—
27 Decr. 1740.
“Said day the session,
considering the frequency of irregular marriages, enacted, and hereby
appoint, that all and every one that shall marry clandestinely or
irregularly in any time coming, shall pay in to the session-box for the use
of the poor four shillings sterling toties guoties, and beside the kirk
dues.”
“7 April 1745.
“The Reverend the Presbytery
of Dunblane having met at this place, and after sermon preached by the Revd.
Mr James Richie, minister at Aberfoile, he, together with the presbetry, by
prayer and imposition of hands did solemnly set apart Mr George Anderson to
be minister of this congregation.”
“12 June 1757.
“The Rev. Mr Steedman did, by
appointment of the Presbytery of Dumblane, declare this kirk vacant.”
The entries in this
session-book come down to 1820, but are of no value in a historical or
archaeological point of view, after the date last above quoted. The vacancy
then announced was filled up in the following year by the appointment of Mr
Robert Brown, who died in 1787, and was succeeded in 1788 by the Rev. David
Simson, who died in 1821. Mr Simson’s place was supplied in 1822 by Dr
George Skene Keith, father of the celebrated Dr Keith, author of the
treatise on the ‘Prophecies/ and grandfather of the distinguished surgeon of
the same name. Dr Keith, who had been translated from Keith in Morayshire,
did not survive for a year his induction to Tulliallan, having died in March
1823, in consequence of an illness brought on in encountering the toil of
wading through the snow to attend a meeting of presbytery. He was succeeded
in 1823 by the Rev. Andrew Bullock, who died in 1836, and was succeeded the
same year by the Rev. George Hope Monilaws, who in 1847 was translated to
Peebles. Mr Monilaws was succeeded in 1848 by the present incumbent, the
Rev. John Smeaton. |