EDUCATION IN THE
BURGH-ERECTION OF AN ACADEMY-SALARIES OF THE TEACHERS-THE ARMSTRONG
BURSARIES-NOTICES OF THE SEVEN TRADES -THE CONTESTS FOR THE SILVER GUN-A
NEW TRADES' HALL BUILTPRESENTATION OF A PUNCH-BOWL TO THE CRAFTSMEN, AND
OF A GOLD CHAIN FOR THE CONVENER-INSECURITY OF THE PRISON-A NEW JAIL BUILT
IN BUCCLEUCH STREET-THE TURNKEY MURDERED BY A PRISONER -GASTOWN FOUNDED-A
NEW NAVIGATION ACT OBTAINED-THE NITH DEEPENED AND EMBANKED-ERECTION OF
BRIDGEND INTO A BURGH OF BARONY, UNDER THE DESIGNATION OF MAXWELLTOWN.
THE poet's sojourn at
Dumfries constitutes a marked era in its history; and to speak of an event
occurring in or about "Burns's time" is still customary in the Burgh.
Adopting that familiar phraseology, let us briefly notice how educational
matters stood with the Dumfriesians in Burns's time. Of established
schools for teaching English there were three, the masters of which had
amongst them a salary of £20 per annum, and 2s. 6d. per quarter from each
pupil. There was one established grammar school (Latin) the teacher of
which had a salary of £20, he receiving no wages from the children of
burgesses, but 5s. per quarter from others, and Candlemas offerings from
all-the scholars numbering about a hundred. Other two schools were endowed
by the town: namely, one for arithmetic, book-keeping, and mathematics;
salary, £28; wages, 5s. per annum from children of burgesses; 7s. 6d. from
other children, with no offering at Candlemas; number of pupils about 60:
and one for writing; salary, £22; wages the same as the preceding;
scholars, 70. The grammar school teacher, in addition to his higher
salary, had a dwelling-house assigned to him; an advantage possessed by
none of the other masters. By this time the Town Council had cancelled
their illiberal edict against adventure schools: so that several of these
existed in the Burgh, at some of which French, drawing, and dancing were
taught; and there were, besides, two or three boarding schools for girls.
The endowed schools had no local connection
till 1802, when, by means of a general subscription, they were all
embraced under one roof, in a neat, substantial structure erected near
Townhead. At first the new Academy was managed by a committee of the
subscribers; but in 1814 it was handed over to the paymasters of the
teachers, the Town Council, who continue to act as its directors. The
education taught in the Academy at present consists of four departments.
Over one of these, including Latin, Greek, French, and German, Mr. W. H.
Cairns, an accomplished scholar, presides, with the title of rector;
though, strictly speaking, there are few, if any, rectorial duties
attached to his office. The salary is £37 11s. 10d.; interest of mortified
money, £26 8s. 2d.: in all, £64. Another, the English department, with
numerous collateral branches, is under the able management of Mr. Duncan
Forbes: salary, £20 8s.; interest, £9 12s.: in all, £30. A third
department, mathematics and arithmetic, was taught, up till the present
summer, by Mr. David Munn, distinguished for his mathematical attainments;
but he having been appointed to a mastership in the High School of
Edinburgh, Mr. Neilson, from the same city, was elected as his successor,
on the 16th of August last. The salary is £16 16s. 6d.; interest, £8 3s.
6d.: in all, £25. Lastly, penmanship and drawing are efficiently taught by
Mr. David Dunbar, whose salary is the same as that of the mathematical
master. Mr. Dunbar is the author of a meritorious volume of poems,
published in 1859. The salaries of the masters are supplemented by the
interest of £3,000, bequeathed for this purpose by Mr. Crichton of Friars'
Carse, and which became payable on the death of Mrs. Crichton, in 1862. At
present the interest amounts to £120, of which the English, writing, and
mathematical teachers receive £15 each, the remainder going to the rector;
but on condition that he shall keep a well-qualified assistant, and
educate ten poor boys gratuitously. The pupils at the Academy have, during
the last thirty-four years, been all on the same footing as respects fees;
the exemption in favour of burgesses' children having been withdrawn soon
after the adoption of the Burgh Reform Act; and Candlemas offerings having
long since gone out of use.
A number of valuable bursaries are attached to
the Academy, for which it is indebted to one of its teachers - Mr. William
Armstrong, of the mathematical department, who died in 1859. By a trust
deed dated 1852, Mr. Armstrong conveyed his whole estate to five private
friends, as trustees, for payment of his debts, and for behoof of two
relatives who were to receive the interest of the same, but who
predeceased the testator; and lastly, were to convey the remainder of his
estate "to the provost, bailies, and town clerk of the Burgh of Dumfries,
and the rector of the grammar school, and the masters of the mathematical,
English, and writing departments of the Academy, and their successors in
office, as trustees for the following purposes : namely, to invest the
remainder, and apply the annual rent of the whole, in order to establish
bursaries in connection with the said Academy, to be called the "Armstrong
Bursaries:" one of the value of £18, another £15, and others £12 each; and
to be awarded to such scholars competing for them as shall, in the opinion
of the trustees, rank first, second, third, and so on, in point of regular
attendance, general scholarship, and good conduct," at the annual
examination of the Academy by its patrons, and who shall have attended its
classical and mathematical departments for two years previous to such
examinations. Also, that the successful competitors shall not be entitled
to receive the bursaries unless they bona , fide intend to prosecute their
studies in the universities of Edinburgh or Glasgow, and attend the
mathematical and any other class, during the session immediately
subsequent to the award of the said bursaries; that the bursaries shall be
enjoyed for one year only, unsuccessful competitors being permitted to
join in any after competitions, if not more than eighteen years of age.
The benevolent testator's free estate is worth upwards of £2,000; so that,
besides the fixed bursaries of £18 and £15, enough of interest is left for
four or five others of £12 each.
Several men of note, in addition to those
named in a previous chapter, have been connected as teachers with the
Burgh schools, both before and since they were joined into one academy;
these including Dr. Dinwoodie, who acted as astronomer to Lord Macartney's
Chinese expedition; the Rev. James Gray (Burns's intimate friend); Dr.
Alexander Ross Corson; and the Rev. John Wightman of Kirkmahoe. The
Academy has long enjoyed the reputation of being a first-class educational
establishment. Our
latest direct reference to the Trades bore the date of 1673. How have they
fared during the interval between that year and the period we have now
reached? Each of the corporations has increased numerically; but as
respects their internal economy, scarcely any change is noticeable. A
minute of 1st September, 1720, reveals the fact that some ordinary
shoemakers had dared to "usurp the science of bootmaking," without having
first been duly initiated into its mysteries; and of course these aspiring
cordwainers were heavily fined by the rulers of the craft. "Weave truth
with trust," was the favourite motto of the websters; but in March, 1764,
some of them proved so far false to their vows of freemanship, as to lend
"sundry utensils" to unfree weavers, thereby causing "great loss and
damage to the incorporation:" fined 3s. 4d. sterling each. But what was
their offence compared with that of John Taylor, who, "though no ways
connected with the trade" of habit-making, was actually detected "turning
an old coat" for William Crow, silversmith, Dumfries, in that artizan's
own house? The box-master and officer of the tailors caught him
"red-handed" in the act, and seizing the ancient garment, they brought it
before a meeting of the body, in proof of his audacity and their courage.
An action of "spulzie and damages" was raised against the trade by Taylor;
but as the case is not further noticed in the minute-book, we may assume
that it was dismissed. Stay-making in these days was a branch of
tailoring, and guarded with as much jealousy as any other part of it ; yet
Elizabeth Knox, residenter, who was "noways free with the trade, or had no
title to exercise that kind of business," was detected in the very act of
patching up an old pair of stays, and fined 6s. 8d. sterling for "the
transgression" -the stays being detained till the money was forthcoming.
On the 17th of December, 1792, the master
tailors met, and "having taken into consideration that the prices charged
by them for work done to their customers has been nearly the same for a
hundred years past, although all other mechanics have increased their
wages," they resolved to form their ,log according to the following rate
of charges, English money:-Making a gentleman's suit of clothes, 10s.;
making a gentleman's greatcoat, 5s. 6d.; mechanics' and livery servants'
clothes, 8s.; boy's first suit, 3s.; mending clothes, per hour, 2d.;
ladies' habits, 10s. 6d.; ladies' greatcoats, 5s.: any one charging a
lower figure, to be fined 10s. 6d. for each offence. The first workmen's
"strike," perhaps, that ever took place in the Burgh, is traceable in a
minute of the same trade, dated the 4th of January, 1796. We thus learn
that all the journeymen tailors, stimulated by the example of their
masters, declined to work further, unless their wages were raised front
six pence per day with victuals to ten pence; and that the employers
offered eight pence a day with victuals-a compromise which was accepted by
the men after they had stood out for a week or more.
Our information respecting the craftsmen has
hitherto been chiefly drawn from the records belonging to each; but the
Seven Trades had books in which their transactions as a united
incorporation were minuted, and to these, so far as they exist, let us
turn for a little. The oldest ones are a book of accounts beginning in
1714, and a minute-book dating from 1767. [In the possession of Mr. James
Dinwiddie, Irish Street.] The accounts relate chiefly to rents drawn from
the letting of their hall and lodgings connected with it, amounting to
some £40 sterling at the first of these periods; to sales of meal and
barley, which the deacons laid in in large quantities and sold out to the
brotherhood with a profit; to charges for repairs on the property, and the
expenses incurred when Riding the Marches, Shooting for the Silver Gun, or
at convivial meetings. A few specimens will suffice.
Under date 9th November, 1722, it is stated
that the deacons and others discussed six bottles of wine "that day we rod
the marches," the price being 9s. sterling. The Marquis of Annandale
having received a ticket of freemanship on the 29th of July, 1723, four
bottles of claret were drunk by the fathers of the freemen on the head of
it-the rate of charge the same, 1s. 6d. per bottle. A goodly donation of
fifty pounds from the Duke of Queensberry having replenished the
box-master's exchequer in November, 1722, his Grace's almoner, "
Waterside," was treated to " thrie bottels of whit win" in a changehouse-charge,
4s. On the 7th of May, 1727, the following entry occurs:-" Spent at a
meeting of the Deacons in the hall anent the Silver Gune shoting, for 5
pynts and half mutchkin brandie, 19s." The chief carousal of the year was
on Michaelmas night, when sometimes the Trades spent a ninth part of their
entire rental in toasting the health of the newly-elected magistrates: the
bill for 1760 running thus:- "4 pints of spirits [whisky at this date
having become a common drink], 16s.; 2 lib. sugar, Is. 8d.; 6 lemons [to
flavour the inevitable punch], 9s.; 8 bottles of wine, 16s.; 12 lib.
cheese, 3s.; 7 doz. baikes, and 3 sixpenny loaves." The Trades were not
selfish in their sociality; money votes to the poor of the town being
sometimes given at these festivities, and frequent entries occurring in
their books of small sums paid away to poor strangers at the instance of
the Convener. The magnitude of their transactions in " victual" may be
inferred from the payments made in 1775 - £540 10s. for oatmeal; £97 3s.
for barley; and £107 2s. 8d. for herrings. Most of the minutes are too dry
or detailed for quotation. They record in brief terms the annual
elections; notice still more briefly the Silver Gun competitions; and
become more communicative after the tide of the Trades has begun to ebb,
and their history has lost its early charm.
In 1785 it was resolved that the Silver Gun
should be shot for only once in five years ; and ultimately the contest
came to be only once in seven. The following are the dates of this great
carnival of the Trades, so far as they can be ascertained:28th March,
1742, Thomas Dickson, glover, convener; 4th June, 1746, James Aiken,
glover, convener; 4th June, 1762, Thomas Gibson, flesher, convener; 4th
June, 1766, William Crosbie, tailor, convener; 5th June, 1777, John
Paterson, hammerman, convener; 4th June, 1779, William M'Ghie, squareman,
convener; 4th June, 1781, John Blackstock, shoemaker, convener; 5th June,
1783, Robert Maxwell, hammerman, convener; 4th June, 1785, John Ogilvie,
shoemaker, convener; 4th June, 1791, Robert Thomson, hammerman, convener;
4th June, 1796, William Hayland, hammerman, convener; 4th June, 1802,
Kinloch Winlaw, squareman, convener; 4th June, 1808, John Fergusson,
squareman, convener; 4th June, 1813, John M'Craken, squareman, convener;
5th June, 1817, Alexander Lookup, skinner, convener; 23rd April, 1824,
Robert M`Kinnell, hammerman, convener; 24th April, 1828, Alexander Howat,
flesher, convener; 8th September, 1831, James Thomson, squareman,
convener. The Gun has not been competed for since 1831, when it was won by
Deacon Alexander Johnston of the tailors, who on that account had the
honour of carrying the trophy in a great procession that took place in the
Burgh at the celebration of Burns's centenary.
During "Burns's time" the Trades were a very
powerful body. Taking in master freemen, journeymen, and apprentices, they
formed an operative force fully 700 strong, or about a ninth part of the
whole population. Those who love precise details will not be displeased
with the subjoined statistics, applicable to the year 1790. Hammermen: 40
freemen, 16 journeymen, 14 apprentices; total, 70. Squaremen (masons,
joiners, cabinetmakers, painters, and glaziers): 86 freemen, 84
journeymen, 50 apprentices; total, 220. Tailors: 45 freemen, 20
journeymen, 20 apprentices; total, 85. Weavers : 42 freemen, 15
journeymen, 2 apprentices; total, 59. Shoemakers : 110 freemen, 84
journeymen, 42 apprentices; total, 236. Skinners and glovers: 14 freemen,
5 journeymen, 4 apprentices; total, 23. Fleshers, 23-all the journeymen
free, and, like Harry of the Wynd, killing for their own hand;
apprentices, 10; total, 33.
Some time in 1703, the Trades, wishing to get
rid of the inconveniences arising from their open-air gatherings, acquired
the hall to which reference has been already made. It was a large room
above the Meal Market, for which they paid 900 merks. Thirty years
afterwards we find them located in a second hall, near the New Church; and
before the expiry of other thirty years, their Blue Blanket is seen
displayed from another building opposite the Mid-Steeple; which in its
turn was superseded by a new hall erected on the same site in 1804. This,
the fourth and last building possessed by the craftsmen of the Burgh, cost
for mason work £368 5s. 6d., less £58, the value of the old materials; for
joiner, plaster, slater, glazier, and plumber work, £838 17s. 5d.; a few
other items increasing the aggregate to £1,167 2s. 11d. sterling.
On the 4th of June, 1806 (the anniversary of
George the Third's birth-day), the new Hall was publicly taken possession
of by its owners. At twelve o'clock the colours of the Trades were
displayed from the windows ; and in the evening the Blue Blanket, or grand
banner of the united Incorporations, was hung from the high front of the
building; while the interior was crowded with a festive company, including
the deacons, the magistrates, the officers of the Royal Artillery Company,
and of the Dumfriesshire and Troqueer Volunteers, the whole presided over
by Convener Samuel Primrose. This was the first of many jovial meetings
held in the same hall. At the time of its erection, the Trades were in
full force. Those who took part in the "house-heating" ceremony that
signalized its opening, never fancied that theirs was the last generation
in which the freeman's monopoly would be maintained, or that the day was
at hand when their convivial gatherings, shooting competitions, and grand
Rood-fair processions, would cease; that their property would for the most
part be disposed of, and all their goodly paraphernalia, including the
convener's gold chain, the gigantic punch-bowl, and the far-famed Silver
Gun, would pass into other hands.
The bacchanalian vessel here referred to was a
present from Convener Grainger, and is really a magnificent product of the
potter's art. As the meeting at which the bowl was presented was a
characteristic one, illustrative in some degree of the Trades and the town
when in holiday attire, we copy the account given of it by the local
journalist:- "On Tuesday evening last [Hogmanay, 1806], the Convener and
Deacons of the Incorporations of this town gave an elegant entertainment
in their new Hall to upwards of a hundred gentlemen of the town and
County. Convener Ferguson, in name of the Incorporations, presented the
freedom of the Trades to John Murray, Esq. of Murraythwaite,
vice-lieutenant of the County; to John Forrest, Esq., provost of Annan;
and to Colonel John Murray, nephew of the vice-lieutenant, with
appropriate addresses to each, to which they made suitable replies. Mr.
Robert Grainger, merchant, in a very handsome manner presented to the
Incorporations a most elegant china punch-bowl and silver spoon. The bowl,
we understand, will contain ten gallons. On the upper ring in the inside
are the words, 'Success to the Wooden Walls of Great Britain!' on the
second ring, `Success to the Incorporations of Dumfries!' on the outside
the lion rampant, with the words, 'God keep the King and the Craft!' being
the arms and motto of the Incorporations; and many other emblematical
devices. After the bowl was filled by the convener ["with good rum punch,"
says the minute-book], a great number of constitutional and patriotic
toasts were given. The evening was spent with the greatest conviviality
and harmony; and, indeed, the manner in which the whole was conducted
reflected the highest honour upon the Incorporations of this town." In the
same year, the Trades were presented with a gilt silver chain and medal,
by Deacon Fergusson, "to be worn by the convener, only on particular
occasions;" and by Mr. Thomas Boyd, the architect of the new Hall, with an
elegant chair for the convener, which piece of furniture was decorated
with the arms of the Incorporation, at the expense of another burgess, Mr.
William Grierson, junior, merchant. The "plenishing" of the hall was
further enriched by a beautifully-executed model of a frigate in full
sail, placed above the entrance-the gift of Captain Affleck, Aberdeen ;
and by a capacious snuffmull, ingeniously constructed out of a ram's head,
a present from Captain M`Dowall.
In 1825, when the system, though still
seemingly vigorous, was nodding to its fall, the public of Dumfries showed
their appreciation of it by subscribing for a magnificent badge of office,
to be worn by its chief. On the evening of the 9th of September, that
year, the subscribers met with the Trades' officials in the Coffee House,
High Street, for the purpose of presenting their gift, which consisted of
a massive chain and medal. Provost Thomson officiated as speaker on this
occasion. He pointed out the way in which James VI. had recognized the
importance of the Dumfries craftsmen, and then said:-" The representative
of the Trades is justly entitled to such a badge of office as has now been
presented to him, not less as a mark of honour and respect than from a
consideration that it is proper that one holding so important a situation
should be publicly distinguished. Should days of difficulty and confusion
at any time arise, no man is able to lend so material aid to the civil
authorities as the Convener of the Incorporations; and round him, with
their well-known feelings of loyalty, they will not, in such an event fail
to range themselves, to support the peace of the town, and the laws and
religion of the country." After a personal compliment to the recipient of
the chain, Convener Allan Anderson, and his immediate predecessor, Mr.
M'Kinnell, the Provost closed by investing the former with the badge, and
begging him to accept it for the Trades, as a token of the esteem in which
they were held by their fellow-citizens. [Seven Trades' Minutes] The
worthy convener returned thanks in suitable terms. The chain, a double
one, is made up of four hundred and nineteen links; the medal attached to
it is surrounded with beautiful embossed work, and has this inscription
engraved on the centre:- "Presented to the Seven Incorporated Trades, by a
few of the inhabitants of Dumfries."
On the 5th September, 1812, an institution was
founded which was well fitted to exercise a refining influence on the
community, we mean the Dumfriesshire and Galloway Horticultural Society.
The meeting called for that purpose consisted chiefly of gardeners, and
was presided over by Mr. William Hood; Mr. William Grierson of Boatford
and Mr. John Learmont of Dumfries taking a leading part in the
proceedings. The society grew at a rapid rate; and so strong had it become
in 1823, that a great anniversary meeting was held that year, followed by
a dinner, at which Colonel Dirom of Mount Annan (distinguished in his day
as a great agricultural improver) took the chair, and at which the members
presented Mr. Grierson with a handsome silver cup, by way of recognizing
the interest he had taken in the success of the society, and their
appreciation of his services in "bringing it to that perfect state at
which it had now arrived."
The old jail, which stood on the east side of
High Street, was never at its best a very strong building. When, in 1682,
two brothers, George and Richard Storie, were consigned to it, charged
with murdering Francis Armstrong at Alisonbank, on the Border, the former
speedily effected his escape; and the magistrates fearing that the latter
would do the same, were fain to send him under the sheriff's authority to
the "Heart of Midlothian." [Privy Council Records] In the following year a
complaint was made to the Privy Council by Sir Patrick Maxwell of
Springkell, that Ludovick Irving, a notorious highwayman, whom he had
caused to be followed to Ireland, captured there, and lodged in Dumfries
prison, at an expense of 1200 sterling, had been allowed to break ward and
disappear. The criminal was first put into "a, sure vault" - a place that
belied its name; and then consigned "to ane outer room which had no sure
posts or doors" - a circumstance which the prisoner soon took advantage
of. Sir Patrick claimed his expenses and demanded the punishment of the
magistrates for allowing Irving to get his liberty; with what success does
not appear. [Privy Council Records] On the 30th of April, 1684, the Privy
Council resolved that as "by the throng of prisoners in the Tolbooth of
Dumfries, the same has been already broken and is yet in the same hazard,"
the strong vaults below the Castle should be prepared for the reception of
prisoners; and the likelihood is that the vaults would be used for that
purpose till the jail was made a little less vulnerable.
"At a much more recent period," says M'Diarmid,
"the sister of the celebrated Jeanie Deans, alias Helen Walker, was
confined in one of the cells of the Dumfries jail, while awaiting her
trial for child murder; and a female still alive [in 1832], who knew both
sisters intimately, stated lately in the presence of her master, Mr.
Scott, optician, that the individual who wronged `Effie,' and afterwards
became her husband, frequently visited Dumfries in the evenings, and
conversed and condoled with her `through the grating." [Picture of
Dumfries, p. 72. ] In
the autumn of 1742, a vagrant woman from the North, named M'Donald, was
sent to prison for pilfering a pair of stockings. As she was being
consigned to a dark cell, she prayed the jailor to allow her a small bit
of candle with which to light up its gloom. The wish was complied with;
and an hour afterwards, just as the ten o'clock bell had ceased to ring,
the whole upper part of the prison was in a blaze. With some difficulty
the flames were subdued, but not till after the third story of the
building had been consumed, and, what was infinitely more pitiful, till
the poor miserable prisoner from the Highlands, whose candle had caused
the conflagration, had been burned to death. A large portion of the jail
had in consequence to be rebuilt, according to the plan of a committee who
recommended that a part of the arch above "the thief's hole," the whole of
the upper story, and the south gable, should be reconstructed, with an
addition to the latter of an outer staircase. [Town Council Minutes.] So
increasingly insecure had the prison become with the lapse of years, and
so defective was it in other respects, that the County and Burgh
authorities resolved in 1801 to erect a new one. It was commenced in the
following year, and completed in 1807. The site selected was objectionable
on account of its being low and damp, and in a genteel part of the town -
Buccleuch Street-to which the prison was no ornament. It contained eight
cells for criminals, four small rooms for debtors, and several apartments
fronting the street, in what was called the Bridewell division of the
building. With this
prison is associated the blackest incident in the life of David Haggart,
notorious as the smartest thief and most daring burglar and jail-breaker
of his day. Though, when occupying the "stone jug" of Dumfries (to borrow
a term from his own jargon), he was but a slim youth of twenty-two, no
fewer than fifteen charges of house-breaking and theft hung over his head.
He had escaped from far stronger bastiles than that of Dumfries, and
reckoned with confidence on getting outside of it also, by means of false
keys which he had managed to fabricate. A fellow-captive named Laurie
induced him to throw aside this plan, and adopt the bolder one of knocking
down Hunter, the head-jailor, with a stone in a wipe (piece of cloth), and
getting hold of his keys with which to set themselves free. Two other
prisoners, Dunbar and M'Grory - the latter lying heavily ironed under
sentence of death for the cruel murder of a pedlar boy on Eskdale-muir -
were made confederates in the plot; and the four felons only waited for a
favourable opportunity to put it into execution. Dunbar, when in the cage
(an erection in the court where prisoners got the benefit of fresh air),
had a stone handed up to him by a sympathizer from below; several
iron-cutting implements were conveyed by Haggart to M'Grory; and when the
scheme of the conspirators was quite ripe, they heard with exultation one
morning that Mr. Hunter had gone to attend the annual races then taking
place at Tinwald-Downs. The jail-governor absent, they had none left to
cope with but Morine the turnkey. A little sharp work with the "chive;" a
well-delivered blow to stun the keykeeper - merely to stupify, not by any
means to kill him; and the jail-birds, so they fancied, would bid farewell
to their "cage" - with what peculiar joy in the case of the murderer, who
would flee not for liberty merely, but life!
In the literal cage three of them were placed
on that eventful day; the fourth, M'Grory, being confined in a separate
cell. Haggart, it would seem, could pass out of the cage as easily as if
he had had a magic word to open it, like that used by the thieves in the
Oriental tale; and when twelve o'clock struck, he was lying crouching in a
closet at the top of a stair that led to the condemned cell - derned there
with deadly weapon-the stone tied in part of a blanket-and ready to assail
the turnkey when he passed that way. Morine required to do so: two
clergymen were on a visit to the convict; Laurie, according to the cue
given him, called on Morine to come up and let out the ministers; and
whilst the poor man was obeying the treacherous summons, a murderous blow
from Haggart made him stagger and fall. In a trice afterwards, Haggart was
outside the prison; and, heedless of all his confederates, off he set
along Irish Street, round by Shakspeare Street into the King's Arms yard,
across High Street, down the Vennel to the Nith, and then away by the left
bank of the river to Comlongan wood. The bloodstained fugitive, though
pressed hard by Mr. John Richardson, an active criminal officer, reached
Carlisle in safety; hearing, by the way, to his horror, the true tidings
that Morine had died that night at ten o'clock. Several months afterwards,
however, he was apprehended in the north of Ireland by Mr. Richardson; and
ere many more weeks elapsed, he was executed in Edinburgh for the murder
of the unfortunate Dumfries turnkey. The jail which was the scene of this
memorable tragedy, was superseded, in 1851, by a huge ungainly structure;
possessing, however, excellent interior arrangements, with accommodation
for sixty inmates. At
a meeting of the Council in 1804, the magistrates were authorized "to lay
out the tonnage money now on hand, in building the new quay at Kingholm;
and, if necessary, to borrow money for the object." The revenue from
tonnage was at this time about £165 a year, which left but a small
surplus; and, as usual, the bank had to be drawn upon for the completion
of the works, which was effected in 1806, the first foreign vessel
arriving at Kingholm Quay being the "Clementina," with sugar, on the 16th
of September of that year. [Town Council Minutes] We have already seen
how, by the liberality of Mr. Maxwell of Nithsdale, the town became
possessed of the ground on which Glencaple village was built; and we must
now notice how it acquired the lordship of another hamlet erected nearer
home. At a meeting of
Council held on the 23rd of March, 1812, the important subject of the moss
lands belonging to the Burgh was introduced by Provost Staig. He stated
that a few days ago he and the other magistrates had visited certain of
these mosses situated within the royalty, over which sundry individuals
had enjoyed the liberty of casting turf; and that as their servitudes had
expired, or would soon cease, the property might now be feued or otherwise
disposed of as might seem best. They had also, he said, gone to Whinnyhill,
where a considerable number of feus had been taken and several houses
built, by which the locality had been greatly improved, and the revenue of
the town increased. As Mr. Joseph Gass had originated the village, and
done much to foster its growth, he proposed that it should be called
Gastown, in compliment to its founder. Provost Staig's propositions were
cordially approved of. On the 5th of the following September, charters
were granted to various persons for twenty-three allotments, at a ground
rent of from 10s. to £1 13s. 4d. yearly, each; the entire feus amounting
to £26 12s. per annum. In this manner the infant village of Gastown
acquired a goodly addition to its size. On the same day fifteen additional
feus at Glencaple were let at an aggregate of £13 10s. Thus from these two
sources a sum of fully £40 a year was at once added to the revenue of the
Burgh; and that in course of time came to be further benefited by the
condition imposed on the feuars of "doubling the duty the first year of
the entry of every heir or singular successor." [Ibid]
On the 16th of January, 1810, the Council
received from the County Commissioners copies of a bill prepared by them
and the Commissioners of the Stewartry, for improving the navigation of
the river, and the police regulations of the Burgh. Hitherto the Council
bad been the Neptunes of the Nith; and now these other bodies desired, by
means of a new legislative trident, to acquire dominion over its waters,
and also sought to intermeddle with the internal affairs of the town. The
Provost, Mr. Robert Jackson, was not of a temper to tolerate such
assumptions; and in resisting them he was backed by nearly all the
councillors. A conference was brought about between a committee of the
latter and the chief promoters of the measure, with the view of coming to
a common understanding respecting it; but as the County authorities stood
out for "the bill and the whole bill," those of the town declared war
against them, and prepared a bill of their own, based on their existing
Tonnage, Ale-duty, and Police Act, passed in 1787, and which had almost
run its course. Both
parties made preparations for a Parliamentary campaign, but no real battle
ensued. A technical flaw in the burghal measure having endangered its
success, its promoters were induced to withdraw it, on condition of
receiving payment of their expenses from the other side, amounting to £926
5s. 4d. When, in the following year (1811), the rival bill was introduced,
the Council made strenuous exertions to get it modified, in the belief
that it was wiser for them to act thus, than to bring up their own measure
anew. Mr. Maitland of Eccles, who was sent to London to look after the
town's interests in the matter, met with considerable success. In
reporting the results, he stated that a new arrangement for the first year
had been made, which assigned to the magistrates their due place in the
commission; that the original clause in the Act which conferred power to
deepen the river as far up as the Caul, and which in its operation would
have endangered the mills and injured the cattle market, had been so
altered as to make the foot of Assembly Street the boundary of the trust;
and that he had obtained the insertion of a clause to provide for the
improvement of the river before any of the promoters who had subscribed
money towards accomplishing the purposes of the Act, should be allowed to
finger a shilling of their shares. [Town Council Minutes.]
It was further reported by Mr. Maitland, that
though he had not got the police clause cancelled which "proposed to
attach £100 sterling annually during the currency of the bill from the
common funds of the Burgh," the town would be virtually relieved from it;
"seeing that he had obtained a bond from Mr. Maxwell of Terraughty, a
leading promoter of the bill, to free and relieve them from "this most
oppressive and unjust assessment." Finally, Mr. Maxwell had come under an
obligation to reimburse the town for the expenses-estimated at upwards of
£450-incurred in opposing the Act. [Town Council Minutes] With some
reluctance, the Council acquiesced in the measure as thus modified, and it
was brought into operation in 1812. It was provided that the commissioners
till the first of November that year, should consist of the Dumfries
magistrates, the deacon-convener, and certain merchants and County
gentlemen who had each subscribed £100 or more to the fund raised for
carrying the Act; that in future the Commissioners of Supply for
Dumfriesshire and the Stewartry should at their annual Michaelmas meetings
nominate ten of their number each, and the merchants and shipowners of
Dumfries should, three weeks prior to the 1st of November each year,
nominate six of their number each to administer the Act.
As important operations were contemplated on
the river, the rates were made much higher than before. A duty of Is. 2d.
was imposed on every ton of goods or merchandise imported or exported,
except coals and lime, on which six pence per ton was levied. A duty of
six pence per ton register was charged on vessels from foreign ports
entering the river, and of two pence on vessels arriving from the coasts
of the United Kingdom ; and it was provided that one penny per ton should
be paid by all vessels anchoring at or near Carsethorn, except such as
were chartered to the port of Dumfries; the limits of the port being from
the Nith, opposite the bottom of Assembly Street, to Southerness, and a
point opposite to it on the other side of the Solway.
Though considerable sums of money had been
expended in improving the river whilst it was under the management of the
Town Council, it had altered little since the time when the Scoto-Irish
ploughed its waters in their curraghs. The new Commissioners of the Nith
aimed at making it navigable up to Dockfoot by large vessels; and with
this laudable end in view, operations were commenced on a great scale,
according to plans furnished by a distinguished civil engineer, Mr.
Hollingsworth. The works were of a varied nature. In the first instance
the course of the stream was rendered less circuitous than before, by an
extensive cutting on the Dumfries or Kingholm side, and another
corresponding incision on the Galloway side at Nethertown; secondly, an
embankment was formed on both sides for the double purpose of fixing the
new channel, and of rendering the adjacent lands less liable to be
flooded; thirdly, the river was deepened by excavations, dredgings, and
the reduction by blasting of the annoying stratum of rock that lay right
across its bed a little below Castledykes. The proprietor of Nethertown,
Major M'Murdo, received no less a sum than £1,548 15s. as the price of the
land given up by him for this undertaking; and about £800 was paid for the
ground taken on the Dumfries side-the town receiving as its share of this
sum, £246 16s. 6d. For the cuttings upwards of £1,000 was paid; and the
embankments must have cost at least as much. If to all these sums be added
the cost of obtaining the Act of Parliament, £974; of survey, £51; of
levelling, £20; of buoys fixed farther down the channel, £90; and of other
works bearing on the great object they were all intended to subserve; the
improvements begun in 1812 must, when finished, have cost fully £7,000.
[Minutes of the Nith Navigation commissioners ] The operations were
superintended by a committee, of which Mr. James M'Whir, merchant, was
convener; and such a high sense was entertained by the Commissioners of
that gentleman's services in the matter, that, by way of acknowledgment,
they voted him a sum of 250 guineas. When the works were nearly completed,
in 1823, Mr. M'Whir reported upon them to the Commissioners, and proposed
a scheme for liquidating the debt that had been incurred. Mr.
Hollingsworth, he said, had engaged to secure for them seven feet of water
at the Dock for two or three days during the time of spring tides; which
promise had been more than realized, as at such seasons the depth of water
at Dockhead was now for four or five days eight feet, and at Dockfoot ten
feet. He further explained, that by the erection of a small stone jetty at
Laghall, opposite Kingholm Quay, the channel there, which could formerly
be forded ankle-deep, was now eight feet deep at low water. The sum
originally subscribed for the works was £9,800, of which £7,225 had been
drawn by the treasurer; and adding interest for eleven years, and the
floating liabilities, about £2,000, the total debt on the trust would
amount to £13,000. The revenue since 1811 had been £11,367 9s. 5d., or an
average of £950 a year; and there was every reason to expect that the
annual income would soon reach £1,000 or guineas. Mr. M'Whir proceeded in
his report to show that the best mode of repaying the loan was by
borrowing £7,000 on the credit of the revenue -a proposal which was
adopted and acted upon. [Minutes of Nith Commission.] He further stated
that, "by the kind exertions of the magistrates," the sum of £400 would be
placed at their disposal for the purpose of erecting a commodious harbour
in the immediate vicinity of the town; a vote to that amount having been
obtained by ex-Provost Kerr from the Convention of Royal Burghs.
Remembering the conflict between the promoters of the new Act and the Town
Council, Mr. M'Whir rather keenly contrasted the "liberal policy of our
present local governors" with what he called "the persecutions formerly
experienced" by their predecessors in office. In due time the money
granted by the Convention was spent in the erection of a massive harbour
wall at Dockheadwhich, however, has been of little service to the
shipping. At a more
recent date, other embankments were erected between Kingholm Quay and
Kelton. The latest work of an extensive kind undertaken by the Nith
Commissioners was the construction of a huge sea-dyke below Glencaple
Quay, which cost no less a sum than £6,000; and though it has had the
desired effects of deepening and straightening the channel at that place,
it is a matter of question whether these advantages have not been secured
at too great an expense, considering how much the revenue has been reduced
by the railways, and the difficulty which the shipping of the port have in
competing with "the steeds of steam," which carry on the traffic of the
district with a speed and regularity that cannot otherwise be rivalled.
All the money hitherto spent in improving the Nith has failed to make it a
good navigable river. Capacious vessels, drawing seven feet of water or
so, can easily come up the estuary to within a few miles of Dumfries; but
after that, in spite of what Mr. Hollingsworth and other engineers have
done, difficulties commence which are only fairly overcome for the time
being when the tidal flux is at least sixteen feet high. For these reasons
the shipowners and merchants are beginning to think that, instead of
trying to subdue the all but impracticable channel between the town and
Glencaple Quay, they ought to connect them, or otherwise reach a deep sea
harbour by a railway; and thus (to use a nautical phrase) splice the
perfect mode of land transit on the defective river transit, and secure
for the Burgh the full benefits of both. Mr. M'Whir, in his report
(already quoted from), anticipated that the revenue of the Nith, which had
yielded an average of £950 annually from 1811 to 1823, would soon increase
to £1,000 and upwards. In 1831 it amounted to £1,072 17s. 4d.: it has been
occasionally a few pounds higher since; but as soon as the railway system
of the district came into full play, the commerce of the river declined,
and it is now in a state of great depression.
Long before "Burns's time," Bridgend had
become a populous town; but even after the beginning of the current
century, when it numbered nearly two thousand inhabitants, it had little
business and no local government, save what was exercised by the County
justices and the superior of the soil. On account of the latter
circumstance, the town became tenanted by more than its fair share of
lawless characters: wandering tinklers, who, wearied with camp life in
Galloway or Annandale, found readily within it welcome rest and refuge;
runners of contraband goods from the Isle of Man, who could usually count
on safe lodgings in Bridgend; while of native poachers and other roughs it
reckoned not a few. Being located in a different county, the Dumfries
magistrates had no jurisdiction over it whatever. Tam o' Shanter eluded
the Alloway witches by putting a running stream between him and them, and
Burgh delinquents in the same way often effected their escape by wading
the Nith at its fords, or crossing it by the bridge, well assured that the
officers of justice durst not pursue them into Galloway. When criminals
were actually followed into Bridgend by those having the requisite
authority, they frequently baffled the beagles of the law by diving into a
labyrinth of underground buildings which lay near the river's brink, where
whisky was distilled in defiance of the gauger, and where a gipsy gang
held rule under their chief, Ryes Aitken, who was nearly as great a local
celebrity in his day as Jock Johnstone, or even Big Will Bailie. There was
much of exaggeration in the statement attributed to a London
magistrate-Sir John Fieldingthat the metropolitan detectives could trace a
thief over the entire kingdom if he did not get to the Gorbals of Glasgow
or Bridgend of Dumfries; for in that case they had to give up the chase.
But it was unquestionably a somewhat lawless town, till, by its erection,
in 1810, into a burgh of barony, under the name of Maxwelltown, it
acquired a magistracy of its own. The charter was obtained greatly through
the exertions of the late Mr. Philip Forsyth of Nithside; and in
recognition of his services in this and other respects, he had the honour
of being elected first provost of the burgh. [The town, which was long
without any proper local government, has now police authorities under
Rutherford's Act, as well as a baronial magistracy and council.]
Maxwelltown has long been as peaceable a place as any in the British
dominions ; and, with its extensive iron foundries and woollen
manufactures (of which we shall afterwards speak), and its large timber
works and saw-mill (the latter the property of Messrs. Gillies & Son), it
possesses no inconsiderable extent of trade. Its inhabitants have rapidly
increased during the present century, and it is now the most populous town
of Kirkcudbrightshire: population in 1861, 3,600. |