DURING those years of the Napoleonic War
the population of Glasgow continued to increase rapidly. From 66,578
in 1791 it rose to 83,769 in 1801, the increase being more than the
entire number of inhabitants in 1740, when the population numbered
17,043. By 1811 it had risen still more rapidly to 110,460.
Nor were the developments of the
community in other directions checked. In 1804 its benevolence was
directed to the sad condition of those mentally deranged. Till then
these unfortunates, when paupers, had been confined in cells at the
rear of the town's hospital or poorhouse, looking out on Rope-work
Lane, while those in better circumstances were relegated to private
asylums, the possible abuses of which were to be pictured at a later
day in such writings as the novel of "Valentine Vox." The citizens
of Glasgow were much ahead of their time in projecting an asylum
under responsible and enlightened management, and in 1806 the Town
Council granted a seal of cause to the managers of the institution,
which at the present hour carries on its beneficent work as the
Royal Glasgow Asylum at Gartnavel. [Burgh Records, 28th Dec., 1804;
26th May, 1806. The principal promoter of the asylum was Robert
McNair of Belvidere.]
Though the ancient public "meithing"
or riding of the marches had been stopped on account of the rabble
and abuses which attended it, the magistrates found time to
perambulate the boundaries of the royalty to make sure that these
were not infringed upon, a precaution which, as the facts shewed,
was not without reason. [Ibid. 2nd Aug., 1805.]
For the third time, by way of ease to
the public in the upper part of the town, the Town Council attacked
that famous feature of the city, the "Bell o' the Brae," at the
upper part of High Street, and lowered it still further. [Ibid. 20th
Aug., 1805. This, however, was not the final alteration of the
ancient landmark. In the course of the work of the City Improvement
Trust in the latter part of the century, when the picturesque but
insanitary old closes and houses of the region were swept away, a
still further lowering of the thoroughfare took place. In early
times the Bell o' the Brae must have been a really considerable
eminence, entirely preventing a view of High Street from the
Bishop's Castle, and rendering highly feasible an exploit such as
that attributed to Sir William Wallace in the thirteenth century.
This fact seems hitherto to have entirely escaped the notice of
historians.]
The city fathers also continued to
provide generously for the wives and children of the Glasgow men who
were fighting the country's battles; [Ibid. 23rd May, 1805 and
onward.] and when news of Lord Nelson's great victory over the
French and Spanish fleets at Trafalgar reached this country, the
magistrates and Town Council joined the pagan of national rejoicing
over that immortal achievement by writing a letter of congratulation
to the king, and the citizens rose promptly to the occasion by
erecting a monument to the fallen admiral on Glasgow Green. [Ibid.
23rd Nov., 1805; 26th May, 1806. On Sunday, 5th August, 1810, during
one of the most terrific thunderstorms which ever broke over GIasgow,
Nelson's Monument was struck by lightning and rent nearly from top
to bottom.—Scots Magazine, 1810, p. 633.]
The business and amusements of the
citizens, however, went on. When the news of Trafalgar arrived there
was pending before the Town Council a request for the use of a
vacant piece of ground next the Theatre in Queen Street for a
temporary circus, and the Council agreed to the request, though the
projectors of the circus did not proceed with their enterprise
[Ibid. 27th Dec., 1805; 27th Jan., 1806.] More important was the
building of another church, the eighth under the patronage of the
Town Council. Once again the Wynd Church, in the crowded region
south of Trongate, was becoming dilapidated. Fifty years earlier St.
Andrew's Church had been built to take its place. But the Wynd
Church remained. Its minister was the redoubtable Dr. Porteous, "for
forty years the great clerical leader of the west," and the building
was no longer large enough to contain those who wished to attend his
services. The Town Council therefore proceeded to build St. George's
Church. The site first proposed was at St. Vincent Street, but
Camperdown Place, now West George Street, was finally fixed upon,
and the building was thus made to close another fine city vista,
westward from George Square.
The erection of this church brought
into public notice a personage who was to be one of the most
outstanding figures in the life of Glasgow during the next thirty
years. The whole work of superintending the building was undertaken
"in the most handsome manner," free of charge, by Bailie James
Cleland, who himself laid the foundation stone. The work was
expeditiously carried out, and in recognition of his services the
Town Council presented Cleland with a piece of plate. [Burgh
Records, 8th Aug., 26th Aug., 1806 ; 23rd April, 1807; 22nd Sept.,
5th Nov., 1808.] This was the first of many important services done
for the City by James Cleland, who is best remembered to-day by the
"Annals of Glasgow," in two volumes, which he wrote for behoof of
the funds of the Royal Infirmary in 1816. The annalist was a wright
and builder, and it was upon his plans that the new Grammar or High
School was erected between upper Montrose Street and John Street in
1807. [Ibid. 21st Oct., 1807. ] Seven years later he purchased the
tolbooth at the foot of High Street, excepting the beautiful old
steeple, and erected a handsome building on the site. [Ibid. 4th
Feb., 1814.] In view of his shrewdness and services a new office was
created for him, and he was made Superintendent of Works. [Ibid. 4th
Feb., 6th Sept., 1814.] So well pleased was the Town Council with
his labours that a year after his appointment it raised his salary
from £200 to £500. [Ibid. 25th July, 1815.] This was the beginning
of a highly interesting and useful public career. During the times
of hardship which culminated in the "Radical Risings" in 1819 and
1820 he directed the labours of the weavers and other unemployed in
the work which was found for them in improving Glasgow Green, a
service for which the Town Council made him a complimentary gift of
£50. [Ibid. 2nd May, 1820; 10th Feb., 1821.] This work was in
compliance with "A Description of the Manner of improving the Green
of Glasgow" which he had drawn up and printed seven years earlier.
It included the making of sewers and a parapet wall in front of
Monteith Row, the covering in of the Camlachie Burn, and the
draining and levelling of the Calton Green and part of the High
Green, resulting in the addition of several acres of grass land to
the city's public park. [Ibid. 16th Jan., 1821. The most complete
account of the Green and its history is that furnished by Cleland in
his Annals of Glasgow, ii. 457, reproduced verbatim, with additions,
by Senex in Old Glasgow and its Environs, p. 56.] Cleland also
carried out a census of the population of Glasgow and its suburbs,
printed in 1820, which contained several new features, and earned
the high commendation of the Town Council. [Ibid. 29th May, 1820.]
Three years later a special vote of thanks was recorded for his
erudite and successful labour in adjusting the different weights and
measures used in the city, and for the ability and accuracy of his
historical treatise on the subject. [Ibid. 4th Feb., 1823.]
Following this achievement his salary was spontaneously raised by
£100, and two years later, when he had superintended the rebuilding
of the Ramshorn Church, he was awarded a special gift of a hundred
guineas, and had his salary increased by another £150. [Burgh
Records, 13th Oct., 1824; 27th Jan., 14th Feb., 17th Aug., 1826.]
One of Cleland's numerous suggestions
for the improvement of the city, which was not carried out, would
have made a curious difference in the appearance of Glasgow to-day.
St. George's Church, the building of which had been superintended by
himself, had certain architectural shortcomings. The four large
statues with which Stark, the designer, had proposed to ornament the
tower, had proved too expensive, and had been replaced by four much
less effective stone pinnacles. Also, while the front towards
Buchanan Street was dignified enough, the rear was barnlike and
commonplace. It was probably in view of these facts that Cleland
made his suggestion. In a letter to the Lord Provost in 1829 he
proposed that St. George's Church should be converted into Council
Chambers, with Guild Hall, Court Hall, and Committee rooms, and that
the congregation should be removed to a new church in Nile Street,
facing the end of Regent Street. By selling the crypt and
surrounding ground for burying-places, the cost of the two buildings
would, he estimated, be reduced to £3000. [Frazer, The Making of
Buchanan Street, P. 66. Cleland's proposal was strongly opposed by a
committee of citizens, who feared that the removal of the Council
Chambers westward would depreciate the value of property east of the
Cross.—Burgh Records, 31st March, 1829.]
This was one of the very few of
Cleland's schemes which definitely missed fire. [Another was his
suggestion in 1813 for raising a sum of 30,000 by taxation for the
building and endowment of two new churches in the city, and the
increase of all the city ministers' stipends by £100. He calculated
the rental of the city at that time to be not less than
£200,000.—Burgh Records, 16th Sept., 7th Dec., 1813. Still another
of Cleland's suggestions which was not accepted was to roof over the
burying-ground round the Ramshorn Church and use the space thus
provided above the arches as a market. The burying-ground would then
have become a sort of crypt.—Glasgow and its Clubs, p. 544.] It has
been stated, no doubt with justice, that "no one man in Glasgow ever
had to do with the getting up of so many churches, monuments, and
public works of all kinds." As late as the year 1837 he was chairman
of the committee which organized the great dinner to Sir Robert
Peel, and erected for the purpose the famous Peel Pavilion in the
orchard behind the house of Gordon of Aikenhead in Buchanan Street,
which is now Princes Square. [The Making of Buchanan Street, p. 74.]
He was the author also of many treatises on public matters which
were notable for their accuracy and practical utility. Of these Dr.
Dibdin, the celebrated bibliographer, wrote "I hold in my hand the
accurate and triumphant folio volume of the great statist of the
north, Dr. James Cleland, by which we are carefully initiated into
all the mysteries of commerce and mazes of prosperity."
From his letters recorded in the
town's minutes, Cleland appears to have had a personality of much
modesty, graciousness, and tact, and from first to last the Council
held him in the highest regard. He was held in similar regard by the
authorities of the University, who conferred on him the degree of
LL.D. When he retired from the office of Superintendent of Works in
1834 a meeting of the most prominent citizens was held in the Black
Bull Hotel, a subscription of £4603 6s. was raised, and a building
known as the "Cleland Testimonial," erected with it at the
south-east corner of Sauchiehall Street and Buchanan Street, was
presented to him as a token of public esteem. [Ibid. p. 75.]
While Cleland was still at the
beginning of his career of public utility, two proposals were made
which for a considerable time failed to secure accomplishment. One
of these was the making of a wet dock at the Broomielaw to provide
accommodation for the increasing number of vessels coming up the
river. The original proposal was to make the dock on the north side
of the harbour, and apparently the plan was to enclose part of the
river for the purpose. The suggestion however, was opposed by the
owners of houses in the low-lying parts of the town above the
bridge, who feared that the obstruction would bring about the
flooding of their property in times of spate. [Burgh Records, 13th
Feb., 19th March, 15th April, 1807.] In 1819, partly by way of
relieving the serious unemployment and discontent of that time, the
Government agreed to lend £30,000 for the making of the dock, and
Telford, the celebrated engineer, was employed to make a plan.
[Ibid. 27th Dec., 1819; 22nd Aug., 29th Dec., 1820.] In 1832 the
project was removed to the south side of the river, and the Town
Council, for £7370, sold to the Clyde Trustees part of the
Windmillcroft opposite the Broomielaw [Ibid. vol. xi., p. 683.]; but
it was not till 1867 that the Kingston Dock, Glasgow's first
artificial harbour basin on the Clyde, was actually opened. [Merwick,
The River Clyde, p. 206 note.]
Of more ambitious scope was the next
proposal of CleIand's time, which was still longer in attaining
fulfilment. Glasgow was then supplying large numbers of recruits for
the army, while its proportion of militia was greater than that of
all the rest of Lanarkshire, and considerable difficulty arose from
the fact that the whole management of these Crown matters was
centred in the headquarters of the Lord Lieutenant of the county at
Hamilton or Lanark. In the absence of the Marquess of Douglas, who
was Lord Lieutenant, the magistrates approached the vice-lieutenant,
Lord Belhaven, with the suggestion that the Lord Provost might be
made, ex officio, a deputy-lieutenant. The suggestion, however, met
with a rather definite snub. The Town Council then sent a letter to
the Lord Advocate, to be laid before the Ministers of the Crown,
asking that the city should be disjoined from the county of Lanark,
and made a separate district, with a Lord Lieutenant of its own. The
reply of Lord Melville, then all powerful in Scottish affairs, for
the Government, was that a Lord Lieutenant could not be appointed
till the city was made a county in itself. [Burgh Records, 19th
Dec., 1806; 21st Oct., 28th Oct., 1807; 28th March, 1808.] Thus the
matter stood for something like a hundred years, till the city was
made a separate county, with the Lord Provost as its Lord
Lieutenant, in 1893.
Though these important projects were
seriously delayed at the time, they were significant as proofs that
the city was instinct with energy and alive with the spirit of
progress. The narrower burghal ideas of previous centuries, it is
true, had not yet all passed away. In 1808, for example, the Lord
Provost was thanked for his zeal, when Dean of Guild, in the
previous year, in compelling large numbers of unfreemen carrying on
trade in the city to become burgesses. But the fact that the fees
collected on the occasion amounted to £1200 shows that the old rule
was breaking down, and that more and more strangers were settling in
the city to contribute to its productiveness. [Ibid. 20th Oct.,
1808.]
Glasgow was shewing its spirit in
military efforts not less than in industry. When Lord Macleod,
eldest son of the Earl of Cromarty attainted for his part in "the
'45," was in 1777 raising the first battalion Macleod's Highlanders,
he was joined at Elgin by 236 Lowlanders and 34 English and Irish
recruits, enrolled in Glasgow. In consequence of his distinguished
service with that battalion, Lord Macleod had the forfeited Cromarty
estates restored to him In 1786 the regiment took the name of the
71st. In 1804, when a second battalion was embodied at Dunbarton,
the recruiting was carried on so successfully in Glasgow that the
regiment got the name of "The Glasgow Highland Light Infantry," and
four years later the name was approved by King George III. The fact
that Lord Macleod's family name was Mackenzie accounts for the
tartan still worn by this famous Glasgow regiment. [Adam, Clans,
Sepls, and Regiments of the Scottish Highlands, p. 297.]
In 1808 the city also offered to
raise another regiment, but Lord Castlereagh declined to sanction
the raising of a new corps while the existing forces remained below
their appointed strength. [Burgh Records, 4th March, 1808.]
At the same time Glasgow was not slow
to do honour to the military heroes of the hour. It conferred its
honorary burgess-ship on Viscount Cathcart and Admiral Hood,
[Ibid. 2nd Dec., 1808.] and, two months later, on receiving news of
the death of Sir John Moore in the hour of victory at Corunna, it at
once took measures to raise a monument to his memory, the Town
Council opening the subscription with £100. [Ibid. 7th Feb., 1809.]
That famous native of Glasgow, son of
Dr. John Moore, the author of "Zeluco" and friend of Robert Burns,
shares with Colin McLiver or Campbell, Lord Clyde, the honour of
being Glasgow's most illustrious soldier son. As a British general
in the Napoleonic wars, his achievement ranks second only to that of
the Duke of Wellington, but lie had the fate of nearly every leader
who makes the first essay in a campaign for this country, of being
inadequately supplied with men and means. [Another notable Glasgow
soldier of the same period was Major-General Sir Thomas Monroe. Of
him George Canning said, "Europe never produced a more accomplished
statesman, nor India, so fertile in heroes, a more skilful soldier."
Born in 1761, Monroe was the son of a substantial merchant who
resided in the Stockwellgate. After three years at Glasgow
University he went to India at the age of eighteen, as an infantry
cadet. He served in the war against Hyder Ali, acted as secretary in
the administration of Mysore, and formed a lasting friendship with
Colonel Wellesley, the future Duke of Wellington. He greatly
distinguished himself in organizing and developing Indian
administration. After the second Mahratta war, in which he served as
a brigadier-general, he was made a K.C.B., and appointed Governor of
Madras, and for his services in the first Burmah war he received a
baronetcy. He was making a farewell tour of the ceded territories
when he died of cholera in 1827.]
In the hour when Sir John Moore fell
at the battle of Corunna the fortunes of Britain in her war with
Napoleon on the continent of Europe were at their lowest. The French
despot was master of all that continent, and had placed his brothers
on four of its thrones. When Spain rose against the usurpation of
its crown the British minister Canning had poured supplies into that
country, and sent Moore with his small army to its help. But
Napoleon asserted his power by marching upon Madrid with two hundred
thousand men, and the defeat of the Spanish forces on the Ebro, and
the retreat and death of Moore, seemed to end the campaign.
Following that event the second Earl of Chatham had lost a British
army in the marches of Walcheren, Napoleon had crushed an Austrian
effort at the battle of Wagram, and Wellesley, who had taken up the
forlorn hope in Spain, after winning one desperate battle and a
peerage at Talavera, had been forced by Marshal Soult to retire on
Badajos. In view of these reverses something like a panic seized
London, where a petition was signed for the withdrawal of the
British forces from the Peninsula. [Green, Short History, p. 825.]
It is of interest to find that, in
that trying time, the spirit of Glasgow remained undaunted. Nothing
could better shew this to be the case than the account of the
proceedings in the northern city on the occasion of its celebration
of the jubilee of King George III. The date was the 25th of October,
1809, and in describing what took place the records of the Town
Council furnish a vivid picture.
"This being the day,"runs that
account," on which our gracious Sovereign entered into the both year
of his reign, the same was celebrated in the city of Glasgow with
every demonstration of affection and joy. At 8 o'clock in the
morning the great bells of the city commenced ringing, and continued
till ten. At half-past ten the lord provost, magistrates, and
council, with the ministers of the city in their gowns and bands,
the lord dean of guild and members of the Merchants House, the
deacon-convener and members of the Trades House, the lord rector of
the University of Glasgow and the principal and professors in their
gowns, the officers of the 1st, 4th, 5th and 6th Royal Lanarkshire
local militia, assembled in the town hall, and went in grand
procession to Saint George's Church, where an excellent sermon was
preached by the Rev. Dr. Porteous from Chronicles c. xxix. v. 20:
'And David said unto all the congregation, "Now bless the Lord your
God." And all the congregation blessed the Lord God of their
fathers, and bowed down their heads, and worshipped the Lord and the
King.' After the service an appropriate hymn was sung by the band,
and the King's anthem in full chorus. The procession then returned
in the same order to the town hall. The streets were lined by the
permanent staff of the before-mentioned regiments of local militia.
From 12 till 2 appropriate tunes were played on the music bells. At
6 the magistrates gave a grand entertainment in the town hall, which
was numerously attended, enthusiasm and joy beaming in every
countenance. After a short address by the lord provost, admirably
suited to the occasion, many loyal and constitutional toasts given
by his lordship were drunk with the most rapturous applause, the
band of the Stirlingshire Militia playing appropriate tunes." [Burgh
Records, 25th Oct., 1809. More than once, at that period, Glasgow
Town Council celebrated some notable event with a procession. At the
laying of the foundation stone of St. George's Church in 1807, the
city fathers, with the ministers and representatives of other public
bodies, walked in procession from the Council Chambers to the spot,
and in i8io the magistrates and council walked in procession to the
Low Green, where the Lord Provost laid the foundation stone of the
new court house, public offices, and jail at the foot of Saltmarket.—Ibid.
3rd June, 1807; 18th Sept., 1810.]
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