As the seventeenth century drew to a
close, signs of change were to be noted in many of the conditions of
life in Glasgow. The strange superstition regarding demoniacal
possession and the possibility of making a pact with Satan, which
for four hundred years smeared the page of Christian history with
its cruel stain, was to demand victims in Scotland for another
quarter of a century. [The last case of witch-burning in Scotland
took place at Dornoch in 1722.—Scott's Demonology and Witchcraft,
ninth letter.] As late as the month of October, 1696, the relatives
of Christian Shaw of Bargarran brought that child to Glasgow to
consult an eminent physician, named Brisbane, regarding the curious
symptoms from which she suffered. Brisbane sensibly attributed the
symptoms to hypochondria, but a commission of the Privy Council
presided over by Lord Blantyre, and an assize court at Paisley, in
which the Lord Advocate Steuart acted as prosecutor, declared for
witchcraft, and in consequence on 10th June, 1697, five poor
creatures were hanged and burned on Paisley Gallow Green. ["The
Renfrewshire Witches," Chambers's Domestic Annals, iii. 167.] The
death of these unfortunates, however, did not end the witch hunt. In
the following year Glasgow Town Council paid £66 8s. Scots for the
maintenance in the Tolbooth of certain witches and warlocks,
imprisoned there by order of the commissioners at Paisley. [Burgh
Records, 12th March, 1698.] But
while this superstition still claimed victims, another affliction
which had for centuries been still more serious had apparently quite
died out. The ghastly disease of leprosy had become a thing of the
past. In 1694 the council considered an application for a feu of the
old leper house, known as St. Ninian's Hospital, at the south end of
Glasgow bridge, and five years later, in the grant of a precept of
Clare constat to the heirs of a certain Claud Paul, the buildings of
the hospital were stated to be ruinous. [Ibid. 27th Jan., 1694; 14th
Aug., 1699.] Thus almost certainly had passed away, from the burgh
and neighbourhood of Glasgow at any rate, a disease which in its
deadly ravages had included no less a victim than King Robert the
Bruce himself.
This change may no doubt be accounted
for, to a considerable extent, by a growing consciousness of the
need for more cleanly habits among the people themselves. Everyone
has heard of the shocking custom which persisted in Edinburgh till
comparatively late in the eighteenth century. There, any time after
ten at night, the passenger in the street might hear the cry of "Gardyloo!"
and despite his shout of "Haud your hand!" might find himself
drenched in a moment with the contents of a bucket of filth
discharged by a servant from some window in a tenement far overhead.
The same disgusting custom prevailed in Glasgow, but was stopped by
the magistrates at a much earlier period. In 1696 the city fathers,
"taking to consideration the many complaints made by the inhabitants
of the growing and abounding nestiness and filthiness of the place,"
forbade the heads of families to allow the throwing from their
windows, front or back, by day or night, of any waste matter, liquid
or solid, on pain of being fined five merks for each offence. [Ibid.
16th Jan., 1696.] Thus the passer-by was relieved, at a
comparatively early period, of the possibility of receiving these
unasked blessings descending from above, and McUre the historian,
writing in 1736, was able to rejoice in the "odoriferous smell " of
the orchards and gardens which mingled so pleasantly with the
tenements and houses of the burgh.
There was still, to be sure, a
sufficiently old-world spirit about the Magistrates, who, after
fining and committing to prison certain burgesses who, "being too
late frae their respective families," had assaulted the town's
sentries, added a clause to their sentence—"In regaird the morn is
the Lord's Day, allowes them to goe at libertie till Tuesday nixt,
at eleven of the clock in the forenoon," when they were duly to
return to the Tolbooth, and remain there till they paid their fines.
[Burgh Records, 21st Mar., 1696; 12th Mar., 1698.]
At the same time a distinctly modern
note was sounded by the occurrence of a strike of the bakers in the
burgh. The movement appears to have been a concerted rebellion of
the craft against the authority of the Town Council. In October,
1695, according to custom, the Magistrates had made their annual
regulation. The twelve-penny loaf was to weigh 9 ozs. 5 drops 12
grains, and it was, of course, to be of standard quality. In the
following June, no doubt in consequence of complaints by the
burgesses, thirteen of the baxters, probably all the members of the
craft, were imprisoned by the provost [This was one of the many
instances in which Anderson of Dowhill, as Provost, showed his
ability to act with promptitude and firmness in an emergency.] for
"making insufficient bread, and for not furnishing the market as
formerly"; and they were ordered to be kept in prison till they had
given their bond to supply the citizens with such "good and
sufficient bread " as was furnished by the bakers of Edinburgh,
under a penalty of £100 Scots for each offence. The baxters refused
to give the bond, and applied to the Town Council for their freedom.
They had evidently supporters in the council on whom they relied.
"By some mistake," or more probably with connivance, "some of the
bailies" took upon themselves to set the delinquents at liberty
without giving the required bond. The council, however, ordered them
to be re-imprisoned till the security was given in the terms
arranged with their agent in Edinburgh, the only concession being a
reduction of the penalty to fifty pounds. [Burgh Records, 27th June,
1696.]
The ringleader of the strike was
evidently a certain Alexander Thomson, and the Town Council next
proceeded to deal with him. He was charged at the instance of the
procurator-fiscal with "utering many vyle and ignominious words
against, and insolent carriage and behaviour towards, the provest."
On acknowledging the truth of the charge, he was fined five hundred
merks, deprived of his burgess privileges, and ordered to stand for
an hour at the head of the Tolbooth stair, the place where public
proclamations were made, with his head uncovered and a paper fixed
to his forehead describing his offence. He was further ordered to
remain in prison till his fine was paid, and afterwards to leave the
burgh and never to return. [Ibid. 4th July, 1696.]
This firm handling settled the main
trouble with the baxters. But the recalcitrance of the craft had
gone a step further. In defiance of public rights, and
notwithstanding an agreement made by themselves, the baxters had
raised their mill dam on the Kelvin to such a level that it deprived
the town's mill above it of the fall of water necessary to drive its
wheel. Here, again, the Magistrates and Council took prompt action.
On examination the dam was found to have been raised twelve inches
above the stipulated level. Thereupon the baxters, being threatened
with a fine of five hundred merks, acknowledged their fault and
placed themselves at the discretion of the council. They were then
ordered to reduce their dam to the proper level, and keep it at
that, under a penalty of a thousand merks. A committee was appointed
to see the work done, and the baxters were provided with a gauge, of
which a duplicate was kept by the Town Clerk. The baxters evidently
realised that the council was not to be trifled with, for the level
of the dam was reduced within a month. [Burgh Records, 26th June,
24th July, 7th Aug., 18th Sept., 1697.]
In the absence of a banking system
throughout the country the Government still made its payments in the
manner of the feudal centuries, not by the remitting of money from a
central fund, but by local payments out of the readiest moneys
levied in the district. Thus the Magistrates of Glasgow are found
paying two sums of fifty pounds sterling each to the officers of
Colonel Douglas's regiment, and charging the amount against "the
Mertimess supplie," or taxation due to Government at 11th November;
and a month later they record the payment of £450 Scots to
Lieut.-Colonel Hamilton, to be taken out of the half-year's stipend
of the Barony parish, then vacant, and therefore in the hands of its
patron, the King. [Ibid. 21st Nov., 19th Dec.., 1696.]
Again and again it appears that the
levying of regular "supply," or taxes for Government purposes, which
had been introduced since the Revolution, was felt as a drawback to
the prosperity of the burgh. Under this pressure the Magistrates
were driven both to economise expenditure and to seek new sources of
revenue. In 1695 they passed a resolution which must have borne
hardly upon a number of persons. "Taking to consideration the
present low condition of this burgh," the city fathers, at one
stroke, "rescinded and annulled" all pensions granted before the
year 1690. [Ibid. 26th Oct., 1695.]
The Town Council next turned its
attention to the cost of maintaining its harbours at the Broomielaw
and Port-Glasgow. That charge, it was felt, could no longer be borne
by the "Common Good" funds of the burgh, "now brought so low, as
said is." With the approval of the Merchants House and the Trades
House, the Magistrates therefore proceeded to institute harbour
dues. The highest charge was £12 Scots for vessels loading or
unloading at the quay of Port-Glasgow. This was
for burgesses only; strangers and
unfreemen were to pay double. At the same time the Council took the
opportunity to make rules for the management of the harbours. For
the carrying out of these at Port-Glasgow the bailie of that place
was made responsible. Among other matters, masters of vessels were
not to cast ballast or dirt overboard in the river or roadstead, no
anchor was to be laid in the water without a buoy attached, and
cursing and swearing were to be punished by the bailie "conform to
the Acts of Parliament."
The city fathers also took notice of
the damage done to the paving of the streets by the iron-shod carts
of the burgesses and of incomers. Within and without the ports, the
record declares, the streets, causeways, and highways were
"exceedingly damnified and ruined" by this traffic, and it was felt
to be just that a charge should be made to relieve the Common Good
of the burden of upkeep. Upon burgesses the charge was laid in the
form of an annual payment of £2 Scots for each shod cart, unfreemen
paying double, while for strangers carting loads into the town the
charge was in form of a toll—two shillings or four shillings Scots
in and out, according to distance. [Ibid. 30th Nov., 2nd Dec.,
1695.] Thirty-three years later, in 1728, "considering the great
dammage which the streets of this city, and avenues thereof sustain
thro a late method of fixing the iron bands to the trades of carts
by square-headed stob naills," the magistrates strictly prohibited
this practice. [Ibid. 21st Oct., 1728.]
To this rule a curious exception was
made. Carts belonging to the Duchess of Hamilton and her town of
Hamilton were admitted free. The exception was probably allowed in
recognition of the kindness of the Duchess Anne, who, after the
battle of Bothwell Bridge, is said to have saved the lives of
hundreds of the fleeing Covenanters by sending a request to the Duke
of Monmouth asking him to "spare the game in her coverts." The
Duchess, moreover, had quite recently given the handsome sum of
i8,000 merks to provide bursaries in Glasgow University. [Burgh
Records, 9th Jan., 1697; 27th Sept., 1694.]
These tolls and dues were not levied
directly by the Magistrates, but, like the other dues of the burgh,
were leased by public auction to a private collector. [Ibid. 16th
May, 1696.]
By this time, also, notwithstanding
its various almshouses, like St. Nicholas, Hutchesons', the
Merchants, and the Trades House, the town was feeling the burden of
the growing number of poor. The Merchants and Trades "stented" or
taxed themselves for the support of their own decayed members, but
there was another unattached class also to be provided for. Under
Provost Anderson of Dowhill the Magistrates proceeded to grasp this
nettle vigorously. First, to prevent the exploiting of its charity,
the Town Council appointed constables to keep strange beggars out of
the city. [Ibid. 14th Mar., 1696.] Then it appointed a committee,
the first managers of the poor in Glasgow, empowered that committee
to purchase or build almshouses and infirmaries, and drew up a set
of rules of management which remains a model to the present day. All
poor or disabled persons who applied were to be admitted, all
foundlings were to be taken in charge, and all idle and vagabond
persons who could give no account of their method of living were to
be apprehended. They were to be provided with lodging, clothing,
washing, and sufficient wholesome food, detained for specified
periods of years, set to work at various employments, and, in case
of refusal, chastised by corporal or other punishment, "not
extending to life, limbs, or mutilation of any member." For
maintenance, three-fourths of the ordinary collections at the church
doors were assigned, and the supervisors were empowered to raise any
further necessary sum by levying a rate of not more than one per
cent. on the income of every inhabitant of the burgh. The younger
poor were to receive Christian instruction and to be bred up in some
useful trade or employment. [Ibid. 6th March, 1697.]
Curiously enough, while the members
of the Merchants House and of the General Kirk Session unanimously
approved of these proposals, the majority of the Trades objected.
The Magistrates and Town Council, however, finding that " the
generality of the inhabitants were cheerful in concurring," ratified
the arrangement, and secured the approval of the Privy Council,
which included Sir John Maxwell of Nether Pollok. The order was
thereupon put into action. [Ibid. 10th March, list Aug., 1697.]
But while the Magistrates and Town
Council felt it necessary to curtail waste and extravagance in those
difficult years, they did not hesitate to expend money when the
expense appeared to be necessary, or likely to bring a profitable
return. We have seen how they invested a handsome sum in the
adventures of the Company of Scotland. A year previously they made a
grant of £12,000 Scots to the Trades House, to help the building of
its great tenement at the corner of Saltmarket and Gallowgate, the
spot where the restored Market Cross of Glasgow now stands. [Ibid.
10th March, 1695. The building, known as Tradesland, was demolished
in 1824.] This was part of the great effort to secure the rebuilding
of parts of the city which had been ruined by the conflagration of
1677. The building also balanced the Merchants House tenement, at
the opposite corner of Saltmarket and Trongate, for the building of
which the Town Council had made a grant thirteen years before. [The
Merchants' House tenement contained a coffee-house which evidently
was Glasgow's first Exchange. The Town Council made it a grant of £3
per annum for the provision of newsletters till its own Town Hall
and coffee-house next the Tolbooth were opened in 1738.—Ibid. 31st
May, 1718; 1st July, 1719; 1st Oct., 1720; vol. vi. p. xiii.]
As a further inducement to
house-building, curiously suggestive of procedure in the twentieth
century, the city fathers further decreed that tenements and houses
built on the main streets to a certain standard should be free of
taxation for a period of ten years. [Burgh Records, 20th April,
1699.]
The Magistrates in the same spirit
took in hand an important work of restoration on their own account.
In 1670 the old kirk of the Blackfriars beside the College in High
Street had been struck by lightning. Its steeple had been rent from
top to bottom, its roof slates scattered, its gables broken, and its
interior fired. [Law's Memorials, p. 33.] The damage might have been
repaired at once, as a sum of £io,000 had been subscribed in 1635
for the endowment of the kirk when it was taken over from the
University. But that sum had been lent to the leader of the
Covenanters, the Marquess of Argyll, and, as we have seen, could not
be recovered. The building had therefore remained a ruin. In 1698,
however, the need for another place of worship had become pressing.
The Magistrates were finding difficulty in securing ministers for
the five existing kirks because of the extraordinary size of the
congregations. There were 9994 "examinable persons" then in the
city. [Burgh Records, 13th Sept., 1701.] The College authorities
were therefore approached, and agreed to pay a sixth part of the
cost of restoring the kirk, that cost being estimated at £10,000
Scots; [The actual cost of the building was £21,308 3s. 8d. Scots.]
the Town Council arranged to devote the seat rents of the other
churches to the work, and a further sum was raised, by the ingenuity
of the Dean of Guild, from the sale of burial-places to the
citizens. The College stipulated that it should have the use of the
church for graduation and other ceremonies, as well as the next best
seat to that of the Magistrates, and the exclusive privilege of
burying in the north-east corner of the churchyard. On the other
hand, it agreed to allocate certain rooms in the College itself to
the sons of burgesses. [Burgh Records, 3rd Dec., 1698; 6th May,
1699. Charters and Documents, ii. 274.]
With a sixth kirk thus provided the
Magistrates and general kirk session proceeded to divide the city
into six separate parishes, of which the largest contained 1777
examinable persons, and the smallest 1607. [Burgh Records, 18th
Aug., 13th Sept., 1701.]
At the same time the more secular
amenities of life were not neglected. As an ornament to the town,
and for the good of the burgesses and strangers sojourning within
their gates, the city fathers thought it desirable to have a bowling
green laid out, and they feued a piece of waste ground at the corner
of Candleriggs and Bell's Wynd to a certain Mungo Cochrane,
merchant, for the purpose. The yearly feu-duty was £24 Scots, or £2
sterling. [Ibid. 13th April, 1695,] By way of provision, also, for
the growing maritime interests of Glasgow, the magistrates secured
and subsidised a certain Robert Whytingdale to teach the art of
navigation along with book-keeping, arithmetic, and writing. They
also encouraged one Delles Debois, a Protestant refugee, who had
been a merchant in Rochelle, to settle in the town and teach the
French language. And they even permitted the settlement of a dancing
master, though this was with the distinct understanding that he
should "behave himself soberly, keep no balls, and permit no
promiscuous dancing of young men and young women together." [Ibid.
7th Dec., 1695; 19th Feb., 1698; 12th Nov., 1699.]
Matters of courtesy and hospitality
also were not neglected. There is the echo of a forgotten tragedy in
the record of a deputation sent to Kilwinning to attend the burial
of the two Masters of Montgomerie in April, 1696, while a more
cheerful note is struck in the accounts for entertainments given to
various noblemen and others who visited the city. Thus when the
Marquess of Montrose was entertained and made a burgess in 1698,
confections and fruits were provided, as well as a white-flowered
ribbon with a gold fringe for his burgess ticket; and there was
similar provision for "treats" given at later dates to the Earl of
Argyll, Sir Hew Dalrymple, President of the Court of Session, the
Earl of Donegal, the Duke of Hamilton, and certain ladies. As these
"treats" cost no more than about £7 sterling on each occasion, the
call for economy was not seriously slighted. [Burgh Records, 23rd
Nov., 1698; 14th Aug., 1699; 20th June and 24th Oct., 1700; 8th May,
1701.] Much more expensive was the gift of two hogsheads of wine to
Lord Blantyre, but the transaction was really a matter of business,
for it was definitely stated to be in settlement of all disputes
between the town and his lordship. [Ibid. 18th Aug. 1694.]
At the same period several other
important settlements were carried through. These settlements, it is
interesting to note, were effected by the energetic and far-seeing
provost, John Anderson of Dowhill, and still further increase the
surprise that his name has not been more generally recognised as
that of a benefactor to the city.
On 10th January, 1700, Anderson
reported to the Town Council that he had met in Edinburgh Tobias
Smollett of Bon-hill, Provost of Dunbarton, and that, in
consultation with the King's Advocate, they had drawn up an
agreement. By that agreement Dunbarton resigned to Glasgow all
rights to levy harbour dues and charges of any kind on the river,
except those on stranger vessels at Kirkpatrick quay, and also gave
up the right to the first offer of goods imported in wholesale
quantities. It was further agreed that vessels and goods belonging
to the burgesses of each town should be free of all dues and customs
at the other. By way of compensation to Dunbarton, Glasgow agreed to
pay 4500 merks. [Ibid. 20th Jan., 29th June, 1700. Charters and
Documents, ii. 280, 289.] Thus at last was cleared away, by the
tactful efforts of this very capable provost, one of the chief
obstacles which barred the path of Glasgow to the open sea and to
the golden regions of prosperous trade which were just then about to
open in the West. |