AMONG other old
historical associations which Haddington can boast of is the fact that
there was once a palace in the burgh, and that in it was born an old
Scottish king, Alexander II., on St Bartholomew’s Day, 24th August 1198.
Tradition has handed down that the site of the palace was where the
County Buildings and Jail are now built. The ruins were taken down in
1833, and were of considerable extent and importance. Adam Neill in his
Haddington County List of 1834 has given a fine woodcut of the ruins.
They consisted of several elegant and well-proportioned Saxon pillars
and arches, a vault and some arched passages communicating with them.
They were without doubt the oldest buildings in the burgh. Mr Neill’s
woodcut should be reproduced as a memorial of a very old building, and
of Alexander II., King of Scotland.
Many old erections,
markets, fairs, customs, etc., now almost out of date and memory, in
Haddington may perhaps interest readers. We will endeavour to note a few
of them.
“Mercat croces,” in old
Scotch burghs, have always been objects of interest either local or
general. They seem to have been commonly considered a necessary
historical appendage to a royal burgh, testifying in many cases to its
antiquity, and to the preservation of many traditional public events in
by-gone times ; not to speak of royal proclamations which are kept up to
the present time, and thus made patent to the public at large, by being
affixed to market crossest Many of the crosses in royal burghs in
Scotland are excellent specimens of the artistic skill of olden times,
while the renovated or newly erected ones display a refined taste very
creditable to their designers. It may be interesting, now that a
beautiful market cross has been presented to the ancient royal burgh of
Haddington, by the liberality of the Messrs Bernards, brewers,
Edinburgh, to notice some particulars about its old cross—not the worn
fir stick which long disgraced the respectability of the burgh, but the
former stone cross, a handsome structure in its day.
It is almost impossible
at the present time to tell the date when a “mercat croce” was first
erected in Haddington, but it is very probable that a cross was first
erected during the reign of David I., in the twelfth century. It is
possible, however, that a search of the burgh Council books may throw
some light on the subject, which must be a congenial task to a local
learned antiquarian mind. The old stone cross stood in the High Street,
nearly opposite the bottom of the Fish-market Close, opposite the shop
of Mr Aitchison, baker.
It had a square basement,
with four steps, surmounted by a round stone pillar as thick as a man’s
waist, with the figure of an animal of some doubtful species, not unlike
a monkey, on the top of it, and was about twelve feet high from the
causeway to the top. The cause of its demolition and subsequent removal
came to pass in the following way about the year 1811. Two Haddington
youths—James Fairbairn and Frank Oliver—along with an English artisan,
had got on the “ spree ” one summer night, and early in the morning had
lain down on the steps of the cross to enjoy a rest or perhaps a sleep.
A wager was laid that the Englishman would not climb to the top of the
cross and bring down the “Puggie” After sundry attempts, he accomplished
the feat, and brought down the “puggie”—and himself; but in doing so the
rickety pillar gave way, and fell down, breaking into numerous
fragments, which, like Johnnie Fife’s waistcoat, “would not mend.” The
Town Council of the day in its wisdom put up the late wooden post in its
stead as the cross of the royal burgh of Haddington, and changed it to a
new site. The mutilated stone “puggie” was long in the possession of the
late Henry Shiells, tobacconist. It is probably in existence yet, and if
so, should be preserved as a relic of olden times. During the reign of
Edward VI. of England, the country was called on to resist the invaders,
and it was ordered among other things by a royal proclamation “that all
fencible men betwixt sixteen and sixty should appear at the Marcat
Crosses of Haddington, Dunbar, and North Berwick weile boddin in feir of
war.” When Mary Queen of Scotland was married to the Dauphin of France
in 1558, the joyous event (thought so at the time) roused the loyal and
venerable Knight of Lethington—Sir Richard Maitland —who composed an
epithalamium of six stanzas on the occasion. The third is as follows :—
All burrows touns, ever
ilk man, you pray is,
To make bainfires, fairseis, and clerk play is,
And thro, your rewis, canels, dance and sing;
And at your Cross gar wine rin sundrie ways
As was the custom in our elders’ days,
When they made triump for ony thing;
And all your stairs with tapes trie gar hing.
Castles, shoot guns! shippis and galayis,
Blaw up your trumpets and on your drums ding.
Haddington is the
“burrows toim” here alluded to. In a proclamation issued by Queen Mary
and Darnley from Dunbar, dated 16th March 1565, the following passage is
met with::—
And their Majesties (on
their way to Edinburgh), God willing, being of purpois to be Haddington
this nixt Sonday, the 17th day of March instant, ordainis theirfor
letteris to be direct to officiaris of armes to pass to the mercat cross
of the said burgh of Haddington, and utheris places neidful, and thair
be open proclamation in thair Majesties name and authority command and
chargeable, etc., as aforesaid, and to attend and pas furthwart with
thair Majesties towart their hienesses burgh of Edinburgh or uther place
as thai salbe commandit, conforme to the said proclamations past
thairupon of befoir, under the pane of tynsale of lyff, landis, and
gudis.
In 1573, the following
order by the Council is found:— “The Town Council ordained Adam Wilson,
younger, to buy and bring hame ane puncheon of claret wine for a propine
to the Regent, to be pitched at the Mercat Croce, with a dozen of
torches and the spice, and to be allowed for the puncheon xxij ” And in
old times the Cross was the rallying place for the burgesses to assemble
when they were summoned to fight the English in the border raids.
The above extracts show
that the Market Cross of Haddington was of some importance in the
history of the country. In later times, we find that in 1810 it was
agreed by the Town Council of Haddington, in order to show that their
loyalty continued unabated, that the king’s birthday on 4th June should
be celebrated as formerly, and that the burgesses should be regaled with
wine and toddy at the cross at the town’s expense. The lamp-posts, &c.,
were all dressed with laburnum, lily-oaks, bays, &c. A bonfire of logs,
roots, and branches of trees, &c., collected weeks before the king’s
birthday by the apprentices and school-boys of the town, from the Long
Planting, Thieves’ Dykes, &c., for a number of years took place at the
cross, but the bonfire was afterwards removed to the Sands as a fitter
place. The roar of small cannons, pistols, and guns discharged, the
cracking of squibs, &C., kept up to a late hour at night, caused no
small commotion in the quiet burgh. This old practice of drinking the
king’s health at the cross was continued to a late date, down to about
1832, when it was abolished. At Queen Victoria’s marriage, however, in
February 1840, the magistrates, council, and burgesses turned out in
large numbers and drank her health at the cross in a very enthusiastic
manner. Mr Thomas Lea was then provost.
A barbarous custom called
the “cat and barrel” was long kept up by the Carters’ Society, and took
place at the cross, on their race-day in July. A cat was confined in a
dryware cask containing soot, and hung at the end of a beam fixed to the
top of the cross. Each rider was armed with a wooden mell, and rode at
full speed under the barrel, and gave it a blow with his mell, which
operation was continued until the barrel was staved. The poor frightened
cat on its release was pursued by the assembled crowd, and was very
often trampled to death. The magistrates felt it their duty to put a
stop to this barbarous custom ; but the carters, as long as their “play”
existed, continued to ride their “Bassies” for three times in a circle
opposite the cross, which terminated the horsemanship of the Carters’
Race-Day.
The steps of the cross
afforded a resting place for country girls, hinds* wives, &c., with
their heavy baskets of butter and eggs, after a long walk in a warm
summer morning. They were also a meeting place for town blackguards,
beggars, and vagrants of all kinds, who seemed, through old custom, to
have acquired a prescriptive right to the use of them. This may have
been a reason why the magistrates and council did not resuscitate the
old cross. All royal proclamations and written legal documents requiring
publicity were, and still are, affixed to the cross. It was always the
custom to proclaim the two public yearly fairs of St Peter’s and
Michaelmas by the town-officers before witnesses at the cross. At these
fairs at one time, the High Street was lined with pedlars, chapmen, and
gingerbread krames or stalls, from the cross to the Tolbooth, on both
sides of the street; but they have long ago become extinct, and St
Peter’s and Michaelmas fairs of Haddington have now become matters of
history.
The juggs stood at the
cross, and were judicially used for putting offenders in for punishment.
The last person that was put in was a servant of David Gourlay’s,
distiller, High Street, for stealing aqua-vitae from his master, in
1785. Punch once facetiously remarked that persons sitting with their
legs in a wooden frame or the juggs were like children in the wood.
The Old Tron was a large
ugly wooden erection used for weighing packs of wool, cheese, lint,
tallow, hides, &c. It stood nearly opposite the shop now occupied by Mr
Thomas Smith, grocer, in High Street, and directly in front of the
George Inn. In the days of posting it was very much in the way of
carriages drawing up at the inn door, and was a source of much
annoyance. It was said that the pillars were cut through one night, and
it fell down and was never put up again. Mr Sang at that time occupied
the George. The customs or dues of the Tron were long ago paid in kind
as well as money. Every pack of wool weighing 8 to 9 stones paid a
fleece and twelve shillings Scots. Every stone of cheese, lint, &c., one
shilling Scots. “Tauch” or tallow, four pennies. Every ox or cow hide,
six pennies. The old dues of the Tron are still kept up in the new
custom table, although there has been no Tron for eighty years and more.
The butter, egg, and
poultry market was held every Friday morning opposite the cross, on the
ringing of the town bell. A large, respectable assemblage of buxom
country wives and lassies it was, with their clean, trig dresses, and
baskets covered with white cloths. Fresh eggs, and sweet butter rolled
up in “dokin” leaves, were then to be had at a moderate price, as well
as young chickens and ducks, and turkeys and geese for the Christmas
time. The bailies frequently visited the market, with their officer and
weights, to weigh the butter, and often took possession of what was much
deficient in weight, which was distributed among the poor. The same
duty, to weigh butter, bread, &c., and inspect meal, is still part of a
bailie’s duty, but it has long ago fallen into desuetude. The Friday
before Fastem’s E'en (9th February) was a great day for the sale of
cocks, and many an old Haddingtonian spent some shillings for them, both
for the table and for the old custom of cock-fighting on Fastern’s E'en.
It is related of Mr James Pringle that he bought a couple of cocks the
Friday before Fastem’s E’en for over fifty years. The butter, egg, and
poultry market, like others, is now entirely out of existence, grocers’
shops and cadgers having entirely altered the trade.
The vegetable market was
also held at the cross, not only on Fridays, but also on Tuesdays long
ago. The fish market was held opposite the Black Bull and Crown Inns. It
was supplied by fish-dealers with carts from Dunbar, Cockenzie, and
Prestonpans. Many will still recollect Jenny Pow and her gudeman, Davie
Hastie. Jenny “wore the breeks” when Davie got “fou”—a frequent
occurrence. She used to order him out of her presence, and confine him,
a very wholesome punishment, which might be well practised now-a-days*
Jenny was a woman of a strong nerve. She often brought in smuggled salt
below her fish, but it was sometimes seized by the Excise. Old Peter
Carse, a character in his day, went through the town, on the arrival of
the fish-cart, crying “Caller haddies and cod, new come in.” He blew
through a "nout’s” horn, and it was said that his clear voice and
sonorous blast could have been heard from the Custom Stone to the West
Port.
The arrival and departure
of the mail coach was a great daily occurrence. Drawn up at the George
Inn to change horses, many anxious hangers-on, during the days of
Wellington and “ Bonny,” were present to hear the news of battles from
the guards or passengers in the coach, not to speak of the events of a
Derby or a St Leger race.
The Haddington fairs were
also grand events, but they also are gone. They were given, disponed, or
granted to the provosts, bailies, council, burgesses, and community, in
a royal charter, by James VI., in 1624, and ratified by the Parliament
of Charles I., in 1633, and were to continue for eight days. The summer,
or St Peter’s fair, was held in July. Michaelmas, or Midsummer one, was
held 29th September. Rows of stands and kraims, with all descriptions of
merchandise, from gingerbread to cloth, shoes, and handsaws, reached
from the Tolbooth to the cross on both sides of the street, and lots of
shows, merry-go-rounds, hobby-horses, &c. The schools were all vacant
that day, and a considerable influx of country folk came into the town.
Long ago two fields in Newton Port, known by the name of the Crofts,
were the place where the fair for horses, cows, &c., was held, and until
lately the town-officer, by authority of the magistrates, and especially
of Bailie George Amos, opened the gates of the fields and proclaimed the
fair. Since no fairs are in existence, this right may now perhaps be
lost. We find a notice in the Town Records as far back as 1676, that the
horse and “nout” market was removed from the West Port to the Crofts.
It was the custom long
ago for shoemakers to come every Friday from Tranent, Seton, Prestonpans,
and Cockenzie, to sell their shoes on boards opposite Mr Brook's and Mr
Cowan’s shop (Johnnie Fifes in those days). We find that in 1784 an
altercation took place between the “outlanders” and the Cordiners of
Haddington, always a pugnacious race. The Cordiners exacted £1, is. of
entry and tenpence per quarter for the privilege of selling shoes, and
in default of the payment of this exaction, their shoes were poinded and
carried off without any warrant whatever. No shoes have been sold on the
streets for at least thirty or forty years past.
An erection called the
hay weights, long used for weighing hay, straw, bark, &c., stood where
the old oat and barley markets were held. It was a high, ugly edifice,
covered with tiles, and supported on large wooden pillars. It was taken
down about 1822, and the present weights substituted.
There was a narrow lane
long ago, running from the George Inn Wynd to the old Tolbooth, and
probably from Birley’s Wa’s to the west end of Mr Brook’s property,
betwixt the houses on the High and Back Streets; parts of it can still
be traced. We find from old records that in 1532 and also in 1572 the
Town Council ordained that watchmen should be engaged at the town’s
expense to watch nightly on the Tolbooth-head from nine hours at night
to four the next morning, and their fee to be six pennies each night,
off the common good at the will of the bailies. It appears to have been
thatched at one time, for we find in 1539 the Council think it expedient
“to complete the knock (clock) house, and the slating of the Tolbooth
this year, and the laif (rest) to be left quhile they be farther
advised.” In 1559, the Council ordered the treasurer to beit and mend
all the fauts of the Tolbooth. It continued in its ruinous state until
the townhouse was rebuilt in 1742, so much so, that the Council had to
meet in Provost Lauder’s house. The south side was rebuilt in 1825, and
the present elegant spire, one hundred and fifty feet high, is from a
design by Gillespie Graham, architect, Edinburgh. The old steeple was a
very antiquated thing, in the old Dutch round style. The clock in it was
completely worn out. The new one cost £300, and was made by Clerk of
Edinburgh. The north side was rebuilt in 1850. The meal and salt markets
were where the west end of the Assembly Rooms was built in 1788.
Tibbiedale extended from
the meal market to the West Port, and is now called Court Street. |