IN the year 1803, when
Napoleon Bonaparte threatened to invade Great Britain, and a landing on
our shores by the French was expected, the burgh of Haddington had its
share of the “pomp and circumstance of war.” In a short time it was made
the station of a regular military encampment. Barracks were erected
around the town to accommodate nearly two thousand troops. Old
Haddington people to this day still speak of the “time of the barracks,”
which were the golden days for shopkeepers, tradesmen, innkeepers, &c.,
the great circulation of money doing much good to the burgh. All classes
in the county were animated with a strong burst of patriotism against
the French, and almost all able-bodied men became soldiers, and enrolled
themselves in fencible, volunteer, and yeomanry corps to resist the
common enemy. Happily, “Bonny henned,” and under the kindness of
Providence his threatened invasion never took place. Had he come with
his legions to invade our land, he and his forces would have met a hot
reception. An extract from a review of the life of Charles Kirkpatrick
Sharpe, shows the spirit of the times:—“For my own part,” he says, “I
wish the French would come and have done, for the people here keep up
such a devil of a drilling that a sober-minded Christian can get no
peace for them. Gentlemen and clowns are at it from morning till night.
The butler drills the footman with a cudgel in the servants' hall, and
the cook instructs the flea-catchers with a ladle in the kitchen ; nay,
the very cows and hogs at the approach of a hostile cur draw up in
battle array, in imitation of the two-legged bumpkins who are sporting
the exercise under every hedge in Annandale!” Little boys caught up the
enthusiasm of the time, and cried out, in knocking down a lot of
nettles, “Down with the French.” East Lothian was as forward as other
counties in taking energetic measures to resist the enemy, as the
probable landing was expected somewhere between Dunbar and Musselburgh,
perhaps about Jovie’s Neuck, or Aberlady Bay. A proclamation, dated July
7, 1803, was issued by the Earl of Haddington—then Lord Lieutenant of
the county, Henry Davidson, Clerk, C.G.M.—in which the tenantry were
enjoined to carry off the horses, corn, meal, and flour, and cattle of
every description. The proclamation concludes as follows :—
“To animate the
inhabitants of this county to a strict observance of these duties, it is
proper to inform them, that the first principle laid down by Government,
is an indemnification, from the community at large, to the individuals
for the value of all stock which may be removed in consequence of an
invasion, if not restored to the respective owners; as also, for
whatever property may be destroyed by our arms to prevent its falling
into the hands of the enemy, provided the proprietor has come forward,
and entered into such arrangements as are proposed to preserve it,
either by personal attendance at the time, or otherwise in some mode of
service at the moment of invasion. It must at the same time be clearly
understood, that no indemnification whatever will be allowed for the
property of any person who is of an age and in a state of health to aid
the public service, and whose name does not appear in the roll of his
parish, for some one of the duties mentioned in a plan transmitted by
Government, and to be afterwards particularly communicated at the
parochial meetings.”
Major-General Don, a
gallant officer, who had seen active service in Egypt under Sir Ralph
Abercromby, when the French were routed in the battle of Alexandria, was
in command at Westbarns camp. He issued particular orders of
instructions for the yeomanry cavalry and regiments of volunteers in the
county of Haddington, in the event of the enemy landing at Dunbar or
Musselburgh. Each man was ordered to carry sixty rounds of ball
cartridge and two days’ provisions in his knapsack, a particular account
of which is narrated in Miller’s “History of Haddington.” General Don
added much to the spirit and courage of the officers and men by telling
them that they must dip their legs in the salt water, and receive the
enemy at the point of the bayonet, and not allow them to land as the
French allowed the British to land in Egypt.
The Honourable
Lieutenant-Colonel Hay Mackenzie of Newhall first commanded the
Haddington regiment of Volunteer Infantry, and was succeeded by Lord
Sinclair of Herdmanston in 1805. The Volunteers continued in force until
1808, when they were embodied as the Haddingtonshire Local Militia. The
Haddington Volunteers consisted originally of five companies. There were
three sets of barracks, viz., the cavalry, infantry, and artillery,
capable of lodging over one thousand nine hundred men. The canteen was
where Mr Hislop has now his coachworks. Mr James Roughead was
barrack-master, and afterwards received from Government a similar
appointment at Piershill. The daily drilling of nearly two thousand
regular troops, besides the Volunteer corps, in the fields around
Haddington, including the Haugh, Lennoxlove, Amisfield, and Clerkington
Parks, and the field-days at Teuchit Muir and Gladsmuir, made a stir
which Haddington may probably never see again. When the “Peace” came in
1814, the barracks, which were wooden huts, were sold and taken down. At
the time of the peace, Jamie Newton, nicknamed the “Coder,” who kept a
small shop at the Custom Stone, put up in his window the following
notice:—“No more fighting, no more killing; beef a groat (per lb.), meal
a shilling (per peck).”
Many curious characters
flourished, and rare events took place in Haddington during the “time of
the barracks.” The presence of many officers of regiments of the line,
whose lodgings were at Goatfield, and in houses in the town, infused a
higher tone to the society and aristocracy of Haddington than formerly,
which, after their removal, took a long time to sober down. Public and
private balls were frequently given, which were numerously attended by
the belles of the town and country. A certain “scarlet fever” mightily
raged at the time, but it is understood that few conquests were made.
Talented and respectable play-actors frequently visited the town, and
had their theatre in the barn betwixt the parish manses, in which the
famous Stephen Kemble once performed.
A class of men, known as
“foragers,” who provided the barracks with straw, corn, grass, rations,
&c., had many a tough battle to fight with officious sergeants and
quarter-masters. David Common and George Amos were the chief of the
class, and although both clever and active men in their way, could
hardly stand their ground, and many a dispute had to be settled in
Baillie’s Hut, in the “Hole of the Wall,” or Tom Clark’s—all
public-houses in the vicinity of the barracks. Fleshers and bakers often
came in for a deal of abuse when the rations they supplied did not
please discontented soldiers. On one occasion some soldiers tossed a
baker of the town up in the air in a blanket, because his “tammies” had
not pleased. The Haddington carters and carriers of that day enjoyed a
monopoly in hires for cartage of rations, provisions, coal and candle,
and munitions of war to the barracks. The old race of carters has now
died out, and nothing like the characters of that day now exist. There
were Huron, Clephen, Telford, and Tait, T.U., Tam Wilson, and Tam Wait,
Keppies, Runcimans, Winton (“the Earl”), Richardsons, Brownhills, &c.,
all stalwart, “beanie” men. It is narrated of Tam Wait that he once took
two carts of wool from Haddington to Kilmarnock, and brought back cheese
for the merchants of Haddington within eight days—a remarkable feat in
those days. They kept good horses, and made it a custom to give them
young cut grass and an extra feed on the 4th of June (George III.’s
birthday).
The old institution of
newspaper clubs was in its glory in these exciting days, and many a
backshop meeting took place on the arrival of the newspaper by Laidlaw’s
coach from Edinburgh, to hear the news read. It is recorded of a
well-known candlemaker of the town, when he was reading the account of
one of Wellington’s victories in the Peninsula, that a girl came into
his shop wanting a penny candle, and he told her to come back after, for
he could not be fashed at present. The Edinburgh newspapers in these
days were of small size, and cost sixpence—a striking contrast to the
papers of the present day. Every year is thinning the ranks of the
generation of “the time of the barracks,” and in a short time the
Haddington military station will be only remembered as a thing that has
been. |