John Walker, Doctor of Divinity, was born in the
Canongate of Edinburgh. His father—Hector of the grammar school
there—was an excellent classical scholar, and is said to have bestowed
such attention to the education of his son, that when ten years of age
he could read Horner with considerable fluency. At a proper age, he
entered the University, where he studied with merited approbation, and
was iu due course of time licensed to preach by the Presbytery of
Edinburgh.
Dr.
Walker's first presentation was to the parish of Glencorse, about seven
miles to the south of Edinburgh, and which includes part of the Pentland
Hills within its range. Here an excellent opportunity presented itself
to the young clergyman for improvement in his favourite study of
botany—a science to which he had been early attached, and in which he
had already made considerable progress, as well as in other branches of
natural history. In this sequestered and romantic district Dr. Walker
passed some of the pleasantest years of his life. Those hours which he
could spare from his pastoral duties were generally spent in exploring
the green hills of the Pentlands, and in making additions to his
botanical specimens.
This pleasing pursuit could of course only be
prosecuted during the spring and summer months, but the winter was not
without its amusements. The talents and acquirements of Dr. Walker were
not allowed to remain unnoticed by the more distinguished of his
neighbours and parishioners. Among these were, William Tytler, Esq., of
Woodhouselee, well-known for his historical researches, particularly
into that portion of Scottish history which relates to Mary Queen of
Scots; James Philp, Esq., of Greenlaw, Judge of the High Court of
Admiralty; and Sir James Clerk, Bart., of Pennycuick—a gentleman whose
skill and taste in the fine arts was undisputed; and whose collections
of paintings and memorials of antiquity have rendered the mansion-house
of Pennycuick a place of great interest to the curious. By these
gentlemen the company and conversation of Dr. Walker was greatly
estimated; and a constant intercourse existed between them.
In 1764, the General Assembly, in prosecution of a
benevolent design entered into some years before, respecting the
religious and moral improvement of the Highlands and Islands of
Scotland, appointed Dr. Walker to undertake a mission to these remote
parts of the country. This he readily undertook, and performed his
arduous task to the entire satisfaction of the Assembly. He was also
authorised, by the Commissioners for the Annexed Estates, to inquire
into the natural history and productions—the population—agriculture—and
the fisheries of the Highlands and Hebrides. In prosecution of these
important inquiries, he performed in all six journeys; and, from the
mass of useful information collected, a posthumous work, entitled "An
Economical History of the Hebrides," was published in 1808.
Not long after his first mission to the Highlands,
which tended materially to confirm the high opinion entertained of his
character, Dr. Walker was presented by the Earl of Hopetoun to the
church of Moffat, in the Presytery of Lochmaben, and county of Dumfries.
In this extensive parish a new and inviting field presented itself for
exploring the vegetable kingdom of nature ; and it is probable that the
frequency of his botanising excursions—the utility or propriety of which
were not appreciated by his parishioners—procured for him the title of "the
mad minister of Moffat." There was another prominent trait in the
demeanour of the Doctor, which no doubt had its due weight in
countenancing such an extraordinary soubriquet. This was an
extreme degree of nicety in the arrangement of his dress, especially in
the adjustment of his hair, which it is said occupied the village tonsor
nearly a couple of hours every day.
It is told of the Doctor, that travelling on one
occasion from Moffat to the residence of his friend, Sir James Clerk of
Pennycuick, he stopped at a country barber's on the way to have his hair
dressed. He was personally unknown to Strap, although the latter had
often heard of him. The barber did all in his power to give satisfaction
to his customer; but in vain he curled and uncurled, according to the
Doctor's directions, for nearly three hours. At length, fairly worn out
of patience, he exclaimed—"In all my life, I have never heard of a man
so difficult to please, except' the mad minister of Moffat.' "
This scrupulous attention to his hair he continued to observe until
advancing years compelled him to adopt a wig.
The Doctor himself used to mention that he was one
day walking in a gentleman's park, where he had been collecting insects,
with the handles of an insect net projecting from his pocket. Two ladies
were walking near, and he heard one of them say—"No wonder the Doctor
has his hair so finely frizzled, for he carries his curling tongs with
him."
On the death of Dr. Rarnsay, Professor of Natural
History in the University of Edinburgh, in 1778, Dr. Walker made
application to the Crown for the vacant chair. In this he was
successful, and obtained his commission in 1779. At that period no
direct judgment of the General Assembly stood recorded with respect to
pluralities, but the parishioners of Moffat were alarmed at the
circumstance of their minister's appointment to the Professorship,
justly conceiving that, distant as they were from Edinburgh upwards of
fifty miles, it was impossible he could properly attend to his pastoral
duties. Several meetings of Presbytery were held on the subject, but the
Doctor found ways and means to smooth down the opposition ; and he
continued for some time to hold both appointments. Owing to the
discontent of the people, however, he found his situation extremely
irksome and disagreeable. A few years subsequently he was happily
rescued from his difficulties by the Earl of Lauderdale, who gave him
the church of Colinton, about four miles from Edinburgh; where, from its
proximity to the town, he could more easily fulfil the relative duties
of his appointments.
Dr. Walker may almost be said to have been the
founder of Natural History in the University. His predecessor only
occasionally delivered lectures ; and these were never well encouraged,
owing no doubt to the little interest generally excited at that time on
a subject so important. The want of a proper museum was a radical
defect, which the exertions of Dr. Walker were at length in some measure
able to rectify. His lectures also proved very attractive, not so much
from the eloquence with which they were delivered, as from the vast fund
of facts and general information they comprised. Both in the pulpit and
in lecturing to his classes, the oratory of Dr. Walker was characterised
by a degree of stiffness and formality.
In 1783, when the Royal Society of Edinburgh was
formed, the Professor was one of its earliest and most interested
members. The opposition offered to the incorporation of the Antiquarian
Society, which principally originated in the objections made to the
delivery of a course of lectures on the Philosophy of Natural History by
the late Mr. Smellie, has already been alluded to in our sketch of that
gentleman.
In 1788, Dr. Walker delivered a very excellent course
of lectures in the University on agriculture, which is generally
supposed to have suggested to Sir William Pulteney the idea of founding
a professorship for that important branch of science. In 1792, he
published, for the use of his students, "Institutes of Natural History;
containing Heads of the Lectures on Natural History delivered in the
University of Edinburgh."
Although his talents for literary composition were
considerable, it is not known that the Professor ever appeared before
the public as the author of any separate work of any extent. With the
exception of one or two occasional sermons, and a very curious Treatise
on Mineralogy, his contributions were chiefly limited to the various
learned societies of which he was a member. For the Statistical Account
of Scotland he drew up an account of the parish of Colinton, in a style,
and with a degree of accuracy, which fully proved the peculiar talent he
possessed for topographical and statistical subjects. He intended at one
period to have published a Flora of Scotland, but was anticipated by the
Scottish Flora of Lightfoot, Chaplain to the Duchess of Portland, who
composed his Flora during his travels in Scotland with Pennant.
Dr. Walker's knowledge of plants was not altogether
of a theoretical nature. He made some good experiments on the motion of
the sap in trees, which are published in the Transactions of the
Royal Society of Edinburgh; and in Lord Woodhonselee's Life of
Lord Karnes there are several of the Doctor's letters, which contain
judicious remarks on various points of agriculture aud gardening. There
are still to be seen some vestiges of his attention to the latter, in
the glebe of Moffat, where a few of the less common kinds of trees, such
as pinasters and others, planted by him, are still growing.
The garden of the manse at Colinton, which is
beautifully situated in a small haugh by the river, was carefully laid
off and embellished with a display of indigenous and other hardy plants,
which the Doctor delighted to collect and cultivate. But these botanical
rarities, like other sublunary things, were fleeting, and destined to
take no permanent hold of the soil; for the next incumbent, who was no
amateur of botany, but a good judge of the value of land, turned the
whole into a potato garden!
Although the Doctor, in his public appearances, was
somewhat formal and affected, in private life he was extremely social.
He was inclined to society, and had many amusing anecdotes, which he
told with much gaiety and good humour. He was greatly addicted to taking
snuff. Bailie Creech (afterwards Provost), in his convivial hours, was
in the habit of reciting, several of the Professor's stories, at the
same time imitating his manner and peculiarities. He was fond of dress,
as may be inferred from the Etching, where he is drawn with a nosegay in
his hand.
In early life the Doctor was patronised by Lord Bute,
and when in London was presented to Rousseau, to accompany him as
cicerone. They conversed in Latin, the one not being able to speak the
language of the other; and both experienced considerable difficulty in
making themselves intelligible.
Dr. Walker died on the 22nd January, 1804, aged
upwards of seventy. The latter years of his life were rendered painful
by violent inflammation of the eyes, brought on, it is said, by his
habit of sitting very late at his studies, and which ended in loss of
sight. In addition to this calamity, his wife was attacked with a severe
and long illness. She was a sister of Mr. Wauchope of Niddry.
The late Mr. Charles Stewart, University Printer, and
author of an excellent work—"Elements of Natural History," 2 vols.
8vo.—was one of Dr. Walker's executors; and, from his MSS., published
the work already alluded to, under the title of "An Economical History
of the Hebrides and Highlands of Scotland:" Edinburgh, 1808, 2 vols.
8vo. Another volume afterwards appeared, viz., "Essays on Natural
History and Rural Economy : " Edinburgh, 1812, 8vo. Besides many curious
and beautiful manuscripts in his own handwriting, illustrative of the
natural history of Britain, found in his repositories, the Doctor left a
valuable assortment of minerals—a large collection of the insects of
Scotland—and a very extensive herbarium. By his will, it is understood,
he gifted a sum of money for the purposes of Natural History in the
University of Edinburgh.