Turning now to the linen
manufacture, we find, from the “Assisa de Tolloneis," that, at the time
of Bruce, the custom on every 100 lb. of linen was one halfpenny. No
further notice of it is found in the public records till 1573, when an
Act of Parliament was passed forbidding it to be exported. It seems to
have continued to make progress, and in the Parliament of 1639 another
Act was passed to encourage this rising industry. After reciting that
linen had now become “ane of the pryme commodities of this kingdome,
wherby many people are put to worke and money is brought within the
same, which, pairtly throughe the deceet used by the bleicheres in
lymeing thereof and pairtlie by the uncertaintie of the breadth, is
lyklie to come in contempt abroade, to the great prejudice of this
kingdome,” therefore it was forbidden for anyone to make or sell linen
cloth of less breadth than one ell if the price per ell was ten
shillings or above, or of less breadth than three-quarters of an ell if
the price was under ten shillings. Bleaching with lime was forbidden
under heavy penalties, and all linen was to be presented in the market
by the “selvedge and not by the rige.”
That the manufacture had
made some progress is shown by the imposition in 1661 of two ounces of
bullion for each 100 ells exported, and in the same year another Act was
passed to encourage the establishment of companies and societies for
making linen cloth stuffs. This Act provided that no stuffs should be
exported except made by such a society; that all their raw material
should be free of duty for 19 years; that they might make regulations
for their trade; and that all vagabonds, idlers, and poor children were
to be instructed to fine and mix wool, spin worsted, and knit stockings.
The Act to encourage
trade and manufactures, which was passed in 1681, lays down with great
minuteness the conditions of textile manufactures at this period in
Scotland. The provision as to the breadth of cloth given in former Acts
was repeated. All linen was to be made up in pieces and half pieces, the
pieces to contain 24 ells. Druggets, fingram, and plaiding were to be of
the breadth of 3/4 and one nail. Serges were to be 50 or 52 ells in the
piece, with a breadth of 1 ell and 2 inches. They were not to be
stretched in the rolling-, and were to be made up in folds 1 ell or 3/4
long.
An extraordinary
regulation was made by the Scottish Parliament in 1686, It was declared
to be a punishable offence for any person to be buried except in linen
dead clothes made in Scotland, under a penalty of £200 or £300 if a
nobleman. This regulation actually remained in force till 1707.
A curious transaction
took place in 1691. The Convention of Royal Burghs on the 20th October
desired their thanks to be conveyed to the Earl of Melville and the
Master of Stair for “putting a stop to a new project of erecting a linen
manufacture within the kingdom.” This “new project” was that some
Englishmen should set up a linen manufactory which would interfere with
the home trade. Accordingly the burghs petitioned the Privy Council to
put the laws anent the manufacture in force, and ordered a present of
2,000 merks to be sent to the two Secretaries of State “for their good
services done,” and £50 as a gratuity to the Under Secretary for his
trouble. From an entry in the minutes of Convention in 1694 it would
appear, however, that the English company did set up their factory after
all.
Further regulations were
made in 1693, and the same year a manufactory was established in the
citadel of Leith with all the privileges accorded by the laws, for the
space of 21 years. They had very arbitrary powers over their workmen,
and could retain them until they served out their time. They had also a
seal granted them to seal all their stuff with, and their privileges
extended to their bleaching fields at Bonington, and later (1695) to
Corstorphine. They could make laws and regulations and appoint a bailie
to hold courts for the punishment of offences committed by their
workmen. The workmen and others could claim exemption from certain
public burdens, such as billeting of soldiers, and moreover, did not
require to pay excise duties for any liquors consumed by themselves.
In 1700 John Corse, of
Glasgow, petitioned that he might be allowed to have a linen manufactory
with all the privileges. Further Acts of Parliament for measuring and
sealing linen were passed 1700, 1701, and 1703. The merchants of
Edinburgh petitioned against the wearing of linen in 1705 on the ground
that it interfered with the woollen manufacturers.
Of the silk textiles we
have very scanty traces in early Scottish history. In the time of David
I. hucksters were forbidden to buy silk except in fair time. On account
of the poverty of the kingdom, and the expense of importing silk, it was
forbidden in 1471 to be worn except by knights, ministers, heralds, and
persons worth ^ioo per annum of rent. A Commission was appointed in 1579
to inquire anent the art of silk manufacture. The result of this was the
establishment in Perth, in 1581, of a considerable silk manufactory by a
Robert Dickson. Privilege was given him by Parliament to set agoing a
manufactory, and to bring into the realm and teach the art of making and
working silk as good as that of France or Flanders, and to sell it
cheaper. The raw material required, and the drugs for dyeing the fabric,
were to be imported by him free of duty, and the products of his factory
were to be also untaxed. He and his workmen, to the number of 100, were
to be exempt from all burdens, taxation, and impositions. And these
privileges were to last for 30 years. There is no trace of any other
silk manufactory till 1697, when two merchants, by name Ormeston and
Elliot, obtained a grant from the Privy Council to enable them to
establish a manufactory for the purpose of winding, throwing, twisting,
and dyeing silk.
In 1703 a petition from
the silk manufacturers was presented to the Parliament of Scotland, but
the consideration of it was delayed until the condition of the whole
manufacture could be considered.
We do not propose to
carry the history of textile manufactures at this time later than the
Union; but it is curious to compare the dismal prophecies that were then
made of the inevitable decline of Scottish trade and commerce which was
supposed to be the certain results of that measure with the actual facts
of history. When the Act of Union was under the consideration of the
Scottish Parliament, the then Lord Belhaven made a famous speech which
produced a great impression on the country, and which is still preserved
in the libraries of the curious. Speaking in a vein of prophecy, always
a dangerous line for a practical politician, he says, referring to the
commercial and manufacturing interests of the towns :—
“My Lord Chancellor,—When
I consider this affair of an union betwixt the two nations, as it is
expressed in the several articles thereof, and now the subject of our
deliberation at this time, I find my mind crowded with a variety of very
melancholy thoughts. ... I think I see the royal state of burghs walking
their desolate streets, hanging down their heads under disappointments;
wormed out of all the branches of their old trade, uncertain what hand
to turn to, necessitated to become prentices to their unkind neighbours,
and yet, after all, finding their trade so fortified by companies and
secured by prescriptions that they despair of any success therein.
. . . I think I see the
honest, industrious tradesman loaded with new taxes and impositions,
disappointed of the equivalents, drinking water in place of ale, and
eating saltless porridge.”
It is perhaps fortunate
that though we are permitted to prophesy, we are denied the power of
bringing our prophecies to pass.
Having treated of the
early textile manufactures of Scotland, we come now to the other
branches. And probably one of the earliest was that of salt. In the
reign of David I. salt works became objects of great attention, and
constant reference is made to them in the Chartularies. That King
granted to the monks of Kelso a salt work on the northern shore of the
Forth, and to the monks of Newbattle one at “Blackeland,” and another at
“Calentyr.” From the same King the Abbey of Cambuskenneth got a salt
pan, the monks of Holyrood a salt pan and twenty-six acres of land at
Airth, and the monks of Jedburgh a salt work at Stirling. William the
Lion was the owner of several salt works, and bestowed one on the Abbey
of Aberbrothock. Roland of Galloway gave the monks of Kelso a salt work
on the Solway, with liberty to take wood from his forests for the pans.
Duncan of Carrick made a similar gift to the Abbey of Melrose from his
lands of Turnberry, in Ayrshire, and the same convent had other salt
pans near Ayr from Roger de Scalebroc. In 1536 the price of salt was to
be fixed by Royal Commissioners along with the Provost of Edinburgh; and
the Magistrates in all coast towns were empowered to settle at what rate
imported salt was to be sold at. Various improvements were introduced
into the manufacture shortly afterwards. In 1563 an Act of Parliament
prohibited anyone from making salt after the new method introduced by
certain strangers without special license for fifty years. No salt could
be exported from any salt work without a written license, only granted
on proof that six bolls weekly from each pan had been reserved for home
consumption. At this period considerable quantities of this article were
imported from Spain and Brittany, but in 1587 Lady Burleigh was granted
for seven years the privilege of making refined salt for salting salmon
and other fish which could not be salted with “ small salt,” and thus
the necessity for using the foreign commodity was obviated. Further
improvements were introduced by Eustacius Roche, a Fleming, and in
consideration thereof he received in 1599 a monopoly of the manufacture
of “great salt.” In 1640 an Act was passed prohibiting Sunday work in
the salt pans, which was confirmed in 1661.'
A curious account of this
industry is given in the report made to the Government of the Protector
as to the excise and customs in Scotland in 1656. From that account we
gather that the northern parts of Scotland were then chiefly served with
foreign salt from France, and the western with English salt; and that
the chief native supply came from the salt pans between St. Andrews and
Stirling on the one side of the Forth, and between Stirling and Berwick
on the other. The proprietors of these pans were usually called
“masters,” and the workers “makers.” The latter received no wages, but
contracted to supply the masters with a certain amount of salt per pan,
and the overplus they kept for themselves. The masters provided all the
coals, and stored their proportion of the salt in “garnels ” for
exportation chiefly to England or beyond the seas. The makers sold their
proportion to cadgers, who hawked it about the country in creels on
horseback for home consumption. Tucker, who makes the report, gives a
very poor account of the workmen or makers. He says that “besides their
infinite poverty^ and miserableness they are to be esteemed rather
brutes than rationals”; and in another place speaks of their “vilenesse
” and “unworthinesse.” The whole amount of custom paid on home-made salt
in the year 1656 was only £810. In 1661 Colonel Ludovic Leslie and
Colonel James Scott obtained a monopoly of the manufacture for twelve
years, and in 1681 all the salt works in Scotland were declared to be
public manufactories, and to be entitled to all the privileges thereof.
Robert Cuninghame, of Auchinbarvie, had a grant in 1686, confirmed and
extended in 1693, for the purpose of making a harbour at Saltcoats, on
the Ayrshire coast, for the better exportation of the coal and salt “
wherewith that country abounds.” Sir John Shaw, of Greenock, introduced
a new method of making salt, and in consequence the privileges of a
manufactory were extended to him and his partners in 1696. Other
improvements were made by Mr. William Erskine, who got similar .
privileges; and later on by Mr. George Campbell, a merchant in
Edinburgh. Salt occupied a considerable share of attention during the
negotiations for the Union in 1706, and the Duke of Athole protested
against any duty being laid on it by the contemplated measure.
Of the early fictile
industries in Scotland our knowledge is very limited. Rude pottery was
undoubtedly made in considerable quantities even in the prehistoric
ages, and before the use of the wheel was known. Occasionally specimens
of a later period have been discovered, but there is no evidence of any
extensive manufacture until comparatively modern times. “Duo godecta
vytrea” are recorded in 1291 as being contained in a chest in the
dormitory at Holyrood, but they may have been of foreign origin.
In 1690 Sir George Hay of
Nethercliff had the gift of a license to make glass and iron in Scotland
for thirty-one years, which was confirmed by the Scotch Parliament in
1612. His work was established at Wemyss in Fife. “Braid” glass, or
window glass, was made equal in quality to best Danskine; but bottles
and other ware not being of sufficient excellence, some specimens were
brought from England and deposited in Edinburgh Castle to serve as
patterns in point of quality. In 1621 the Privy Council granted Hay a
monopoly of the manufacture, but restricted the price to twelve pounds
the “cradle” or case. A tax of 5 per cent, on the value was put on glass
in 1655 ; and a little later an ounce of bullion was to be brought to
the Mint for every twelve dozen of drinking glasses and glass bottles
exported. James Turner, a cabinetmaker in Edinburgh, “having with much
labour, pains, and expenses, attained to the skill and art of making of
cabinets, mirror glasses, and the like curious work,” the Deacon and
Incorporation of the Wrights of Edinburgh interrupted his factory,
seized on his tools, and fined him £20 sterling; but the Privy Council
in 1678 and in 1685, and Parliament in 1695, decreed that he should have
full liberty to exercise his work and trade without molestation from
anyone. Another glass manufactory was set up at Leith, to which in 1689
the Privy Council granted the privileges of a manufactory, and
prohibited the introduction of foreign bottles into the country, only
providing that the Leith work should not charge more than two and
sixpence the dozen. In 1698 the manufactory at Wemyss seems to "have
passed into the hands of Lord Elcho, who received an Act of Parliament
confirming the grant of the privileges of a manufactory formerly' made
by the Privy Council, and giving him a monopoly for nine years of
certain new kinds of glass never before made in Scotland (viz., coach
glasses and moulded glasses) unless some other manufactory was started
within two years. It was specially provided that this grant was not to
prejudice the privileges formerly given to the manufactory at Leith or
to that at Aitchison’s Haven, which was established by William Morison,
of Preston Grange, in 1697, for the making of all sorts of glass, “as
bottles, vials, drinking, window, mirror, and warck glasses.” Among the
foreigners who were engaged at Morison’s work was a Frenchman, Leblanc,
who was skilled in the art of polishing glass, an art never hitherto
practised in Scotland. The first glass work in Glasgow was started in
1701 by James Montgomery, who applied to the Privy Council for a license
to make bottles to supply the West Country, seeing that the transit of
such breakable goods from Leith and Morison’s Haven was attended with
vast charge and great hazard. He proposed to use wood ashes and fern
ash, of which there was great abundance in the West Country, to make,
first, good white soap, and the rest into glass. The Privy Council
granted his request accordingly. Robert Douglas, Leith, had a
manufactory of porceIain and earthenware there in 1695, and in 1703 an
Act was passed in favour of William Montgomery, of Macbiehill, and
George Linn, merchant in Edinburgh, who set up “a pot-house with kilns,
mills, warehouse, and other conveniences for making Lame, Purslane, and
Earthen Ware,” and had brought competent persons from abroad to teach
the natives the proper mode of manufacture, giving them not only the
ordinary privileges of a manufactory, but a monopoly for fifteen years.
Soap was not an article
manufactured in Scotland at a very early period. What was used seems to
have been imported apparently from the Low Countries. It is mentioned as
part of the “conveth” of the Abbey of Scone in 1164, and the custom
payable on each “kyste or schryno of sapo,” as given in the Assisa de
Tolloneis was twopence. In 1619 a privilege was granted to Nathaniel
Uddart to make soap at his works in Leith, and in 1621 the Privy Council
prohibited the importation of foreign soap, but fixed the maximum price
of the native manufacture at £24 per barrel (of 16 stones) for green
soap, and ^32 per same barrel of white soap. This grant was, however,
very unpopular, and in consequence of the numerous complaints made about
it, the prohibition against foreign importation was threatened to be
withdrawn unless a better article was provided at a cheaper rate. This
patent lasted twenty-one years, and at its expiration another was
granted to Patrick Maule, of Panmure, "His Majesty’s daily servitor,”
for thirty-one years at a yearly rental of £20 sterling. He had at the
same time a license to fish and trade in the country and seas of
Greenland for materials necessary for his work. In 1695 an Act of
Parliament was passed in favour of Robert Douglas (who is described in
it as “a great promoter of manufactories” for many years, and is
apparently the same individual formerly mentioned), to enable him to get
the privileges granted to manufactories for his soap work at Leith,
which “had much contributed to setting up the trade with Archangel and
Russia,” and these privileges were accordingly granted to him for
nineteen years. A petition was presented in 1700 by the same James
Montgomery, who erected the glass works in Glasgow, to have the
privileges of a manufactory extended to his soap work there.
The manufacture of paper
can claim a fairly early origin in Scotland. In 1590, Peter Groot Heare,
a German, along with some partners, received a license from the Privy
Council to establish a paper work, with all the privileges belonging to
a manufactory, for nine years after the 1st of August next. In 1675,
another work was set up at Dairy Mills, near Edinburgh, but very soon
after it was burnt down. However, in 1679, it was going on and producing
gray and blue paper of a better quality than had ever been made before
in this country. French workmen were employed, but many Scots were
instructed in the trade. The proprietors were impeded in their
operations by a “ faulty custom ” in the country of using good rags to
make candlewicks. They accordingly petitioned the Privy Council to
prohibit rags being used for this purpose, which they did. No further
notice of this work occurs in the public records, but it was probably
not successful, for in 1693 Nicolas Dupin petitioned the Privy Council
for permission to set up a paper manufactory. He was supported in his
enterprise by some Scotchmen in London, who told him that there was no
good writing paper to be got in Scotland, those who had already
attempted the manufacture having failed. He claimed to be able to make
all sorts of fine paper as good or better than any made beyond seas, and
far cheaper ; and he proposed, besides, to bring in some “ingenious
outlandish workmen” to teach their art in the kingdom. All his paper was
to have the arms of Scotland as the water mark; and the company were
granted the same power over their instructed workmen as the cloth
factory at Newmilns had. This company had an Act of the Scotch
Parliament passed in its favour in 1695. The Act having recited that “
it being found that the water and air in several parts of this kingdom
are very fitt and may contribut much to the success of such a work/’
empowered Dupin and Denis Manes and their partners to be incorporated by
the name of “the Scots White Paper Manufactory,” with all the privileges
and immunities contained in the Acts for encouraging commercial
undertakings.
Sugar came into use in
Scotland at a comparatively late period. There was a tax put on it in
1655, which shows it must have been known commonly before that time. In
1681 two sugar works at Glasgow were declared to be manufactories under
the provisions of the Acts for encouraging manufactures. These works
belonged to Frederick Hamilton and John Corse and other partners, who
had an Act of Parliament in their favour, allowing them, in addition to
the usual immunities, to grant “transires” without applying to the
Custom House. Another work was in operation in Leith in 1695, and had
the same privileges which were granted to Glasgow, including that of
making 18 tons of rum yearly free of duty. Hugh and James Montgomerie,
merchants in Glasgow, had an Act of Incorporation in 1696 for the
purpose of starting another sugar work in Glasgow (called “a suggarie”)
under the style and title of “The New Sugar Manufactory of Glasgow,”
with all the privileges of law, to endure for nineteen years. Another
sugar work was started in Glasgow by Matthew and Daniel Campbell in
1700, who also proposed to the Privy Council to distil brandy and other
strong waters.
In 1686 the Estates of
the Realm, “takeing to consideration the great advantage that the nation
may have by the trade of founding lately brought in to this kingdom by
John Meikle for casting of bells, cannons, and other such useful
instruments" granted him the rights, privileges, and immunities under
the Acts of 1661 and 1681.
Cannons would not be of
much use without gunpowder, so we find that four years later Mr. James
Gordon applied for a license to make that commodity. Gordon was a
merchant of London, as his memorial sets forth, “who, by the blessing of
God has acquired the most necessary skill of making of salt peter and
Gunpowder,” and desired “for the generall benefite of his native
Countrey ... to prosecute the said good and beneficiall designe.” An Act
was prepared and is recorded in 1690 (though it is doubtful whether it
ever passed), granting the necessary permission, prohibiting any one
from importing gunpowder, and providing that every barrel of the native
manufacture should be sealed with a seal to be provided by Gordon. He
was also empowered “to cause take up the bottoms of floors, cellars,
vaults, and other out houses such as doucats,40 old castells, Towers,
fortalices, churches, chappells, creeks, pitts and coaves, &c., in any
place within the kingdome where peterish earth shall be found, and to
dispose thereof for the convenience of the gunpowder manufactories.”
The first notice we have
in the public records respecting gunpowder is in 1535, when the
merchants were ordained to import it. Some time previous to 1630 a
patent had been granted for its manufacture in Scotland, for in that
year Parliament was petitioned “that the persoun to whome the gift was
givin may ather convenientlie and tymouslie take vpon him the dew
performance or otherwayes that his patent be recalled.” The Earl of
Linlithgow was probably the person meant, as, when monopolies were
abolished in 1641, he was recompensed for the outlay he had incurred on
his powder-works. Another gunpowder-work was established in 1695 by Sir
Alexander Hope of Kerse and others.
In 1693 Parliament,
taking into consideration the great loss and inconvenience sustained by
the lieges by reason of the want of tradesmen for making coaches,
chariots, sedans, coach-harness, and other fittings, empowered William
Scott, cabinetmaker, to set up a manufactory for the same, with all the
privileges belonging to it. James Lyell of Gairden had “applyed himselfe
for these many yeares for improving of lint, hemp, and rape seeds for
the making of good oyl out of the grains within this kingdom,” and an
Act in his favour was passed in Parliament in 1695. He also set up a
manufactory “of rabbet and hair skins ... by bringing them first into
wooll and then into hatts, which is now exported, and then returned in
fforeign hatts.” Another oil work was established in 1700 by James
Turner, but no further notice of it occurs in the public records.
The rapid rise and
continual growth of Scottish manufactures after the Union belongs to a
later period of history, and does not come within the scope of the
present design. But enough has been given to show the keen and anxious
desire to encourage manufacturing industries which prevailed in this
country for more than two centuries before the desired result was
actually achieved. |