SOUTHESK, Earl of,
a title in the peerage of Scotland, conferred in 1633, on Sir David
Carnegie of Kinniard, eldest son of Sir David Carnegie of Panbride, also
designed of Colluthie, by his second wife, and grandson of Sir Robert
Carnegie of Kinniard, appointed a lord of session, July 4, 1547. Sir
David was knighted by James VI., and in 1604 nominated one of the
parliamentary commissioners for the projected union betwixt England and
Scotland. He was also a visitor of the university of St. Andrews. In the
parliament which sat in 1612, he was one of the commissioners for the
shire of Fife. In 1615 he was a member of the court of high commission.
He was first created a peer by the title of Lord Carnegie of Kinniard,
14th April 1616, to him and his heirs male, bearing the name and arms of
Carnegie. He was constituted an ordinary lord of session 5th July 1616,
and he was one of the royal commissioners to the Perth assembly which
met 25th August 1618, when the obnoxious five articles passed. In the
parliament which met soon after, he was appointed commissioner for the
plantation of kirks, as well as for the abolition of hereditary
jurisdictions then contemplated by James VI. On 15th February 1626, he
was admitted one of the extraordinary lords of session, and removed 8th
February 1628. At the coronation of Charles I. in Scotland in 1633, he
was created earl of Southesk, Lord Carnegie of Kinniard and Leuchars, by
patent, bearing date, Holyrood-house, 22n June of that year, the
preamble narrating the eminent services of his grandfather and father,
with remainder to his heirs male for ever. In 1641 he was one of the
noblemen selected by the king and parliament to be privy councilors, and
in 1645 he was one of the committee of estates to whom the whole
management of the country was intrusted, as also in 1648 and 1651. He
held the office of high sheriff of Forfarshire. In 1654 he was fined
£3,000 by Cromwell’s act of grace and pardon. He died at Kinniard in
February 1658. By his wife, Margaret, daughter of Sir David Lindsay of
Edzell, he had, with six daughters, four sons. 1. David, Lord Carnegie,
who predeceased his father. 2. James, second earl of Southesk. 3. Hon.
Sir John Carnegie of Craig. He had a charter, with his father, of
Ulyshaven or Usan, in 1619, of Fearn to himself the same year, and of
Pittarrow in the Mearns in 1631. 4. Hon. Sir Alexander Carnegie of
Pittarrow. Lady Magdalen Carnegie, the youngest daughter, was the wife
of the great marquis of Montrose. The first earl of Southesk had three
brothers. 1. John, first earl of Northesk. 2. Sir Robert Carnegie of
Dunnichen and Caraldstone, knight. 3. Alexander, ancestor of the
Carnegies of Balnamoon.
Sir David Carnegie of
Panbride, their father, was brother to Sir John Carnegie of Kinniard,
who died without male issue. Sir David, by his marriage with Elizabeth,
daughter of William Ramsay of Colluthie, Fifeshire, obtained the lands
of Leuchars Ramsay and Colluthie. She was his first wife, and had two
daughters, one of whom got Leuchars Ramsay, and the other, Margaret, the
estate of Colluthie. The latter married William Dundas of Fingask, and
with her husband’s consent, she disponed Colluthie to her father, as her
sister did Leuchars. Sir David Carnegie took for his second wife a
daughter of Wemyss of Wemyss. In 1583 he obtained to himself and
Euphemia Wemyss his wife, a charter of the lands of Colluthie. According
to Archbishop Spottiswoode, Sir David Carnegie of Colluthie was a wise,
peaceable, and sober man, in good credit and estimation with the king,
and taken into the privy council for his knowledge of civil affairs. In
1595 he was constituted one of the eight commissioners of the treasury,
called from their number the Octavians.
James, second earl of
Southesk, had a charter, in his father’s lifetime, of the barony of
Rossie, Forfarshire, 25th March 1632. In 1650 he waited on Charles II.
in Holland, and in August 1652 was one of the commissioners chosen for
Scotland to sit in the parliament of England. He succeeded his father in
1658, and in August 1660 he killed the master of Gray in a duel near
London. He was sworn a privy councilor to Charles II., and had a grant
of the office of sheriff of Forfar. He died at Kinniard in March 1669.
By his wife, Lady Rachel Ker, relict of Halyburton of Pitcur, and
youngest daughter of the first earl of Roxburghe, he had, with two
daughters, a son, Robert, third earl of Southesk.
Robert, 3d earl, was
captain in the Scottish guards in France, and afterwards colonel of the
Forfarshire militia. He had a grant of the office of sheriff of Forfar,
to him and his son, 29th April 1682. He died 19th February 1688. He
married Lady Anne Hamilton, eldest daughter of the 2d duke of Hamilton,
a lady who figures conspicuously in the ‘Memoires de Grammont,’ in which
work is an engraving of her ladyship, from a drawing after Sir Peter
Lely. Subjoined is a woodcut of the seal of James, earl of Southesk:
[seal of James earl of Southesk]
They had two sons;
Charles, fourth earl of Southesk, and the Hon. William Carnegie, killed
in a duel at Paris, in 1681, by William Talmash, son of the duchess of
Lauderdale.
The fourth earl of
Southesk was, on 8th May 1688, served heir male of his father in his
extensive estates in the counties of Aberdeen, Dumfries, Fife, Forfar,
Kincardine, Kirkcudbright, Peebles, and Selkirk. Disapproving of the
Revolution, he never went to court or parliament after that event, and
died 9th August 1699. By his wife, Lady Mary Maitland, second daughter
of the third earl of Lauderdale, he had James, fifth earl. This nobleman
engaged in the rebellion of 1715, and was attainted by act of
parliament. His estates, at that time of the annual rental of £3,271,
probably about a tenth of their present value, were forfeited to the
crown. In 1717 an act passed to enable his majesty to make provision for
his wife and children. He died in France in 1729. He married Lady
Margaret Stewart, eldest daughter of the fifth earl of Galloway, and had
a son and a daughter, who both died young. With this earl the elder
branch became extinct. His countess took for her second husband John,
master of Sinclair.
The representation of the
family devolved on Sir James Carnegie of Pittarrow, descended from Hon.
Sir Alexander Carnegie of Pittarrow, fourth son of the first earl of
Southesk. He died before 1680. By his wife, Margaret Arbuthnott, sister
of the first Viscount Arbuthnott, he had, with two daughters, two sons.
1. Sir David, first baronet. 2. Mungo Carnegie of Birkhill, advocate.
The elder son, Sir David
Carnegie, created a baronet of Nova Scotia Feb. 2, 1663, married, first,
Catherine, second daughter of Sir Archibald Primrose of Dalmeny,
lord-register, sister of the first earl of Rosebery, by whom he had a
son, Sir John, and two daughters, the elder of whom, Margaret, married
Henry Fletcher of Salton, and was mother of Andrew Fletcher of Salton, a
lord of session under the title of Lord Milton; 2dly, Catherine,
daughter of Robert Gordon of Pitlurg, widow of the second Viscount
Arbuthnott, without issue; 3dly, Jean, daughter of Burnet of Lagaron, by
whom he had two sons and two daughters. The eldest son, Sir John
Carnegie, 2d baronet, died in April 1729, leaving, by his wife, Mary,
daughter of Sir Thomas Burnet of Leys, 5 sons and 5 daughters. George,
the youngest son, a merchant at Gottenburgh, purchased the lands of
Pittarrow, and married in 1769, Susan, daughter of David Scott of
Benholm, Kincardineshire, with issue.
Sir James Carnegie of
Pittarrow, the eldest son, 3d baronet, became heir male of the family of
Southesk, and was allowed, by act of parliament, in 1764, to purchase
from the York Building Company, into whose possession they had come, the
forfeited estates of the family in Forfarshire, for which he paid
£36,870 14s. 2d. He was a captain in the army, and M.P. for
Kincardineshire, and had 4 sons and 2 daughters.
The eldest son, Sir David
Carnegie of Kinniard, 4th baronet, repurchased several estates of his
family in Fifeshire, and rebuilt the castle of Kinniard; M.P. for
Forfarshire. He died in London 25th May 1805. By his wife, Agnes Murray
Elliot, daughter of Andrew Elliot, Esq., of Greenwells, Roxburghshire,
he had 2 sons and 10 daughters. Emma, the 9th daughter, married Douglas
of Cavers; and Magdalene, the youngest, became, in 1816, the wife of Sir
Andrew Agnew, baronet.
Sir James Carnegie of
Kinniard, the elder son, then a minor, succeeded as 5th baronet. Born in
1799, he was at one time M.P. for the Montrose burghs. He claimed the
earldom of Southesk, and died Jan. 30, 1849. By his wife, Charlotte,
daughter of Rev. Daniel Lysons, F.R.S., of Hemsted Court,
Gloucestershire, author of the ‘Magna Britannia,’ he had 3 sons and 2
daughters; 1st, James; 2d. John, born 1829 lieutenant, R.N.; 3d Charles,
born 1833, M.P. for Forfarshire, 1860; 4th, Lady Charlotte, born in
1839, married in 1860, Thomas F.S. Fotheringham, Esq., of Fotheringham;
5th, Agnes, died in 1842.
His eldest son, Sir James Carnegie of Kinniard, born at Edinburgh in
1827, succeeded as 6th baronet. Educated at Sandhurst military college,
he entered the army in 1845. He served for five months in the 92d foot,
and was afterwards for three years in the grenadier guards. By the
reversal of the attainder, by act of parliament in 1855, the titles of
earl of Southesk, and Lord Carnegie of Kinniard and Leuchars, which had
been attainted in 1716, were restored to him with the original
precedence, and his brothers and sister were subsequently restored to
their relative rank as children of an earl. He married in 1849, Lady
Catherine Hamilton Noel, 2d daughter of 1st earl of Gainsburough, and
had by her 3 daughters; 1st, Lady Arabella Charlotte, born 1850; 2d Lady
Constance Mary, born in 1851; 3d, Lady Beatrice-Cecilia-Diana, born in
1852; and one son, Charles Noel, Lord Carnegie, born in 1854. Her
ladyship died in 1855. He married 2dly, in 1860, Lady Susan
Catherine-Mary Murray, eldest daughter of 6th earl of Dunmore. The earl
was lord-lieutenant of Kincardineshire from 1849 to 1856. |