SPENS, or SPENCE,
a surname, originally a Fifeshire one, derived from a word, meaning in
Scotland, a spare room beside the kitchen, and in England, a yard, an
enclosure, a buttery. The family of Spens of Lathallan, of great
antiquity in that county, from their carrying the lion rampant of
Macduff in their arms, are said to have been descended from the old
earls of Fife. Of the Spences of Wolnerston, or Wormieston, in the
parish of Crail, we have the following notices:
The Spences of Wormieston
adhered to the cause of Queen Mary, and at the parliament held by the
regent Lennox at Stirling, 28th August 1571, David Spence of Wormieston
was amongst the “rebels” forfeited. He is described as one of the most
able and upright characters of the period. In the daring attempt to
surprise the parliament at Stirling, on the 4th September, planned by
Kirkaldy of Grange, he had received from the latter the charge of
securing the regent and saving his life at every risk, and after the
regent had surrendered, he executed his charge so faithfully that when
attacked by his murderers, he received through his own body the bullet
by which Lennox was mortally wounded. Wormieston was afterwards
barbarously hacked to pieces by the king’s party who came to the rescue,
although the wounded Lennox repeatedly called to spare his life. After
James VI. had succeeded to the throne of England, Sir James Spence of
Wormieston was sent ambassador to the king of Sweden, with the view of
effecting a peace between that monarch and the king of Denmark. The
barony of Wormieston afterwards came into possession of the Lindsays.
Count de Spens, who was
ranked amongst the first of the nobility in Sweden, and was
generalissimo of the Swedish forces, was a descendant of the house of
Wormieston.
It is not improbable that
Sir Patrick Spens, of the ancient ballad which bears that name, was a
baron of Wormieston. The occasion of the ballad was the expedition which
conveyed the princess Margaret, daughter of King Alexander III., to
Norway in 1281, when she was espoused to Eric, king of that country. “In
returning home,” says Fordoun in his History of Scotland, “after the
celebration of her nuptials, the abbot of Balmerinoch, Bernard of
Monte-alto, and many other persons were drowned.” The command of the
ship that bore the princess to Norway, was given to Sir Patrick Spens,
as
---------------“the best
sailor
That ever sailed the sea;”
And the gallant commander
and all his company are represented as having been lost on their
homeward voyage:
“Sir Patrick he is on the
sea,
And far out ower the faem,
Wi’ five and fifty Scots lords’ sons
That longed to be at hame.”
Midway between Norway and
the coast of Fife, they were all cast away
“Half ower, half ower, to Aberdour.”
Sir Walter Scott preferred to read it,
“O forth miles off Aberdeen,”
remarking that in a
voyage from Norway, a shipwreck on the north coast appears as probable
as either in the firth of Forth or Tay. But as Aberdour was the nearest
port to Dunfermline, where the Scottish monarchs chiefly resided from
the time of Malcolm Canmore to that of Alexander III., and as the royal
commissioners, Wemyss of Wemyss and Scott of Balwearie, sent to escort
the young princess to her husband, belonged to Fife, it seems more
likely that the common reading is the correct one:
“Half ower, half ower, to
Aberdour,
Full fifty fathoms deep,
And there lies gude Sir Patrick Spens,
Wi’ the Scotch lords at his feet.”
The immediate ancestor of
the Lathallan family was Henry de Spens, who flourished in the end of
the thirteenth century. Like most of the other Scots barons he was
compelled to swear fealty to Edward I. in 1296. Contemporary with him
was Nicol de Spens, who was also forced to swear allegiance to that
imperious monarch. Henry died soon after 1300. His son, Thomas de Spens,
is mentioned in two charters, in the reign of Robert Bruce, to the
monastery of Soltray. His son and successor, William de Spens, had two
sons, William his heir, and Walter de Spens, witness in a writ of the
bishop of Aberdeen in 1382. William, the elder son, was proprietor of
the lands and barony of Lathallan, and several others in the same
county, of which the earls of Fife were superiors till the forfeiture of
Murdach duke of Albany and earl of Fife in 1425, after which the family
held the lands of the crown. He died about 1432, at an advanced age. He
married Isabel, daughter and heiress of Duncan Campbell of Glen Douglas,
Tarbet, Dumbartonshire. In consequence of this marriage the Spens’ of
Lathallan, with several cadets of the family, added to their arms
gyronny of eight, the paternal coat of Argyle. With one daughter, he had
two sons, John, his heir, and William, first of the Spens’ of Kilspindy,
Perthshire, who flourished principally in the reigns of James I. and
II., but have long been extinct.
John de Spens, the elder
son, in his father’s lifetime was designed of Glen Douglas, and he
retained that designation with that of Lathallan, as long as he lived.
He is described as having been a person of great parts and spirit, and
extremely active in business. In 1434, he was chosen one of the lords of
the articles in a full parliament held at Perth by King James I. He died
in the beginning of the reign of James II. By his wife, Isabel, daughter
of Sir John Wemyss of Rires, progenitor of the earls of Wemyss, he had
four sons. 1. Alexander, his heir. 2. Robert, of Pittedie, Fifeshire. 3.
Thomas, bishop of Galloway, a learned prelate, appointed in 1458
lord-privy-seal for Scotland. The following year, on being translated to
the see of Aberdeen, he resigned the privy seal, but in 1468 received it
again, and held it till 1471. Being very prudent and expert in business,
Bishop Spens was employed in several embassies, particularly in the
treaty of marriage between the duke of Savoy and Lewis, Count de
Maurienne, his son, with Anabella, sister of King James II., in 1449,
and on 27th July 1451, he was appointed ambassador from Scotland to
negotiate a truce with England. There is an effigy of Bishop Spens in
the collegiate church of Roslin. He erected an hospital at Edinburgh,
where he died, and was buried in the Trinity college churchyard at the
foot of Leith Synd in 1480. 4. Patrick, an officer in the company of
Scots guards, sent from Scotland by King James II. to Charles VII. of
France in 1450. He was ancestor of the family of Spens-Destignots of
France.
The eldest son, Alexander
Spens of Lathallan, was by James II. appointed high constable of the
town of Crail for life, and got a charter of the same, dated 29th
December 1458. By his wife, Katherine, sister of Sir Andrew Wood of
Largo, he had a son, Robert Spens of Lathallan, who died before 1474.
The latter left a son and successor, John Spens of Lathallan, who died
in 1494. He married Margaret, daughter of Patrick Dunbar of Kilconquhar,
son and heir of the twelfth earl of March. Douglas, in his ‘Baronage,’
states that as he could discover no descendant of that family in
existence, excepting those of the said Margaret, the Spens’ of Lathallan
are undoubtedly the heirs of line of that great and illustrious house.
John Spens of Lathallan had two sons; John, his heir, and David, rector
of Flisk, who got a charter under the great seal of the lands of Muirton,
dated 12th June, 1513. The elder son, John Spens of Lathallan, was
retoured heir to his father in 1495, and died in 1520. His son,
Alexander Spens of Lathallan, married a lady of the ancient family of
Durie, and with a daughter, Lilias, Mrs. Arnot of the house of Balcormo,
had a son, James Spens of Lathallan, who, by prudence and economy,
greatly improved his estate. By his wife, Elizabeth, daughter of John
Seton of Lathrisk, the latter had four sons, and died at an advanced age
in 1595. The second but eldest surviving son, Arthur Spens of Lathallan,
married Janet, daughter of William Duddingston of St. Ford, and left a
son, Alexander Spens of Lathallan, who married Isabel Bethune, a
daughter of the family of Creigh, but having no issue, he made a
resignation of his whole estate, 14th October 1609, in favour of his
undoubted heir male, his uncle, Alexander Spens of the city of St.
Andrews, third son of James Spens of Lathallan, by Elizabeth Seton.
Alexander Spens, who thus succeeded to Lathallan, had three sons. 1.
Thomas, his heir. 2. James, writer in Edinburgh. 3. Alexander. The
eldest son, Thomas Spens of Lathallan, living in 1630, married Margaret,
daughter of Nathaniel Moncrieff of Randerston, and had three sons and
two daughters. Alexander, the eldest son, predeceased his father.
Nathaniel, the second son, was retoured heir in 1662. He married a
daughter of Sir Thomas Gourlay of Kincraig, and had a son and successor,
Thomas Spens of Lathallan, who died before 1700. The latter married his
cousin, Margaret Gourlay, grand-daughter of Sir Thomas Gourlay, and had
two sons; Thomas, his heir, and the Rev. Nathaniel Spens, a clergyman of
the Episcopal church of Scotland.
The elder son, Thomas
Spens of Lathallan, married Janet, daughter of Sir Robert Douglas of
Glenbervie, baronet, and had five sons and three daughters. Nathaniel,
the fourth son, was the first of the Spens’ of Craigsanquhar. The eldest
son, Thomas Spens of Lathallan, married Margaret, daughter of Archibald
Hope, Esq., of the Craighall family, and had three sons and three
daughters. His eldest son, Thomas Spens, Esq., succeeded his father, 9th
May 1758. He sold the ancient patrimonial estate of Lathallan, and died,
unmarried, in 1800, when the representation of the family devolved on
his brother, Archibald Spens of Manor House, Inveresk,
lieutenant-colonel East India Company’s service, born 22d June 1765,
died in May 1845. By his wife, Charlotte, second daughter of Arundel
Phillip, Esq. of Exeter, he had three sons and two daughters. The eldest
son, Archibald, East India Company’s civil service, Bombay
establishment, born 17th August 1809, married 18th March 1829, Henrietta
Ochterlony, eldest daughter of Sir Thomas Malcolm, K.C.B. and K.G., with
issue, three sons and two daughters.
_____
Nathaniel Spens, M.D. of
Edinburgh, younger son of Thomas Spens, the sixteenth laird of Lathallan,
purchased in 1792, the estate of Craigsanquhar, Fifeshire, which at one
period formed part of Lathallan, but had been disjoined from it in 1524.
By his wife, Mary, second daughter of James Milliken, Esq. of Milliken,
Renfrewshire, Dr. Spens had James, his heir; Thomas, M.D., fellow of the
Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh, and first physician to the royal
infirmary of that city; two other sons, and a daughter. The eldest son,
Lieutenant-colonel James Spens, 73d regiment, became in 1799, proprietor
of Craigsanquhar. He was three times married, but had issue only by his
third wife, a daughter of John Davidson, Esq. of Ravelrig, Mid Lothian,
by his wife, Hannah, sister of Henry Mackenzie, author of ‘The Man of
Feeling,’ and died in 1840. With one daughter, Hannah, Mrs. Monypenny of
the Pitmilly family, he had two sons, Nathaniel, his heir, and John, M.D.,
fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh. The elder son,
Nathaniel Spens of Craigsanquhar, born 18th February 1805, became a
writer to the signet in 1830. He married 23d January 1840, Miss Janet
Law Guild, with issue. His only surviving son, Colin, was born 9th
November 1843.
_____
The Spences of Rodham,
Aberdeenshire, says Douglas, have been free barons ever since the reign
of James III. Several other families of the name of Spence in the same
county, also, the Spences of Berryhole, Fifeshire, are all descended
from the family of Lathallan.
_____
In the reign of Queen
Mary, Sir John Spence of Condie was lord advocate. He favoured the
Reformers, and in December 1563, when John Knox was indicted for having
written his famous letter to the leading Protestants, which, to gratify
the queen, the privy council declared to be treasonable, he went in
secret to Mr. Knox, and after he had heard his declaration, and
considered the letter, he said, “I thank God, I came to you with a
fearful and sorrowful heart, fearing you had committed some offence
punishable by the laws, which would have brought no small grief to the
hearts of all those who have received the word of life out of your
mouth. But I depart greatly rejoicing, as well because I perceive you
have comfort in the midst of your troubles, as that I clearly understand
you have not committed such a crime as is bruited you will be accused
of; but God will assist you.” The queen, says Calderwood, (vol. ii. pp.
234, 237), commanded him to accuse, which he did, but very gently. Knox,
it is well known, was acquitted, greatly to poor Mary’s chagrin. |