STEDMAN, a surname
adopted by Charles Barton, son of the celebrated Scottish admiral, Sir
Andrew Barton. Charles Barton married Susan, daughter of Charles Stedman
and his wife Janet Neilson of Leith. Susan was possessed of considerable
property, and Charles, on his marriage, took the name of his wife, and
his descendants continued it. He had several children. His eldest son,
Alexander, died in 1593.
Alexander’s son, William,
married Margaret Anderson, and died in 1606, leaving a son, Alexander
Stedman, Kinross. The son of the latter, Robert Stedman, of the Milne
Lead and Gala Hill, Kinross, and of Little Seggie and Ballingall,
Kinross-shire, married Agnes, daughter of Michael Henderson of Turfhills,
in the same county.
Robert left three sons.
1. James, the eldest, succeeded to the lands of Little Seggie, which
became the designation of his family. He was also seized in the lands of
Milnathort, Kinross-shire, in 1648. Born in 1598, he died in 1686. He
married Euphan, daughter of James Dempster of Tillyochie, Kinross-shire.
2. John. He succeeded to his father’s property in lands and houses in
Kinross. He married Jean Dempster of Tillyochie, and died in 1673. 3.
Robert. He succeeded to the lands of Ballingall, which became the
designation of his family. He was twice married, and left issue.
James Stedman of Little
Seggie, the eldest son, had a son, the Rev. Robert Stedman, for 52 years
minister of Carriden, Linlithgowshire. In the old churchyard of the
parish there is a monument to his memory, erected by his relict, Sarah,
daughter of Sir Alexander Ingles of Inglistown, in that county. He
joined the protesting party in the Church of Scotland, and was deposed
in 1661. Subsequently he was restored, and was the first moderator of
the presbytery of Linlithgow, Nov. 30, 1687. Born in 1625, he died in
1701. He left four sons, Alexander, James, Robert, and John.
1. Alexander, ordained
minister of Beith, Fifeshire, in 1691, succeeded his father in Little
Seggie.
2. James, born in 1662,
married Janet Bairdie, Linlithgow. He predeceased his father, without
male issue. At the base of the public fountain in Linlithgow, there was,
in 1843, a large tombstone of Dutch marble (removed from the
burial-ground of Linlithgow Cathedral), with the remains of an
inscription, “Here lyes the Body of Janet Bairdie, spows of Stedman,”
and the figures 67, supposed to be her age.
3. Robert, born in 1667,
like his ancestors, the Bartons, seems early to have been prepossessed
in favour of a maritime life. He became the owner and commander of a
ship which traded between Borrowstowness and Holland. He extended his
voyages to Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, and, in course of time, became
possessed of no fewer than 13 ships. He amassed considerable wealth,
which he ultimately lost. He died in 1738. By his wife, Margaret,
daughter of Edward Jossey of West Pans, East Lothian, he had several
sons. Edward, the eldest, born in 1699, was minister of Haddington, and
died in 1756. Alexander, the 3d son, born in 1703, and educated for the
Scottish bar, was distinguished as a sound lawyer and profound
mathematician. He joined the Pretender in 1745, and, with his brothers,
John and Charles, was taken prisoner at Culloden. They all effected
their escape, Alexander and Charles to America, and John to Rotterdam.
Alexander settled in Philadelphia, where he practiced his profession
with great success, and having made his peace with the mother country,
was appointed a judge of the supreme court of Pennsylvania, March 19,
1764. On the declaration of Independence of the American Colonies, he
returned to Scotland, and subsequently went to Swansea, in Wales, where
he died at the advanced age of 91. His son, Charles Stedman, born in
1753, on the revolt of the American colonies, joined the British forces,
and was placed at the head of the commissariat department. Soon after
the battle of Brooklyn in 1776, he was made prisoner, and carried to New
York. The rapid advance of the British army caused the Americans to
abandon that city in haste, and he was released. In 1780 he was again
taken prisoner, while commanding a foraging party in the vicinity of
Springfield, Burlington, New Jersey, but made his escape. He was
appointed aide-de-camp to Baron Linsingen, then in command of the
auxiliary Hessian troops, retaining his commissary powers. Owing to the
scarcity of provisions, a rifle corps of German emigrants was raised, to
the number of 400, and, being placed under his command, proved an
efficient foraging force. At the battle of Guildford Court-house, March
15, 1781, he was wounded in his sword hand, in single combat with an
American dragoon, and was only saved from being cut down, by the
appearance of a British light horseman, who slew his adversary. At the
peace of 1783, he came to England, and retired on the half-pay of a
colonel. He was the author of a ‘History of the American War,’ published
in 1794. In 1797, through the influence of the Marquis Cornwallis, he
was appointed deputy-comptroller and accountant-general of the revenue
of stamps, an office created on the occasion. He died in 1812, and was
succeeded in his office by his only son John, born in 1786. In 1813 the
latter was appointed civil secretary at Gibraltar and registrar of the
Supreme Court of Appeal, and in 1816 one of the judges of the Court of
Admiralty there.
4. John Stedman of Wester
Baldridge, Fifeshire. Born in 1678, he was ordained, in 1699, minister
of Dalmeny, Linlithgowshire, and, in 1710, translated to the Tron
church, Edinburgh. He died in 1713. By his wife, Jean, 2d daughter of
Rev. John Kinniard, minister of East Calder, he had three sons; Robert,
Alexander, and John, and six daughters. Robert Stedman, the eldest son,
born in 1701, entered in 1730, as ensign in the Scots brigade in the
Dutch service, and rose to the rank of lieutenant-colonel. He was at the
battles of Fontenoy and Rocroix, and the sieges of Dendermond and
Bergen-op Zoom, and died at Breda in 1770. He left two sons, John
Gabriel, born 1741, and William George, born 1748, both
lieutenant-colonels in the Scots brigade, Dutch service. John Gabriel,
the elder son, was infeft in Ernieside, Kinross-shire, in 1791. In 1796
he published a ‘Narrative of a Five Years’ Expedition against the
revolted Negroes of Surinam from 1772 to 1777.’ The same year he was
appointed to the command of a British regiment of the line, then in
garrison at Gibraltar, but was prevented by an accident from joining it,
and died in 1797. – Alexander, the 2d son, died at Jamaica, unmarried.
John, the 3d son, born in 1710, was, in 1740, appointed surgeon to the
North British dragoons, or Scots Greys. He afterwards practiced as a
physician in Dunfermline, and subsequently settled in Edinburgh. Besides
several medical treatises, he was the author of ‘Laelius and Hortensia,
or thoughts on the Nature and Objects of Taste and Genius.’ He succeeded
to Little Seggie in 1765, and married Peggy, daughter of Robert Wellwood
of Pitliver, Perthshire. He died in 1791.
Lieutenant-colonel John
Gabriel Stedman of Ernieside had 3 sons. 1. William George, born 1784,
who succeeded him in that property. He was a lieutenant in the royal
navy, and was killed while boarding a French privateer of the island of
Cuba. 2. Robert Adrian, born in 1790, lieutenant-colonel 1st light
cavalry, in the East India Company’s service, and C.B. He succeeded his
brother in Ernieside in 1812. He was at the battle of Aliwal in the
Punjaub, Jan. 28, 1846, and was mentioned with high praise in the
dispatch of Sir Harry Smith, the commander-in-chief. He died at sea,
April 12, 1849, on his voyage home, after having served 41 years in
India. A monument to his memory is erected at Cawnpore by his brother
officers. 3. John Cambridge, born in 1796, a captain 34th light
infantry, East India Company’s service, was killed in 1834 in battle in
Burmah.
Lieutenant-colonel
William George Stedman had an only son, Lieutenant-general John Andrew
Stedman, born in 1788, who entered the Dutch service as a cadet, and
rose to the rank of lieutenant-general. On 17th and 18th June, 1815, he
covered with the Dutch troops the right wing of the allied army, and the
road from Mons to Brussels, under the command of the Duke of Wellington.
He received several orders of knighthood, and was made by Louis XVIII.,
an officer of the Legion of Honour. He died in 1824. His only son,
Charles John #William, became a naturalized subject of Prussia, and
Baron de Stedman in that kingdom. |