BARON MURE.
This gentleman was held in the highest
esteem for his great wisdom and knowledge of affairs, and was
eminent in many walks of life. He was distinguished equally as a man
of learning and great legal attainments. He sat from 1742-1761 as
Member of Parliament for the County, and was created Baron of
Exchequer. His influence in all matters affecting the well-being of
the kingdom was perhaps greater than that of any other person in the
kingdom, as during the middle of last century he dispensed the
patronage of the Crown in Scotland. He built the present
mansion-house of Caldwell in 1772, from plans by Robert Adam,
architect, London. He was Lord Rector of the University of Glasgow,
1774-5, and died in 1776.
WILLIAM MURE
was no less
distinguished and eminent in his career than was the Baron, his
grandfather. His studies related to subjects of a most abstruse
character mostly; as the Chronology of the Egyptian Dynasties, and
the Calendar of the Zodiac of Ancient Egypt, which, with his
investigations into the Critical History of the Language and
Literature of Ancient Greece, and other writings, the Caldwell
Papers included, gave him rank amongst the greatest scholars and
scientific investigators of modern Europe. He was D.C.L.,
Vice-Lieutenant of Renfrewshire, and Member of Parliament for the
County from 1846 to 1855, and Lord Rector of Glasgow University,
1847-1848. He died, aged about sixty-one years, in London, 1860.
GEORGE C. MONTEATH, M.D.,
second son of the
Rev. Dr. Monteath, sometime minister of the parish of Neilston,
attained marked eminence in his profession in Glasgow, especially as
an oculist, and in the science of optics. In the churchyard of
Houston, to which church his father was translated from Neilston,
there is a handsome monument erected to his memory, for which Mr.
Smith of Jordanhill wrote the following inscription :—
Sacred to the Memory of
GEORGE CUNINGHAME MONTEATH, M D.,
Who died at Glasgow, 21st January, 1828,
Aged Thirty-nine Years.
Distinguished by the
highest attainments, and most honourable conduct in his profession,
to the humane and arduous duties of which he was devotedly attached.
He was respected in public, and beloved in private life.
This tribute of affection is erected by his afflicted widow,
Anne Colhoun Cuninghame.
WILLIAM YOUNG, M.D.,
was distinguished for
his knowledge of anatomy and pathology, and after removing from
Neilston to Glasgow’, became equally eminent as a physician. In the
discharge of his duties as one of the physicians to the Royal
Infirmary, he contracted typhus fever, of which he died, in the
forty-seventh year of his age. He was much regretted, as he was held
in high esteem, and the public prints of the city testified to his
great worth.
JOHN ROBERTSON, ENGINEER.
was for several years
a foreman in Crofthead mill, then a cotton-spinning mill. He was
well-known to be a man of more than ordinary capacity ; and that to
his great practical knowledge of mechanics, he united a special
aptitude for original contrivances in overcoming difficulties of an
engineering character connected with his business. We are informed
that the application of his invention to the “ self-acting mule,”
made that ingenious machine of greatly increased practical value in
the industry of cotton-spinning. And we learn from a cenotaph
erected in Neilston churchyard that to his genius was due the
invention of the first marine engine on the Clyde. (See page 71 for
inscription on this stone.)
JOHN SHANKS, SANITARY ENGINEER.
Founder with his
brother, Andrew, of the celebrated firm of Shanks & Co., Tubal
Sanitary Engineering Works, Barrhead. This gentleman was the
inventor and patentee of many ingenious appliances relating to
practical sanitation of every description, when that branch of
health knowledge was only beginning to attract attention.
He was a native of Paisley, but came to Barrhead when quite young,
and was happy in having his life prolonged sufficiently to see the
success of his enterprise, and reap the fruits of his earlier mental
efforts and ingenuity.
JAMES RIGG, POET.
spent his early years
in connection with calico printing in Barrhead, in one of the
branches of which he began an apprenticeship ; but, like many others
in the same trade, finding that that business was changing from hand
to machine labour, he turned his attention to other industries. For
a number of years he was employed as a clerk ; and always a lover of
music, he was for a time precentor in churches in Paisley and
Barrhead. Latterly, however, he was engaged as a traveller for a
firm in Glasgow. From his earliest youth he had been a lover of
Nature, especially field botany, in which he became very proficient.
Meanwhile, the elements of poetry were finding expression in verses
published from time to time, and in his later and riper years, with
greatly improved versification, he carried into these studies a fine
poetic vein, in which the poet-botanist is beautifully illustrated
and exemplified in the two volumes he published, Wild Flower Li/rics
and other Poems 1897,1 and Nature Lyrics and Essays, 1902. Bigg died
at Chipmill, near Kennishead, 12th December, 1907, aged sixty-six
years. Since his death, a monument to his memory has been erected in
Neilston Cemetery by one of his late employers, we understand, who
was also an admirer of his waitings, which has the following
inscription on its base :—
JAMES RIGG,
Poet of the Wild Flowers,
Lies buried here.
A Man of Worth and Genius.
Alex. Gardner, Paisley.
JOHN DAVIDSON, POET AND JOURNALIST,
was a native of
Barrhead, where his father was minister of one of the dissenting
churches, but left that town when quite young. He was engaged as a
teacher in Greenock at one period of his life, in which town he had
been educated, and was also for a short time engaged teaching in
Paisley. He was a prolific writer on many subjects—ballads, songs,
and plays, and a series of remarkable “Testaments.” His poetical and
critical powers were of a high order, and his poetically descriptive
essays and papers are as ingenious as they are interesting and
varied. The mere enumeration of his writings after he settled in
London in 1890 and devoted his energies exclusively to literature,
show the vast fertility of the poet’s genius. In 188G, he published
the drama Bruce; in 1888, Smith: a Tragedy; in 1889, Scaramouch in
Naxos; in 1890, Perfervid; after which, he issued two volumes of
poems: In a Music Hall, 1891, and then followed the remarkable
series of impressions of life in London, under the title of Fleet
Street Eclogues, 1893. Following these came quite a succession of
works from his busy pen—A Random Itinerary, 1894; Ballads and Songs,
1894; Baptist Lake, 1894; A Full and True Account of the Wonderful
Mission of Earl Lavender, 1895; Miss Armstrong and other
Circumstances, 1896; in this year also Translation of Copee’s play,
“For the Crown,” staged at the Lyceum Theatre, London; Ballads,
1898; Self's the Man: a Tragedy, 1901; Testaments, 1901-2; The
Knights of the Maypole, 1902; A Rosary, 1903; The Testament of a
Prime Minister; Selected Poems, 1904; and Theatrocrat: a Tragic Play
of Church and Stage. In consideration of his contributions to
literature he received, in 1905, a Civil List pension of £100. In
1909, the poet’s mind seems to have given way to melancholia, and he
could see only darkness and difficulties ahead. On an evening in
March of that year he left his home near Penzance, and did not
return. In the same year, on 18th September, his body was recovered
from the sea; to which again it was committed by his family at the
close of the coroner’s investigation, in consequence of a letter he
had left in which he expressed a wish to be buried at sea.
E. A. WALTON, R.S.A.
This gentleman is a
native of Neilston, having been born in Glan-derston, 10th April,
1860. He early devoted a natural genius for the art, to the study of
painting in its various branches, first at Glasgow and subsequently
at Dusseldorf. He holds the medals of Paris and Munich, and also
Chicago, and has been a Royal Scottish Academician for a number of
years. He is an original worker, and his pictures are always famous
for fine colour and charm, while he is equally at home in portrait
and landscape art. As an artist, he is yet comparatively young, and
we hope for a brilliant future for our fellow-parishioner in the art
of which he is even now a foremost exponent.
ALEXANDER HORNE, MISSIONARY,
for twenty-three
years, was engaged in missionary work in the village of Uplawmoor,
previous to the erection of the quoad sacra church there. He was
never of very robust constitution, but was imbued with a deeply
religious spirit, and possessed a gentle and kindly disposition. His
verses, Shadow and Substance, and other Poems, 1874, are a true
reflex of his own inner and deeper nature. He died at Uplawmoor,
1881.
JAMES SHAW, TEACHER.
James Shaw, teacher,
Tynron, Dumfries, was born at Barrhead, 22nd April, 1826. When about
thirteen years of age he was sent to Glasgow to be initiated into
pattern designing, and on returning home two years afterwards, began
a regular apprenticeship of seven years to the same business at
Gateside Printwork, then under the management of Glen & M‘Indoe. At
the close of his apprenticeship he went for two or three years as
clerk and designer to Cumming, Melville & Co., silk printers,
Roebank, Beith. Returning to Barrhead about 1853, he started, with
five others, as master printer at Cross-mill, an unfortunate
experience, so far as he was concerned. As the business with which
he had hitherto been connected was passing through a dull stage, he
now, at the age of thirty years, turned his attention to the
profession of teaching, and entered the Established Church Training
College, Glasgow, in 1855. Shortly after being qualified, he was
appointed to the parish school of Tynron, where, with much
acceptance, his labours continued for thirty-four years, and where
he died, 15th July, 1895. Shaw was no ordinary schoolmaster : to a
many-sided mind he added the instincts of a philosopher, which found
scope in nearly every department of study—Natural History, Botany,
Astronomy, Geology, Antiquities, Philology, Poetry. Had he either
been more favourably placed as to his intellectual surroundings or
more specialized in his studies, instead of dissipating his
energies, he might have attained a different position in literature.
A collection of his writings has been compiled into a Memorial
Volume of 312 pages, by his friend and former pupil, Professor
Hubert Wallace, Edinburgh University, under the title of A Country
Schoolmaster, James Shaw, IS1.)'.). In the preface to the work, it
is said of Shaw, by one who knew him well :—“He was a large man,
fated to play out his life’s drama on a small and dimly lighted
stage.”
JAMES SCADLOCK, POET.
James Scadlock was
born in Paisley, 7th October, 1775, where his father was a hand-loom
weaver. But as he came to our parish in very early life, and
remained in it until his death, he may be looked upon as all but a
native. After spending only a few months, when a mere boy, with his
father at the loom, and a short time as a lad in a stationer’s shop
in his native town, he came to Barrhead and took up residence with a
relation. Here he began an apprenticeship of seven years as a
copperplate engraver in Fereneze Printwork, then under the firm of
Finlay, Ure, Bryce k Co. Towards the close of his apprenticeship,
having already begun to court the Muse, he made the acquaintance of
Tannaliill, Paisley’s sweet singer, with whom, being kindred
spirits, a friendship was developed which continued during the whole
of the latter’s lifetime. In a dull period in the printing trade of
Barrhead, Scadlock went to Perth, where he wrought for a short time.
But on business improving, he returned to Barrhead, and, in April,
1808, was married to Mary Ewing. Taking up house in Grahamston, he
and his wife continued to reside there until his death, which took
place from typhus fever, 4th July, 1818. He was of an amiable
disposition, and was a fond admirer of nature in all its aspects,
loving to linger among the hills and glens that surrounded his home.
His pure and gentle muse frequently found subjects of song among the
beauties of our local scenery, in Killoch Glen and by Levernside. He
will always take a place among the minor poets of our country.
EX-PROVOST BROWN, UNDERWOOD PARK,
PAISLEY.
This gentleman was
not a native of our parish, but he was brought to it at a very early
age, and was reared and educated in it, at the most impressionable
period in his life, and ever afterwards entertained such warm
sentiments towards it, that it seems proper to include him among her
eminent natives. Robert Brown was born at Rainger Home farm, East
Kilbride, 15th July, 1810. In 1815, his parents removed to Nether
Capellie farm, Neilston, and the boy’s first duty was to herd on the
braes above Glen Killoch till school age. He was educated at
Neilston parish school, and seems early to have evinced an aptitude
for Latin and Greek and Arithmetic—the intention being that he
should proceed to the University. This intention was, however,
departed from, and he removed to Paisley in 1827. Subsequently going
to Glasgow, he acted for a time as reporter and sub-editor of the
Chronicle newspaper, which helped to give a literary bias to his
inclinations. In 1834, he was appointed Town Chamberlain to the
Burgh of Paisley, and in 1845 was an accountant and share broker in
Buchanan Street, Glasgow. Having acquired, in 1850, the property of
Ferguslie, he founded the Ferguslie Fire-clay Works. In 1854, he
entered the Town Council for the Fourth Ward, and two years after—
1856—had become Provost of Paisley, from which office he retired in
1859. Active, diligent, and accomplished, he now, with more leisure,
turned to literary work, for which he had early imbibed a taste,
which seemed never to have left him, the result being the
publication of quite a series of works : History of the High Church,
History of the Grammar School and Academy, History of Burns Clubs,
Memoirs of Paisley Poets, and his greatest work, A History of
Paisley, closing a busy life on 6th May, 1895.
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
It has been stated,
on what authority is not said, that the family of this celebrated
novelist had at one period some connection with the parish of
Neilston. Stevenson is known to have been descended from a
Covenanting stock belonging to the West of Scotland, and we are
probably indebted to the Covenanting blood that was in his veins for
the stirring story, The Pentland Rising. But whether the stock here
referred to was the Neilston resident or not, is obscure. The
statement, however, is that the novelist’s grandfather at one time
resided in Nether Carswell farm in our parish. Nether Carswell is a
moorland sheep-farm situated to the south of Neilston, and in the
direction of Dunlop. |