ALL through the long period embraced in the
sixteenth, seventeenth, and the first half of the eighteenth
centuries, the social condition of the people underwent little or no
change. They had maintained a gallant and successful struggle
against the power of their Southern neighbours. “How heroic,” it has
been justly said, “ was the war of independence ! Its true majesty
consists not in a chance triumph like Bannockburn, but in the ardent
and sustained devotion to an ideal, in the unfailing courage with
which the nation arose again, and lived and fought after disasters
that might well have been mortal, as they seemed, in the unbroken
unity of purpose that compacted all ranks and all conditions of men
into one vigorous, self-sufficing organism.” But though they had
thus, by a self-sacrificing gallantry which lias attracted the
admiration of all succeeding generations, maintained their country’s
liberties, and though the principle of freedom in the abstract was
well enough understood by them, still, during the period that
succeeded, down to the middle of the eighteenth century, personal
freedom was a privilege of which the common people throughout the
country knew little or nothing. They had won their country not for
themselves, but for the chieftains and lairds. They had successfully
resisted the English yoke, only to fall under the yoke of petty
tyrants of their own flesh and blood. These barons, armed with
feudal power, were ignorant and over-bearing, tyrannical and cruel.
The Government was not yet strong enough to keep them under control,
and the people who lived within their domains were entirely at their
mercy. They lived in strongholds, whose grim walls, grated windows,
and iron doors bore testimony to the fact that it was on brute force
alone they relied for the maintenance of their position. Within
these castles or keeps they led a comparatively idle life, and
sallied forth at intervals, followed by their half-naked,
half-starved menials, to plunder a less watchful neighbour, or to
execute reprisals for a raid perpetrated upon themselves on some
previous occasion. Perhaps the last instance of these sanguinary
encounters that occurred between neighbouring lairds in this part of
the country is that which was fought out at the Moss of Knockonie,
which is a portion of the farm of Cosh ogle, and, being in the
ancient parish of Kirkbride, was annexed, as is elsewhere explained,
to the parish of Sanquhar, the remainder of Coshogle being added to
the parish of Durisdeer. The following quaintly worded account of
the affray is derived from Pitcairn’s Letters :—
“A small private war between the lairds of Drumlanrig
and Cashogle came to a bearing this day (May 12 1621), at the Moss
of Knockonie. This moss belonged to David Douglas, brother to
Drumlanrig, bnt Cashogle had always been allowed to raise peats from
it for his winter fuel. The two lairds having fallen into a
coldness, Cashogle would not ask this any longer as a favour, but
determined to take it as a right. Twice his servants were
interrupted in their operations, so he himself camc one day to the
moss, with his son Robert and thirty-six men or thereby, armed with
swords, hagbuts, lances, corn-forks, and staves. Hereupon the laird
of Mouswald, a brother of the proprietor of the moss (who was
absent), sent a friend to remonstrate, and to urge upon Cashogle the
propriety of his asking the peats ‘ out of love,’instead of taking
them in contcnipt. The Cashogle party returned only conteniptnous
answers, ‘ declaring they would cast their peats there, wha wald,
wha wald not.’ Some further remonstrances being ineffectual,
Drumlanrig himself, accompanied with friends and servants, came upon
the scene, shewing that he had the royal authority to command
Cashogle to desist. But even this reference failed to induce
submission. At length the laird of Mouswald, losing temper,
exclaimed—‘ Ye are ower pert to disobey the king majesty’s charge :
quickly pack you and begone.’
“‘Immediately, ane of Casliogle’s servants, with ane
great kent (staff), strak Captain Johnston behind his back, twa
great straiks upon the head, whilk made him fall dead to the ground
with great loss of blood. Then Robert Douglas (son of Cashogle) pre-sentit
ane bended hagbnt within three ells to the Laird of Drnm-laurig’s
breast, wliilk at the pleasure of God misgave. Immediately
thereafter, Robert of new morsit the hagbnt, and presented her again
to him, whilk shot and missed him at the pleasure of God. Robert
Dalyell, natural son to the Laird of Dalyell, was struck through the
body with ane lance, who cried that he was slain; and some twa or
three men was strucken through their clothes with lances, sae that
the haill company thought that they had been killed, and then
thought it was time for them to begin to defend themselves;
whereupon Robert Douglas and three or four of his folk being hurt,
was put to flight, and in flying, the said Robert fell, where the
Laird of Drnmlaurig chaucit to be nearest him; wha, notwithstanding
the former offer Robert made to him with the liagbut, not only
spared to strike him with his awn hands, but likewise discouraged
all the rest nuder pain of their lives to steir him. One of the
Cashogle party was slain.”
As Pitcairn justly remarks, such an occurrence as
this in the South of Scotland, and amongst men of rank and property,
shews strikingly that the wild blood of the country was yet by no
means quieted. There was a mutual prosecution between the parties;
but they contrived to make up the quarrel between themselves out of
court, and private satisfaction being, as usual, deemed enough, the
law interfered no further.
The barons took no interest either in the improvement
of their lands or of the condition of the people. They recognised no
duties or responsibilities as pertaining to their position; their
sole concern was in the maintenance of their rights and the
gratification of their unbridled passions. Under such a state of
things, the condition of the common people can be imagined. As we
have said, they enjoyed not the smallest degree of personal liberty,
and had been, by centuries of oppression, well schooled into
unquestioning obedience to the will of their tyrannical rulers, or
we might say their owners, for, according to the feudal system that
was universal, the people were practically slaves. In the burghs, it
is true, they enjoyed in some degree the forms of self-government,
but it was more in form than in substance, for the direction of
municipal affairs was effectually controlled by some territorial
magnate, and thus, for long after it was created a royal burgh,
Sanquhar was dominated by the Crichton family. While the lives of
the citizens might not be jeopardised by their rulers, as those
outside were at the hands of the barons, they were subjected to
numerous petty restrictions in such matters as the articles of food,
the price of labour, and other social interests, in which the
authorities had every countenance in the sumptuary laws of the
Scottish Parliament. In some instances, the people were debarred
from buying and selling with those who had incurred the displeasure
of the authorities—an early example of that terrible weapon of
social persecution, the boycot.
An Englishman, passing through Dumfriesshire in 1704,
sums up his impression of the condition of the people by the remark
that “had Cain been born a Scotchman, his punishment would have been
not to wander about but to stay at home and the Rev. Alexander
Carlyle, on a visit to the county in 1733, says—“ The face of the
country was particularly desolate, not having reaped any benefit
from the Union of the Parliaments; nor was it recovered from the
effects of that century of wretched government which preceded the
Revolution/’ This state of things continued without mitigation down
to the year 1748.
The peaceable settlement of the country was retarded
by the Rebellions of 1715 and 1745, but these were only the faint
flickerings of a waning cause before its final extinction. These
rebellions shewed how deeply attached part of the Scottish people
were at heart to the Stuarts, who had occupied the throne for
several centuries, and had proved either feeble and vacillating,
totally wanting in governing capacity, and too weak to cope with a
set of haughty and turbulent nobles, or self-willed and cruel,
paying little regard to the just and necessary liberties of the
people. These insurrectionary movements were, however, supported
chiefly in the north country, the lowlands remaining true to the
Revolution Settlement. It has to be borne in mind that tho
principles of the Reformation had not penetrated the Highlands to
any great extent, and, therefore, the Highlanders had a religious as
well as a political attachment to a race who, whatever their varying
fortunes, and however false and perfidious they might have proved as
rulers, had at least been faithful and constant in their adherence
to the Roman Catholic religion. Though there were some Papists and
Jacobites in Nithsdale and Galloway in 1715, the great body of the
people were loyal to the reigning Sovereign. Kirkcudbright or Loch
Ryan had been mentioned as a likely landing place for the Chevalier,
and measures were devised to meet such an emergency. Major Aikman
was despatched from Edinburgh for that purpose. He reviewed the
fencible men of the upper ward of Nithsdale on Marjory Muir, in the
parish of Closeburn, and afterwards had a meeting at Closebnrn with
the leading men of the district. Arrangements were made— “1. That
each parish be modelled into companies, and proper officers chosen
to that effect. 2. That each parish exercise twice or thrice every
week. 3. That upon the first advice of the Pretender landing, each
parish should meet by themselves in some convenient place, there to
concert what is proper to be done, and it was earnestly desired that
they should bring their best arms and ammunition along with •them to
that place. 4. That upon the first notice of the Pretender’s arrival
at Loch Ryan, Kirkcudbright, or in the Firth of Leith, Sanquhar
should be the rendezvous for the western shires; together with other
measures. And lastly, That the friends in every particular district
fall upon ways or means to make the above said particulars
effectual.”— Struthers’ Hist. The first blood shed in this quarter,
we learn from Rae, was at Penpont, where one Bell of Minsca, a
Jacobite gentleman, who had insulted the guards, and refused to
stand when the sentries required him, was shot by one of them
through the leg. This was about the end of July, 1715. “The
gentlemen and people in the upper parts of Nithsdale met at Penpont,
where they rendezvou’d four hundred men, who performed their
Exercises in Battalia, and fired all by Platoons, to the
satisfaction of the best judges then present. Besides these, there
were upwards of an hundred horsemen.”—Bae’s Hist. In October a body
of the rebels was stationed at Moffat, and warning was sent by
Lord-Justice-Clerk Cockburn to Dumfries that it was their intention
to attack that town by surprise. They broke up their camp at Moffat,
and marched straight for Dumfries, their intention being, it would
appear, to deliver their attack on Sabbath, which was the Sacrament
Sabbath, thinking that on that day the community would be most
completely off their guard. But on their arrival within, it is said,
a mile and a half of the town, they learnt that the people had been
apprised of their coming, and had made every possible preparation. A
considerable force had assembled, for notice of the rebels’
movements had been despatched to the whole surrounding country, and
the greatest alacrity was shewn in answering to the call. Amongst
others was “A braham Creighton of Garland, Provost of Sanquhar, with
a company of foot from thence, who being informed that the enemy had
invested the town, mounted themselves on country horses, for the
greater expedition, and arrived at Dumfries on Friday.” The rebels,
finding that Dumfries could not be, as they had hoped, taken by
surprise, but was-in a position to make a sturdy resistance, retired
and took up quarters at Ecclefechan. There was no one with proper
authority to direct their movements, and they marched and
countermarched in the most aimless fashion. The English gentlemen
declared for an advance into England, saying that they had
information from their friends that a favourable reception and aid
awaited them ; but the Scottish nobles were opposed to this as, in
their opinion, rushing on certain destruction. In this condition of
matters, with the leaders quarrelling among themselves, some
advising one plan of campaign and others another, the disaffection
spread to the men, among whom the same divergence of opinion was
manifested; and when a move was made in the direction of Lougtown,
the Scots were displeased, and the Earl of Wintoun drew off with a
part of his troop. Four hundred of the Highlanders, too, refused to
march, and deserted the main body, intending to return to their own
country, taking their route through the moors by Lockerbie. They
split into two parties at Airikstone (Ericstane), some going through
Crawford moor towards Douglas, and the remainder down the Yale of
the Clyde towards Lamington. The latter were captured by a body,
both horse and foot, assembled by the Laird of Lamington and others,
and were imprisoned in the church there. The miners of Hopetoun (the
men of Leadhills) and of Wanlockhead intercepted the other party,
and made prisoners of sixty of them, the last stragglers being taken
near Sanquhar.
We need not pursue the subject of the rebellion
further, being only concerned with what relates to the local
history.
In the retreat from Derby during the rising of 1745,
Prince Charlie, when his army had crossed the Esk, divided it into
two parts ; one portion he sent by way of Ecclefechan arid Moffat,
and the remainder, which he led in person, continued their retreat
by Annan and Dumfries. After leaving the latter town he stayed at
Drumlanrig Castle, of which he took possession for the night, the
Duke of Queensberry being absent. He occupied the state-bed, while a
number of his men lay upon straw in the great gallery. Before
departing next day, it is to be regretted that the Highlanders took
that opportunity of expressing their love of King James by slashing
with their swords a series of portraits representing King William,
Queen Mary, and Queen Anne, which hung in the grand stair-case—a
present from the last of these sovereigns to James, Duke of
Queensberry, in consideration of his services at the
Union. (Chambers' Hist, of the Rebellion.) The pictures have been
carefully restored, but they still bear the marks of this
contemptible act of Prince Charlie’s men. The line of retreat taken
was up the Pass of Dalveen into Clydesdale, their design being to
march upon Glasgow. There was, till recently, in Sanquhar a small
military drum known as “Prince Charlie’s Drum.” Its story was that
it was stolen from a party as they rested while passing through the
town. This was not on the line of march, but, in all probability,
the party were deserters, for, after such a lengthened retreat, the
army must have fallen into a broken and dispirited condition ; and
while the Highlanders, moved by the instinct of mutual support and
protection, might hold together so long as they were in a strange
country, others who had no such motive, and felt that the cause in
which they had been engaged was now hopeless, would drop off from
time to time, and the road up Nithsdale would afford to such a
tempting opportunity. The story at any rate was universally believed
in the beginning of the century, and has been accepted ever since as
authentic. The drum was kept in the garret of the old
“doon-the-gate” (South U.P.) Manse. When the house was taken down
this relic fell into the hands of a man living near by, whose son
sold it a few years ago to a collector of curiosities for the paltry
sum of £1. It was exhibited lately at the Military Exhibition held
in Edinburgh, being lent for that purpose by his representatives.
These rebellions gave much trouble to the government,
and seriously retarded the material and social progress of the
country. At the same time, they were not an unmixed evil, for they
afforded a reason, and a very sufficient reason, for stripping the
heads of clans and feudal lords of their powers of criminal and
other jurisdiction which vitally affected the lives and liberties of
the people. The administration of justice up to this period had been
simply the expression of the will, the arbitrary will of too often a
petty and vindictive tyrant, or the haphazard decision of one who,
though striving to exercise his powers honestly and conscientiously,
had had no training whatever for the adequate discharge of such
important functions, and had his judgment perverted by personal or
friendly interests. The country was slowly but surely emerging from
a period during which the privilege and power of government, which
naturally inhered in the Crown, had been usurped by these feudal
lords who, each within his own territory, held absolute authority,
and paid but the scantiest respect to the legitimate government of
the kingdom. The country generally had been kept in a disturbed
state for centuries by the political ambitions of nobles and barons,
sometimes acting singly, sometimes in combination, encouraged by the
fact that, as too often happened, the King was either a minor or had
not sufficient firmness and force of character to cope with and keep
in subjection these turbulent lords. In the border district this
state of matters was aggravated by the reiving raids, which were
almost constantly recurring between neighbouring lairds. Holding, as
we have said, absolute authority over their vassals and retainers,
they involved the whole population in mutual plunder and strife.
Such a state of things was incompatible with the advance of
civilisation, and the time had arrived when strong measures might,
as one writer puts it, be taken for “ameliorating generally the
institutions of the Scottish people, and thus disarming them of
their ignorant hostility and self-destroying rancour, which, on
every trivial occasion, they were ready to put forth at the call of
their interested, capricious, and selfish superiors who, happening
to be born lairds, supposed themselves entitled to their affection,
the fruit of all their toil, and the last drop of their blood
whensoever they were pleased to require it.”
An Act for vesting in the Crown the estates of such
of the lords as had been mixed up in the traitorous rebellion of ’45
was therefore followed immediately by a general Act, applicable to
the whole kingdom, for the abolition of these heritable
jurisdictions. Notwithstanding, however, the extent to which these
powers had been abused, the holders were treated by the State with
the utmost consideration, and as such powers were regarded as
private rights vested in certain families, and secured to them by
the treaty of Union, compensation was given for their surrender.
Among those who sent in their claims we find that the Duke of
Queensberry, who had purchased the barony of Sanquhar, and with it
the sheriffship of Dumfries, from Lord Crichton, claimed as Sheriff
£6000, his whole claim amounting to £14,500; but it was cut down to
£6621. This salutary Act came into force in the year 1748. It was,
as might have been anticipated, violently opposed, but the miserable
end of the recent rebellion had taught the lesson that the days were
past w'hen the authority of Parliament and of the Executive
Government could be successfully defied. The measure was sullenly
acquiesced in, but it proved the most beneficial for Scotland of any
that had been passed since the Union. By it “all heritable
jurisdictions of justiciary, and all regalities and heritable
baillieries, and all heritable constabularies, other than the office
of high constable of Scotland, and all stewartries, being parts only
of shires or counties, and all sheriffships and deputy sheriffships
of districts, belonging unto, or possessed or claimed by any subject
or subjects, and all jurisdictions, powers, authorities, and
privileges thereunto, appurtenant or annexed, or dependant
thereupon, are abrogated, taken away, totallis dissolved and
extinguished.” These jurisdictions, powers, and authorities were
henceforth vested in the Court of Session, Court of Justiciary at
Edinburgh, the Judges in the several Circuits, and the Courts of the
Sheriffs and Stewards of the shires or counties, and others of the
King’s Courts respectively. The heritable sheriffships were resumed
and annexed to the Crown. All judges were by this Act required to
qualify by taking the oaths to Government (the same provision
applied, it will be observed, to Town Councils), with all
procurators, writers, agents, or solicitors practising in any of the
Scottish Courts. By this important measure the administration of
justice, the purity and efficiency of which lies at the very root of
a nation’s well-being, ceased to be the subject of private property,
and was transferred to a body of officials, appointed by and
responsible to the Crown alone, trained to the profession of the
law, and free from local or personal influences. For the first time
could it be said that the inhabitants of Scotland were free men. It
was some time before all classes of the people could accommodate
themselves to the new order of things, but they gradually came to
realise that old things had passed away, and that now they were free
to practise those arts of peace and industry which were in harmonj
with a slowly but steadily advancing civilisation.
The Union, which ultimately was destined to operate
to the great advantage of the poorer country, had for a time rather
the opposite effect. The more active and enterprising of her sons
were drawn across the border by the wider field for the display of
their talents, where, engaging in business of various kinds, they,
by the exercise of the qualities and virtues which distinguish the
Scottish people, speedily amassed considerable fortunes.
Appreciating the advantages of a more advanced civilisation, and
having, during their residence in the richer country, naturally
acquired different social habits, they preferred to remain where the
state of society was more congenial to their improved tastes.
Others, encouraged by their successes, followed, and thus Scotland
was, for a period, deprived of the very men who could have most
effectually worked out her salvation from a condition of poverty and
indolence. With a true patriotism, the great Forbes and others
strove hard to develop the industries of their native land, and were
wonderfully successful. The linen trade, and also the fisheries,
were those upon the extension of which they principally expended
their energies. The records of the Convention of Royal Burghs bear
ample testimony to the success with which their patriotic efforts
were crowned. In 1727, there were stamped 84,000 yards of linen ;
while in 1783, the quantity had increased to no less than 9,000,000
yards. In the chapter on the weaving industry, it is noted that it
has been found impossible to ascertain with any degree of certainty
when it began in Sanquhar, but it is extremely probable that it
contributed its quota, however small that might be, to this national
manufacture of linen, for, when it is considered that in the early
years of this century there were already over 100 weavers in the
town, it is almost certain that weaving had been going on for a
considerable time prior to that period.
The latter half of the eighteenth century was
therefore the time when, the disturbing effects of the rising of
1745 having subsided, the country settled down to the enjoyment of
an era of steadily increasing prosperity. Prosperity was so far,
however, only a comparative term, and we find that for long after
this date the country was subject to ever-recurring periods of want
bordering sometimes on famine. The diet of the people in country
parts was of a plain though wholesome kind, made up entirely of the
native products of the soil. For breakfast there was oatmeal
porridge, which was served with milk or as often whey. Dinner was
usually made up of mutton broth, followed by the boiled mutton with
potatoes; and for supper, potatoes (often beaten and called
“champers”) with milk, or porridge and milk again. This was the
daily fare of the inhabitants in small towns as well, except that
the dinner had not the advantage of the variety enjoyed in country
houses, but all three meals consisted of oatmeal, potatoes, and
milk. One can see at a glance, therefore, how completely their
condition was dependent on the home harvest, at a time when the
baleful Corn Laws were in full operation. These laws at first were
directed against the exportation of corn, for in those days more
corn was, as a rule, grown than sufficed for the wants of the
people, but gradually, by the increase of the population, the
exporting of corn altogether ceased, and the restrictions were
applied to the importation of bread stuffs. The agricultural
interest was sufficiently powerful in the country, and the
representative rights of the people in the government were
sufficiently ignored to permit of the maintenance of laws of the
kind, the design of which, of course, was to protect the interests
of landowners, but the certain effect of which was to artificially
raise the price of the necessaries of life. The price at which
importation was allowed was altered from time to time, and
ultimately the prohibitory laws operated by a sliding scale, so
adjusted that the price of bread-stuffs was effectually maintained
at a very high figure. The home price of course varied with the
character of the harvest, and whenever a bad harvest, or worse
still, a succession of bad harvests, was experienced the inevitable
result ensued. Grain rose to famine prices, entailing upon the
working classes suffering of no ordinary kind. It is observable
that, in this country, the weather frequently comes in cycles—that
bad seasons seldom come singly. At such periods the population were,
particularly in country districts, brought almost to the verge of
starvation, and diseases, attributable to the want of sufficient
nourishment, were common among the poorer classes. A public writer,
speaking of a period of this kind says—“Meal became so scarce that
it was at two shillings a peck, and many could not get it. It was
not then with many ‘ Where will we get siller? but where will we get
meal for siller?’ I have seen, when wheat was sold in markets, women
wringing their hands, crying—‘ How shall we go home and see our
children die of hunger? They have got no meat these two days, and we
have nothing to give them? ” The harrowing details which he gives of
the sufferings of the poor people remind us of the horrors of a
prolonged siege, and all that it appears the authorities could think
of for the mitigation of the wide-spread distress was to fix maximum
prices, and ordain a solemn fast, on account of the “lamentable
stroke of dearth and scarcity.” It might have occurred to them that
the people had had enough of fasting.
During the period which we have now reached, the end
of the 18th century, the poet Burns often passed through Sanquhar
prior to his removal to Ellisland, and visited the town after that
time in pursuit of his calling. He was on intimate terms of
friendship with Mr (afterwards Provost) Edward Whigham, who kept the
head inn, where Burns frequently stayed overnight, and had such boon
companions as Mr Johnston of Clackleith, and latterly of Blackaddie,
who also became provost in 1791, and Mr Bigg, of Crawick Forge. The
poet amused himself in copying out his manuscript productions, which
copies he distributed among his friends, Provost Whigham coming in
for a large share. He was presented with a copy of the Kilmarnock
edition of Burns’ Poems, which is now in the possession of Mr J. R.
Wilson, of the Royal Bank, here. This volume contains on a fly-leaf
a copy of verses which the poet scratched on a window-pane of the
inn one morning after having breakfasted with Mr Whigham and his
family :—
“Envy, if thy jaundiced eye,
Through this window chance to spy,
To thy sorrow thou shalt find
All that’s generous, all that’s kind,
Friendship, virtue, every grace
Dwelling in this happy place.”
The pane of glass itself is in the possession of the
representatives of the late Mr David Barker. Mr Barker had also a
Memorandum in Burns’ handwriting in the following terms :—
Memorandum for Provost E— W— to get from John French
his sets of the following Scots airs —
1. The auld yowe jumpt o’er the tether.
2. Nine nights awa, welcome hame, my dearie.
3. A’ the nights o’ the year, the chapman drinks nae water.
Mr Whigham will either of himself or through the
medium of that Worthy Veteran of original wit and Social Iniquity—Clackleith—procure
these, and it will be extremely obliging to R. B.
Now, Mr Whigham was not provost till the year 1793,
and therefore this request was made to him by the poet while he was
engaged in the recovery of old Scotch airs aud songs for Mr
Thomson’s Collection, within a year or two of his death.
Photographic copies were made of this memorandum, and the foregoing
is copied from one of these.
The following is a copy of another letter of Burns,
addressed, it is believed, to Mr John M'Murdo, Chamberlain to the
Duke of Queensberry from 1780 to 1797, who frequently entertained
the poet at Drumlanrig :—
Sanquhar, 26th Nov., 1758.
Sir,—I write you this and the enelosed, literally m
passant, for I am just baiting on my way to Ayrshire. I have
philosophy or pride enough to support me with unwounded indiffereuee
against the negleet of my more dull superiors, the merely rank and
file of Noblesse and Gentry, nay, even to keep my vanity quite sober
under the loadings of their compliments; but from those who are
equally distinguished by their rank and character —those who bear
the true elegant impressions of the Great Creator on the riehest
materials—their little notiees and attentions are to me amongst the
first of earthly enjoyments. The honour you did my fugitive pieees
in requesting copies of them is so highly flattering to my feelings
and I’oetie ambition, that I could not resist even this half
opportunity of serawling off for you the enelosed as a small but
honest testimony how truly and gratefully I have the honour to be,
Sir, your deeply obliged humble servant, Robert Burns.
Elsewhere, in connection with Municipal,
Agricultural, and Industrial matters, the attempt is made to convey
some idea of the condition of the town prior to the beginning of the
present century, but the materials are very meagre. As is stated in
the preface, there is this serious disadvantage that the records of
a place, which are frequently of the utmost value as sources of
information in compiling its local history, are singularly deficient
so far as Sanquhar is concerned. We are thus prevented, in a
narration of the facts relating its general history, from going
further back than the date above mentioned.
Taking, therefore, the beginning of this century as
our starting-point, the attention is first arrested by the cloud
that then overhung the town, as it did the whole country. Following
the period of great prosperity which marked the last decade of the
eighteenth century, the depression which characterised the opening
years of this was felt with all the greater keenness. The country
having recovered from the political disturbances caused by the
expiring efforts of the Stuarts to regain the throne, which
culminated in the rebellions of 1715 and 1745, the benefits of the
interchange of commerce between Scotland and England, following upon
the Union, and the great stimulus given to trade by the efforts of
patriotic Scotsmen and the introduction of cotton, had combined to
work a perfect revolution in the social condition of the country.
Employment was now abundant, and wages had advanced, and the pulse
of a commercial activity and enterprise, which the country had never
previously experienced, beat full and strong, when the black shadow
of war fell on the Continent and destroyed the whole fair prospect.
That arch-disturber of the peace of the nations, Napoleon, had begun
his career of ambitious and self-seeking policy, which was destined
to entail untold sufferings and sacrifices until his final overthrow
at Waterloo. Apart from, and in addition to, the enormous losses in
the field of both blood and treasure, trade was paralysed, and
though the iron hoof of war was never imprinted on British soil, our
country in other respects had to bear the brunt of the final
struggle. The pride which, in spite of the poverty and misery they
had to endure, the people took in the successes of the British arms
in the Peninsula, bore testimony to their heroic spirit. It was the
common topic at every fireside, and the children, catching the
spirit of their sires, went about the fields with sticks slashing
the heads off the thistles, taking the weeds for Frenchmen.
It was during this period that, as has been noted,
the Town Council had once and again to come to the relief of the
unemployed weavers, who were in a state of starvation, and had to
take measures to secure a supply of oatmeal, which the poor people
could not procure even for money. As illustrating the straits to
which they were reduced, we know of the case of the father of a
large family in the locality who, procuring a reading of a
newspaper—for there were very few in circulation at that
time—observed a notice of the expected arrival of a vessel iu the
Port of Leith with a cargo of pease. Borrowing a pony, he set out
with the object of securing a quantity of the pease, and arrived in
time. Having bought at the ship’s side as many as the pony could
carry in a sack hung over pannier-wise, he returned home rejoicing.
So long as the pease lasted, the principal food of the family was
pea-bannocks.
The large number of French prisoners who fell into
the hands of the British were distributed over the country. The
party sent to Sanquhar was composed of certain officers with their
servants. They were stationed here for several years on
their 'parole d’honneur, but were not allowed to pass beyond a
circuit of three miles from the town. They were of all
nations—French, Italian, Poles, &c.—for soldiers of fortune of
almost all the continental nations flocked to Napoleon’s standard.
One was named Dufaure, another Wysilaski, another Delizia, and so
on. They were handsome young fellows, had all the manners of
gentlemen, and, living a life of enforced idleness, they became
great favourites with the ladies, with whose hearts they played sad
havoc, and, we regret to have to record, in some instances with
their virtue. The banks of Crawick would appear to have been a
favourite resort of theirs. On a rock in the Holm Walks one Luogo di
Delizia has inscribed his name, with the date “ 1812” underneath.
Lower down, the date “1814” is cut in similar style ; while to the
right are two concentric circular lines containing the French word
“Souvenir,” plainly, though rudely, carved between. Their customary
bathing place was a pool behind the Holm house, which bears to this
day the name of the “Sodger’s Pool.” They were drafted off in
batches as each exchange of prisoners' took place, and it is said
that some of them fell at Waterloo. They had all been removed before
that time, the last leaving early in 1815, with the exception,
perhaps, of one, Angus M'Gregor by name, whose father had had to
take refuge in France for the part he had taken in the Rebellion of
’45. Angus, it appears, had learnt hand-loom weaving, and practised
the trade so long as he was in Sanquhar.
The year 1826 was the “dry year,” elsewhere referred
to. It was followed by a snow-storm in the spring of 1827, still
spoken of as the “big snaw.” It began on Saturday, the 3rd March,
with showers of small flakes, and increased as the day advanced,
till, as night set in, the fall became thick and fast, and was
accompanied by a fierce gale of wind. The result was that drifting
occurred, blocking up the roads, which had to be “cast” for the
passage of the mail coach, and the wall of snow on either side was
at points so high as to completely hide the coach as it passed
along. The inmates of many of the houses—single storey thatched
ones— had their communication cut off, and on the Sabbath morning,
when they opened their doors, they were confronted with an
impenetrable wall of snow. A supply of water was secured by melting
masses of the snow in a pot, and by this means their breakfast of
porridge was prepared. They had to remain imprisoned until they were
dug out by their more fortunate neighbours. Several shepherds, who
were out looking after their flocks, were overtaken by the storm,
and, getting confused in the blinding drift, perished. One of these
was at Ulzieside, and another at Todholes. In the former case, the
poor man had made a continuous circuit of a little knoll, as was
shewn by his footprints in the snow. Not knowing where he w’as, he
had tramped his dreary round, longing for the daylight which, poor
soul, his eyes were never again to look upon. With step ever growing
feebler, he struggled along till, at length stumbling, he fell, and,
incapable of further effort, resigned himself to his fate.
Additional pathos was lent to the incident by the fact that this
knoll was situated only a very short distance above his own house,
so that he may be said to have perished on his own threshold, and
within call of those whom he loved.
Stage coaches had commenced to run between England
and Scotland, and afterwards between certain towns in Scotland, so
early as the middle of the seventeenth century. The journey to
London occupied many days, the whole lawful days of a week being
consumed in the journey from York to that city. The delay was no
doubt largely attributable to the poor character of the roads; and
it is noted in 1685 as a great feat that the Duke of Queensberry and
other noblemen had travelled from London to Edinburgh in eight days.
There was no regular service of stage coaches, however, on the
Nithsdale road till 100 years later. In the early years of this
century there was a daily service. One coach, owned by Major Logan,
of Knockenstob, and others, was called “The Independent,” and put up
at the Queensberry Inn, while another was named “The Burns;” and at
a later period a third, called “The Times,” was added. A keen
rivalry sprang up between them, and racing was of daily occurrence,
affording a good deal of amusement to the townsfolk. “The Burns” was
withdrawn, but “The Independent” continued to run till the opening
of the railway. The arrival of the coach was the principal event of
the day. The toot of the guard’s horn, the crack of the driver’s
whip, and the gaily painted coach as it dashed up the street, drawn
by its team of four steaming horses, roused the sleepy town. The
good burghers peeped out of doors, or hurried to the inn to learn
the news, while the youngsters crowded around, their highest
ambition being to walk one of the horses round the stable yard till
he had cooled, and then to ride him bareback to the River Nith for a
bath, in which occupation many a one had his first lesson in the
equestrian art. The opening of the railway gave the fatal blow to
the coach system, and thus disappeared one of the most picturesque
features of the social life of our small country towns. The mail was
carried on horseback, and latterly by mail gigs. They were privately
owned, and, besides the Government subsidy, a good deal was earned
by the carriage of small parcels, and sometimes of a stray passenger
or two. The direct road to Glasgow on foot by Muirkirk and
Strathaven was shorter than that taken by the coach via Kilmarnock,
the former being about 48 and the latter about 58 miles. William
Cunningham, a watchmaker in Sanquhar, laid a bet that he would cover
the distance between the two places in less time than the coach.
Cunningham was a powerfully built man, and walked with a long
swinging step. They started, the coach and he, together from the
Tron steeple in Glasgow, and when the coach swept round the turn of
the road at the Council House, the driver, to his astonishment,
espied Cunningham standing at the inn’s close awaiting its arrival
to claim payment of the bet. He had done the journey in eight hours,
keeping up, that is, a rate of six miles an hour, and won with
twenty minutes to spare.
During the resurrectionist, scare, about sixty years
ago, when parties went about the country exhuming bodies from the
churchyards for disposal as subjects for the dissecting-rooms in the
colleges, a watch was set for some time, there being a prevalent
belief that raids had been made, or were contemplated, in this
quarter. That these apprehensions were not unfounded, is proved by
the story that John Thomson, a son of Dr Thomson of Sanquhar, at the
time a medical student in Edinburgh, one morning identified a
subject that lay on the dissecting-table as the body of an old blind
fiddler who used to play at the “penny reels” held in the Council
House on fair nights.
The passing of the Reform Bill of 1832 was the next
great event, than which, perhaps, nothing in the previous history of
the town had evoked such a deep and widespread interest. The
fortunes of the Bill were watched with eager expectancy, and the
prolonged resistance which was made to it by the Tory party caused
the very name of Tory to stink in the nostrils of the Radicals of
Sanquhar. The ultimate triumph of the measure was hailed with the
keenest delight, and a Demonstration was organised. A procession,
embracing the mass of the population, was made to Kirkconnel, a
distance of four miles. It was accompanied by the usual bands of
music and a liberal display of banners. On their return home, the
processionists assembled on the square, where congratulatory
addresses were delivered amid the greatest enthusiasm. As a sample
of the oratory on the occasion, we give the peroration of a speech
by a Mr Turner, the parochial schoolmaster of Kirkconnel—“it would
take an ocean of ink,” he cried, “acres of paper, and a quill
plucked from the wing of an archangel to write a record of the
political crimes of the Tories.” An inflammatory harangue of this
sort could not be tolerated by his superiors, and it cost the author
his situation. The Council house was illuminated, as was also every
house in the town, by the simple form of placing candles in every
window pane ; even the few Tories judged it wise to conform in order
to conciliate the populace and save their window-glass, while one or
two, who had made themselves particularly obnoxious, slipped quietly
away from the town for the day. The evening was spent in the usual
round of merrymakings.
Down to this time and later, the animal spirits of
the young fellows, which, having but little opportunity for exercise
in the quiet every day life of the town, found vent at times in
practical joking and other forms of horse play. There was no
policeman to keep them in check, and a considerable degree of
freedom, or rather licence, was enjoyed. As a rule, the element of
malice was absent, and there was frequently a sufficient spice of
humour in their tricks to disarm resentment, and nothing worse than
a good laugh was excited. As examples of this sort of thing, the
following may be taken:—The Lochan was then a row of low
thatch-roofed houses built against the rising ground behind, whence
it was an easy matter to walk on to them. Ned G , a shoemaker, who
worked in the neighbourhood, would rise from his work, and, picking
up sods which were always lying plentifully about, would walk along
the roofs and clap a sod on each “lum.” Returning, he would light
his pipe, and resume his work. In a few minutes a great “row”
suddenly sprang up in the Lochan. The women-folks, driven to the
street by the smoke, which filled their houses, made a perfect Babel
of tongues, when Ned would walk down, and inquire, with an air of
the greatest innocence, “Wi,’ what’s ado,” and on learning the cause
would earn the good name of a “rale obleeging chiel” by going up and
removing the sods which he himself had placed there.
William Thomson, shoemaker, had, among his
apprentices, one or two very stirring blades. Thomson, looking out
of his back window one day, said in their hearing that he wished he
had had some gooseberry bushes in his garden. Imagine his
astonishment next morning, on looking out, to find the garden well
supplied with bushes, loaded, too, with fine ripe berries. The
’prentices had interpreted his wishes in a way he had not
anticipated. The rascals, aided by certain accomplices, had gone
overnight to a large well-stocked garden at Knowehead and
transported the bushes bodily.
A fish hawker, who had failed to dispose of his
stock-in-trade, unyoked his cart on the space of ground in front of
the Town Hall, and left it there. It had leaked out that the fish
were stinking, and, to pay him off, a band of young fellows drew the
cart through the town, scattered the herrings on the street, and
finished up by taking the cart to the kirkyard, where they contrived
to suspend it from a branch of one of the trees.
“Running” people was a form of practical joking
peculiar, so far as we are aware, to Sanquhar. It was largely
indulged in by the young fellows, the victims being persons in a
more or less intoxicated condition, or of somewhat advanced years.
It afforded amusement doubtless to the perpetrators, but it was no
fun to the victim, who, at the end of his forced and rapid journey,
was left in an exhausted and breathless condition. The method of
procedure was as follows :—Having posted themselves at the door of a
public-house, the youths awaited the exit of the individual whom
they had marked out for their attentions. So soon as he emerged with
unsteady gait, and mayhap humming the refrain of a song, he was
seized firmly by each arm, at the wrist and the shoulder, and, if he
were a man of powerful build, also from behind by the collar of the
coat, and before be could utter a word of protest, he was carried
along at a swift pace, which never slackened till he was landed at
his own door. Not a word had been spoken by his assailants during
the rapid and unceremonious convoy, nor by the victim, who found
that he had sufficient to do to keep his feet, and had no breath to
spare; and when he recovered himself he found it was useless to give
vent to his feelings of indignation, for the rascals had swiftly
disappeared.
An amusing instance of this practice of “ running ”
took place one evening with an old man, Tammie Graham. He was in the
act of shaving, one side of his face being shaved, and the other
covered with a fine lather of soap, his friend Baker Todd sitting by
the fire, and “cracking” all the while, when a knock was heard on
the door. Tammie laid down the razor, and answered the call. No
sooner was the door opened than a brief scuffle was heard, followed
by the sound of retreating footsteps. After a very short interval
Tammie was deposited on his own door step. On his entering the house
panting and excited, Todd inquired—“What’s ado, Tammas? Where hae ye
been ava?” “Been,” answered he; “Dreadfu’ be’t” (a favourite
exclamation of his), “I hae been three times roon the p-p-p-pump
well sin’ I g-g-gaed oot.” The mischievous twinkle in Todd’s eye
gave the suspicion that he was an accomplice in the trick, which
received confirmation from the fact that during Tammie’s absence he
had drawn the edge of the razor across the fender. When the old man
resumed the shaving process, and found that the razor was useless,
he looked significantly at Todd, who, however, having an excellent
command of his countenance, looked as innocent as a child.
A minute of the Town Council of the year 1836 relates
that “Bailie Edgar put in a claim for damages to his coat, received
while engaged as a magistrate of the town in endeavouring to quell a
disturbance caused by one Benjamin Robison, by whom his coat was
torn to pieces.” This minute introduces to us a notable character of
the place. Benjamin, or Ben as he was briefly named, was of the
class known as loafers. He followed no regular employment, but was
ready for any chance job, for which he was sometimes rewarded with
drink. In his sober senses a quiet enough man, Ben, when the drink
was in, became a perfect fury. When in that condition he must get up
a “row.” He usually began with some antics which collected a crowd
of children, whom he greatly amused, but the scene oftentimes
developed into something serious whenever any bigger person
interfered. When assailed, Ben would watch for his opportunity to
seize some article of his assailant’s clothing. He had a grip of
iron; when once he got a hold, it was impossible to unloose it, and
whatever he caught had to come. On one occasion, a prominent citizen
of the town was arrayed in all the glory of one of the ruffled
shirts which had just come into fashion ; he unfortunately got into
an altercation with Ben, whose eyes were attracted by this grand
shirt. Springing forward like a wild cat, Ben seized and wrenched
away the whole shirt front, ruffles and all. He, as wo see, had no
reverence for authority ; not even the august dignity of a
magistrate could cowe him, and the majesty of an officer of the law
had no terrors for him. The town officer, Sergeant Thomson, was
endeavouring to remove him to jail for some street disturbance. Ben
threw himself on his back on the ground (this was his favourite move
when he was in danger of being overpowered) and, watching his chance
as the officer stooped over him, caught the tails of his coat and
literally tore it off his back. These disturbances, of which lie was
the central figure, were called “weddings.” Notwithstanding the
damage which an individual sometimes suffered at his hands, his
“weddings” afforded many an hour’s fun, and he was a general
favourite. Poor Ben came to au untimely end. Stumbling one day at
the top of a steep stair in a public-house in the town, he was
precipitated to the bottom. When picked up he was found to be
insensible, aud was carried home, where he lingered for two or three
days, but never regained consciousness. Thus passed out of sight one
who had been an outstanding figure in the social life of the town
for many a day. His death occurred about the year 1841 or 1842.
The mention of the name of this “character” leads us
to remark that in the olden time there were in most little towns a
number of individuals, not of the type of Ben certainly, but in whom
individuality of character, of a great variety of type, was strongly
marked. These peculiar traits were, for the most part, an abnormal
development of one or other of our national characteristics, dogged
determination and perseverance, or the dry humour which, in spite of
the ignorant sneer that it takes a surgical operation to get a joke
into a Scotchman’s head, is a distinctive feature of the Scottish
character. The author of the above foolish saying could not have
mixed in the society of the rural parts of Scotland, without
discovering that the faculty of humour, and even the higher form of
wit, was common enough.
One of this class, Willie M—, who went on the spree
periodically for a week or a fortnight, called at a friend’s house
on his way home one day, in a very fuddled condition, and there
unexpectedly met an old schoolfellow, a sea captain, who had been
round the world, and whom he had not seen for many years. The
captain was the first to recognise him, and, jumping up, greeted his
old friend in hearty sailor fashion. “How- are you, Willie? It’s a
long time since I saw you. How are you?” Willie, somewhat dazed, did
not answer for a moment, but, pulling himself together, at length
replied— “Captain, homeward bound with a general cargo.”
On another occasion Willie, in the same condition,
called on his friend. He had just learnt of the sudden death of a
near relation. His friend spoke to him in a sympathetic tone, when
Willie remarked—“There’s a good deal of the Apostle Paul about me
this morning. I have sorrow upon sorrow.”
A good story is told of another character, a mason,
who was working in the country. He and another of the squad set out
one morning to their work. There were two public-houses on the way.
They called at the first house for a dram, which dram was but the
prelude to a “big drink.” They got no further that day. Next morning
they set out again, and passed the first house with a firm
determination not to repeat the folly of yesterday. By the time they
had reached the next “public,” however, the resolution of our friend
failed. He again proposed a dram, for he was very dry. “Na, na,”
answered his friend; “I’m no gaun in the day.” Persuasion was
useless, and so he said—“Weel, weel, gang slow, and I’ll be wi’ ye
in a meenit.” His companion did so, looking over his shoulder now
and again to see if he was coming, till a turn of the road hid the
house from sight, and he then marched on. Work began, and went on
for hours, when about noon a strange and accountable sound of music
was heard, faint at first, but ever sounding louder and nearer ;
when at length there was presented a scene which sent the whole
squad into fits of laughter. Our friend had, after refreshing
himself very freely, resumed his journey to his work, and
foregathered on the way with an Italian organ grinder. How he made
himself understood is not known, but he had hired the musician to
play him to his work. On they came, the organ man in front, grinding
his music with might and main, while he strutted behind with a proud
air, and making what he considered an impressive entry, shouted to
the terrified Italian—“Play up, ye furrin’ deevil.”
An example of a different kind was that of Geordie L
.
French clay pipes had come into use, and one or two
had found their way to Sanquhar. They could not be purchased,
however, nearer than Glasgow. So great was Geordie’s ambition to
possess one of these grand pipes that he actually set out on foot
all the way to Glasgow for the sole purpose of buying a French clay
pipe. Having secured this coveted object, he carried it carefully in
his hand all the way home. When he had reached the precincts of the
town he stopped, filled and lighted it, and then marched down the
middle of the street—a proud man. He stayed up a little close off
the main street, the opening of which was very narrow, and in
turning the corner rather sharp, the head of the pipe caught the
house, and in a moment Geordie’s heart, which had swelled with pride
over his new possession, sank within him as he saw it fall, shivered
to pieces at his feet.
These are only a few samples of hundreds of such
stories, which could be told of Sanquhar characters, but space
forbids. For intellectual gifts of a somewhat higher order, we
should mention two farmers of the neighbourhood—the late Mr
Williamson of Barr and Mr M'Call of Ulzieside—Auld Barr and
Ulzieside as they were familiarly called. Their witty sayings,
particularly those of the former, are often quoted. But were quick
in repartee, and no one cared to encounter them. Being next
neighbours and fast friends, they sharpened each other’s wits in
their daily intercourse. The truth is, one would have had to search
far and wide before coming across two such characters in any
countryside.
Speaking of farmers, this district contained
specimens of the hard, close-fisted class, who contrived to gather
together wonderful fortunes, but the truth is, money-making was
their life’s study. As an example of how it was done, let us adduce
the case of one who had been visiting overnight a neighbour some
miles distant. He was hospitably entertained, and driven to Sanquhar,
half-way home, by his friend. On alighting he, addressed him,
saying—“Weel, Mr K., ye hae been very kind; if ye’ll come in, I’ll
treat ye.” The gentleman consented, and when the bell had been rung
the old man said—“What’ll ye tak’?” “Oh,” answered the other;
“it’s early, I’ll just take a bottle of lemonade.” “Juist what I was
gaun to tak’ mysel’,” he added, “and I daursay ae bottle may dae us
baith.” Turning to the waiting maid, he gave his order—“Bring a
bottle of lemonade and twae tumblers, my woman.”
This same old farmer borrowed a cart from a neighbour
on the opposite side of the river. There was a toll-bar at the
bridge, and when he had done with the borrowed cart, he was
concerned how he would get it returned without incurring the
twopence of toll. At last he hit upon a device. He was a big strong
man, and getting between the trams, with the rigwoodie chain over
his shoulder, he dragged the cart across the bridge, and into the
side of the road near to the farm whence he had borrowed it, and
sent up word to its owner where he would find it. This man died
worth several thousand pounds.
Resuming our narrative we come down to 1848, when the
country suffered a dreadful visitation of cholera. It gradually
spread northwards, and at length reached Dumfries, which, being in a
particularly insanitary state, stiffered to a fearful extent. Panic
seized the people in all quarters, and travellers by road were
viewed with the greatest suspicion, and contact with them shunned.
Measures of precaution against the introduction of the fell disease
were taken. They were of the simplest kind, the laws of sanitary
science being then practically unknown. The Town Council gave orders
for the cleaning out of middens, and a general white-washing took
place. Every passenger who was known, or suspected, to have been in
the ill-fated county town was arrested on his arrival, and
fumigated. For this purpose a square box, high enough to reach to
the neck, was made. Into this he was thrust, and a cloth covering
the top of the box was tied tightly round his neck. When that had
been done, a mixture of sulphur and quicklime was put into an iron
cup, and was then lighted, and laid in the bottom of the box. An
amusing scene occurred with an Irish tramp, who was subjected to
this process. Failing to understand the object of the authorities he
offered a stout resistance, and it was with the greatest difficulty
that he was got into the box. When the flaming sulphur was thrust in
at his feet, his features were transfixed with horror. Evidently he
thought he was to be burnt alive. On being liberated he bolted out,
and when he reached the street set up a wild hurroo, and shouted—“By
my sowl, and it never fired on me.” The town happily escaped the
cholera, but for weeks the inhabitants lived in a state of the
greatest apprehension.
Chambers, in his “Domestic Annals,” mentions a
phenomenon that occurred in the end of the year 1838, when the Nith
and other rivers in the south of Scotland were so depleted of water
that all the mills were stopped. This strange occurrence was
attributed to various causes; some thought it was due to an
earthquake, others to a wind driving back the waters. The matter was
inquired into hy a distinguished scientist, who gave the opinion
that it was due to the severe frost, which had completely frozen up
the upper streams, while the lower reaches had - been emptied into
the sea. This was no doubt the true reason, for it was during the
winter of 1838-39 that the longest and greatest frost of the century
was experienced. The frost lasted for twelve or thirteen weeks, the
Nith being crossable anywhere for miles.
We do not require to refer here to the Chartist
agitation, having touched on that subject in the notes on the
Sanquhar weavers.
In the year 1845 there is the first mention of a
coming event which was destined to have a great effect upon the
trade and social condition of the whole district—the making of the
railway through Nithsdale. The construction of it was let in
sections to contractors, and the navvies employed were almost wholly
Irish, the bulk being Roman Catholics. Between them and the natives
there was no good feeling from the outset. The people of Sanquhar,
whose minds were deeply imbued with the spirit of exclusiveness,
inbred by the privileges which, as burghers, they had enjoyed for
generations, always looked askance at strangers, whom they termed,
and even yet are inclined to stigmatise, as “incomers.” This feeling
of hostility towards the navvies was intensified by the fact that
they were of an alien faith. In the rural parts of the south of
Scotland the bulk of the population was Protestant; in many
parishes, and Sanquhar was one, not a single Roman Catholic was to
be found. The attitude and conduct of the navvies, so far from
conciliating, only served to exasperate the people of the town. They
were ignorant, savage, and treacherous. Attacks were continually
being made, under cloud of night, on individual inhabitants by bands
of two or three or more navvies, for they always liked to have the
advantage of numbers. These attacks were made without the slightest
warning, and upon people with whom they had no cause of quarrel.
Springing out from the shadow of a corner, they would belabour and
kick their victim unmercifully, and leave him bruised and bleeding
on the ground. Sometimes they were watched and interrupted, but,
whenever they became anything like equally matched in numbers, they
immediately fled. Many of the weavers were stout young fellows, and
some of them carried, down the inside of their trouser-leg or
elsewhere about them, a good stout stick, which was quickly produced
if occasion demanded. It was plain that the town’s-people and the
navvies would have it out some day, and that day came when the
steeplechases were held on the Muir. These steeplechases were
organised by the contractors, who sought thereby to gratify the
humour of their workmen and their own humour as well. Work on the
railway was completely suspended for the day, aud an immense
concourse of spectators congregated on the ground to witness what
was an entire novelty in this quarter. Drink was going plentifully,
and the navvies assumed a very aggressive attitude. The inevitable
collision occurred in the evening between a body of them and a band
of weavers at the Council House. The latter felt that the time had
come for settling who should be masters, and had made due
preparations accordingly. They were all armed with cudgels, and when
the moment of action arrived the navvies found themselves confronted
by a close phalanx of determined opponents, who laid about them with
a will. Beaten at their own game the navvies, finding a convenient
magazine of broken road metal, took to stone-throwing. A section of
the weavers, by a dexterous flank march, cut off their line of
retreat. The navvies took alarm, broke and fled along the road
towards Kirkconnel, along which they were chased out of the parish.
The only serious injury sustained, however, was by a navvy who had
his leg fractured, but many broken heads and bruises kept the
Irishmen in mind of the lesson they had been taught. From that time
they gave no further trouble.
In the year 1839, Crawick Mill Carpet Company
introduced gas for lighting their works and the village, and the
Town Council resolved to consult the engineer as to its introduction
into the town. The result was that a Company was formed with this
object. The Council subscribed for £200, which was subsequently
increased by £15 when the main pipe was extended to the railway
station, at the opening of the railway. The Gas Company was not a
prosperous concern for many years, owing to the works being
ill-constructed at first. The street pipes were laid too shallow,
and an enormous loss was caused thereby. No dividend having been
declared for several years, the Company being in debt to a
considerable amount, fresh capital was raised; the works were
improved, and closer attention to the Company’s business was given
by a new body of directors. The profits have been largely devoted to
still further improvements, including a double main on the streets;
dividends have been declared on the preference and sometimes on the
ordinary stock, and the price of gas was recently reduced from 8s 4d
to 6s 8d per thousand feet.
A reading-room was established in the year 1848 in
one of the rooms of the Town Hall, and was the scene of many an
animated debate on political and social subjects. It was well
supplied with newspapers, and was for many years a flourishing
institution, but the abolition of the paper duty, and the consequent
reduction in the price of newspapers to a penny, together with the
great extension of cheap literature, took away its attractions, most
of the readers preferring to have their papers in their own homes.
A great improvement on the street was effected in
1852 by the erection of a terrace on the north side at Corseknowe.
The ground rises above the level of the street, which, as we have
elsewhere said, originally ran over the knowe, but was subsequently
cut through it. A retaining wall, surmounted by an iron railing, was
put up, and it received the name of Dalkeith Terrace, in honour of
the Earl of Dalkeith, whose coming of age in the same year the
townspeople had just celebrated in a very hearty manner. The cost of
the terrace was about £60.
The reader will have observed frequent reference to
“The Pump Well.” The water supply of the town was then derived from
a number of wells distributed over the town, but this well, which
was situated at the Market Cross, was in an emphatic sense the pump
well. It was beautifully built with ashlar, and was covered by a
stone erection. The spout by which the water was discharged faced
down the street; the handle of the pump was a long bar of iron with
a ball at the end. It was not driven vertically, but horizontally,
like the pendulum of a clock. Few there were who could swing this
ponderous handle except with both their hands, and to do so with but
one hand was regarded as a proof of great strength of arm. A stone
seat was set along the side of the pump facing the street. The
widening of the street in recent times having left the pump near the
middle of the roadway, an obstruction to the street traffic, it was
shifted back to the side of the pavement in the year 1836, and it
was ultimately taken down and removed altogether about the year
1881.
The source of the present water supply, introduced in
the year 1868, is Lochburn. A limited liability company was
incorporated 21st April, 1868, with a capital, including preference
shares, of about £2000. A reservoir was constructed at the gathering
ground on Clenries farm, at a distance of three miles, and a
distributing tank and filters on an elevation in the neighbourhood
of the town. The quality of the water is excellent, being very soft,
and therefore suitable for general household as well as dietetic
purposes.
The Volunteer movement in 1859 was adopted with great
enthusiasm in Sanquhar and the country parts surrounding. A strong
company was promptly formed, and commenced drilling in the “big
shop” at Crawick Mill—an empty weaving shop formerly belonging to
the Carpet Company It was composed of all classes—farmers, artisans,
and labourers. They were tall, broad-shouldered men, but in truth
this description applied equally to the other companies in the
County. Public attention was drawn in the Metropolis to their
splendid physique, as they marched down Princes’ Street on their way
to the Royal Review in 1860, and we remember hearing an inspecting
officer declare that he had never seen the same number of men cover
so much ground as the Dumfriesshire Volunteers did when standing in
rank. The company still continues strong and efficient.
The Dumfries District of Burghs was represented in
Parliament, from 1847 to 1868, by Mr William Ewart, a Liverpool
merchant, who was much respected, both by his constituency and in
the House. Amid the ups aud downs of political feeling in the other
burghs of the group, Sanquhar always remained steadfast to Mr Ewart
and Liberalism, and on one occasion, when he was opposed by the late
Mr Hannay, the most brilliant of all those who broke a lance with
him during his Parliamentary career, the return from Sanquhar shewed
that not a single vote had been cast for his opponent. Mr Ewart, in
1863, presented a handsome barometer to the inhabitants of Sanquhar,
which is inserted in the wall of what was then the residence of
Provost Williamson. His portrait, gifted to the town after his death
by his sister, Miss Ewart, hangs in the Council Chamber.
In 1852 the Town Council resolved “to promote the
celebration in a becoming manner of the attainment of his majority
by the Earl of Dalkeith, as a mark of respect and attachment to the
noble house of Buccleuch and Queensberry.” They resolved to
illuminate the Town Hall, to ring the Town’s bell, and voted a sum
of ten guineas for fireworks The townspeople entered heartily into
the demonstration, which was of a most successful character.
A still greater event, and one which evoked a
wonderful display of loyal feeling, was the visit of the Prince of
Wales to the town in 1871. His Royal Highness and the Princess of
Wales were, in the month of October, on a visit to the Duke of
Buccleuch at Drumlanrig Castle, and shooting parties were arranged
on His Grace’s moors in the upper part of his estate. Having
occasion to pass through Sanquhar, the Duke was just a trifle
anxious as to the reception which the Prince might receive. The
Sanquhar people were regarded by all Tories as dangerous Radicals,
not given to ceremony in the expression of their political opinions.
They availed themselves, however, of this visit of the heir-apparent
to the throne to shew to all men that their Radicalism was quite
consonant with loyalty. Indications that this was so had indeed been
given by them on previous occasions, as in 1841, on the birth of the
Prince of Wales, in 1863 on his marriage, and again, in the early
part of this same year 1871, on the marriage of the Princess Louise
to the Marquis of Lorne, when they were not behind in testifying
their attachment to the reigning house and the institutions of the
country, but all these previous demonstrations were eclipsed on this
occasion of the royal visit. The Town Council presented a loyal and
dutiful address, to which the Prince graciously replied. Three
floral arches were erected across the main street, and the plain
architectural features of the houses were concealed by a profusion
of flags, evergreens, and other decorations. On the party passing
through in the morning, they were greeted along the whole length of
the street by the population, who turned out en masse. The carriage
containing the Prince and his ducal host proceeded at a walking
pace, and His Royal Highness displayed an affable manner which
fairly captivated the Sanquhar people. On the return journey in the
evening still greater crowds, gathered from far and near, awaited
his arrival, and gave him a right royal welcome. There was a display
of fire-works, the Council House was illuminated, as were also the
houses down to the meanest cottage, where the modest candle in the
window testified at once to the poverty and its loyalty of inmates.
The notice of the royal visit that was received had been short, and
preparations were hurriedly made, but as the Prince passed again on
the following day the demonstration was repeated with even greater
enthusiasm. All were agreed that the like of it had never before
been seen in Sanquhar, and his Royal Highness, in his reply to the
address of the Town Council, expressed his grateful sense of “ the
hearty reception he had met with from all classes of the community
when he had passed through Sanquhar.” The people, in addition to the
loyal feeling by which they were inspired, were no doubt actuated
also by a regard to the fact that the Prince was the guest of the
Duke of Buccleuch, and sought in honouring the guest to likewise
honour the host. A further proof of their kindly feeling to the
house of Buccleuch was given in 1882, on the coming of age of Lord
Eskdaill, the eldest grandson of the Duke, when a demonstration of a
very hearty kind was made ; while an address of sympathy and
condolence was sent by the Town Council to the Duke and Duchess on
the occasion of his sudden and pathetic death in 1886. Lord Eskdaill
was a young nobleman of great promise, and had won golden opinions
from all on the vast family estates with whom he had come into
contact. The accident which caused his death occurred far from human
dwelling or human aid, save such as his Highland ghillie could
render him. The pathetic story of his last hours, as he lay on the
heather, bleeding slowly to death, and the gentleness of soul which
he displayed as, with almost his last breath, he whispered his
thanks to the servant for the water which he brought him, sent a
thrill through the whole country, and evoked a universal feeling of
sympathy with his parents in the loss, under such trying
circumstances, of one who was the light of their home, and with whom
were bound up so many fond anticipations.
Last, but not least, of these periodic celebrations
was that of the Jubilee of Her Majesty the Queen in 1887. The
occasion was observed throughout the whole country on a stupendous
scale, but we believe that in no town of its size, certainly not in
this part of the kingdom, were more elaborate preparations made. The
great mass of the population, joined by large crowds from Kirkconnel
and Wanlockhead, marched in procession, to Kemp’s Castle, where a
platform had been erected, whence, after the proceedings had been
opened by prayer, appropriate addresses were delivered to the vast
throng. The Volunteers fired a feu-de-joie, and ringing cheers were
given for Her Majesty. Sports were provided for the young people,
and refreshments for all. A free concert was given in the evening in
the Public Hall, and a half crown was presented to every poor person
in the two parishes. A bonfire on Matthew’s Folly at a later hour,
where an immense crowd assembled, gave a fitting termination to the
day’s proceedings, into which every one had thrown himself heart and
soul, and which passed off successfully in every way.
This chapter may he brought to a close with a rapid
survey of the changes effected in country districts by the railway.
The conditions of life and the daily habits and customs of the
people in country districts throughout Scotland underwent no great
change during the generation that preceded the introduction of
railways, about the middle of the present century. Each small
district was completely inbound. What lay within the limits of the
horizon was all the world to them, so far as their daily life was
concerned, and a certain air of mystery or romance surrounded all
outside this narrow circle. The natives were, as a whole, content to
walk in the footsteps of their fathers, following the same
occupations, generation after generation, the result being that,
according to a well understood law of nature, particular families
acquired an hereditary skill in particular branches of work. At the
same time, there were bold and adventurous spirits, whose ambition
scorned the quiet, uneventful 'life of their native vales, and
longed to explore the great world beyond. Oft-times they, like the
patriarch, “went out, not knowing whither they went and, though
without definite aim or purpose, or the inspiration of the promise
of a great future, they were guided, as truly as he was, by the hand
of Providence. At all events, the prosperity which marked their
after-career was in many instances truly wonderful, but was only the
direct and natural fruit of the indomitable qualities of the hardy
race from which they were sprung. They proved themselves the
pioneers of civilisation in many a remote corner of the globe,
laying the foundations of thriving colonies, which have since become
a source of pride to the British Empire, and have extended the
influence of the Anglo-Saxon race upon the destinies of the whole
human family; and how often has it happened that in the course of
time his native town has found itself unexpectedly and richly
endowed by the munificence of a son, the memory of whose way-going
had almost faded from the recollection of his boyish associates?
But, not to speak of emigration beyond seas, a journey in that age
from one end of the island to the other was an enterprise fraught
with considerable risk, and only to be undertaken on important
occasions, and after mature deliberation. A journey to London was
not unattended with danger to life or limb. Road accidents were not
uncommon, and over and above these had to be reckoned the chances of
falling a prey to the highwayman, the tales of whose daring
escapades, so often heard at his own fireside, kept the traveller’s
mind in a state of uneasiness and apprehension. So serious, indeed,
were the risks, that the prudent family man, who was about to
undertake such a journey, regarded it as his first duty to make his
will. When the day of his departure arrived, his family circle was
thrown into a state of agitation and concern, and his
fellow-townsmen crowded around to see him off and wish him
God-speed. On his safe return, he was congratulated on his good
fortune, and thenceforward, in the minds of his friends and
neighbours, he was regarded as a person of no small importance. Long
journeys by coach were confined to men of substance; the movements
of the common people had to be made on foot, the toilsomeness of the
way being sometimes relieved by a friendly “lift’ on the top of a
carrier’s cart. The occasions on which any great number of the
people travelled together were few. The occurrence of a curling
match with a neighbouring parish was so great and so unusual an
event that the preparations for an earl}' start threw the curlers,
and, indeed, the whole population, into a wonderful state of
excitement, which was once tersely described by a wag, who said that
in Crawick Mill “ they were rinnin’ wi’ teapots and razors the hale
nicht.” Attending a neighbouring sacrament, or a fair, if there was
a market town within easy reach, led to an exodus for the day of a
large portion of the population, but with these rare exceptions
their lives consisted of a plain, monotonous round of common duties.
And yet, it must not be supposed theirs was an
unhappy lot. It may truly be said, speaking of this district in
particular, that the condition of the population, though a humble,
was a reasonably happy and contented one. In both town and country,
employment was, on the whole, steady and plentiful. In the town,
weaving was the principal industry, and, in the country around, the
population was rooted to the soil, families of farmers and cottars
remaining in the same place for generations. Though the wages of
agricultural labourers were small, they were supplemented in various
ways. The notion that the interestsof capital and labour were
antagonistic was never once entertained ; they lived together,
masters and servants, with no great difference in their condition
outwardly, and on terms of cordial friendship. The children of the
ploughmen were constantly running about the farm-house and falling
heir to the fragments of a meal, the odds and ends that fell to them
from the kitchen table coming in no way amiss to sturdy boys with
good healthy appetites. It was a common arrangement that, in
addition to the wage in money, which was small, the cottar received
a plentiful supply, free, of skim milk from the dairy, and was
allowed to plant a small patch of potatoes. The cast-off clothes
from the farm household, or sometimes even a cut off the web when it
came from the mill, fell to the ploughman and his family. His wife
helped with the milking, and every one who could make a strap, bind
a sheaf, or assist in any way, turned out to the “hairst-rig.” The
system of payment “in kind” obtained also in the engagement of
shepherds, many of whom had what was called a “pack”—a certain
number of sheep which pastured with the general flock, the produce
of which belonged to the shepherd as part of his remuneration. In
these arrangements one can detect the germ of the idea of “three
acres and a cow,” and of the principle of common-sharing of profits
between employers and employed, which are being advocated in these
days by certain reformers. The population in the purely rural part
was in those days very considerable, much greater than it has since
become. There was quite a number of small farms, each with its own
farm-house, and servant’s cothouse as well, while by the road-side
were groups here and there of cottages—two, four, or half-a-dozen
together— where were bred the stalwart families, whose ranks formed
the unfailing supply of agricultural labour. The ruins of some still
remain, but of the bulk of them every trace has been obliterated.
This process of depopulation was the direct result of the policy,
which began about fifty years ago, of constituting one large farm
out of two or three small contiguous farms, and which has been
ultimately carried to such an extent that, aggravated by other
influences elsewhere noted, the supply of the agricultural labour,
which, notwithstanding the extensive use of machinery, is still
necessary, can hardly be maintained, even though the wages have been
meanwhile doubled and even trebled.
The burghers of the old town had the placid stream of
their daily life rippled with their periodical celebrations of—
Riding the marches, Town Council and trades elections, and the
King’s birthday; while their burghal privileges gave, to them a
direct interest in politics, both imperial and local. Though down to
the Reform period their municipal rulers were, being self-elected,
beyond popular control, the constituents whom they professed to
represent claimed, and exercised freely, the right to criticise
their conduct. Then the great fairs—at Candlemas, July, and
November, besides other minor fixtures of the same kind—created no
little stir. The first is likewise called “The Herds’ Fair,” that
being the day on which shepherds are engaged for the year; but the
changes of service were then much less frequent or numerous than
they have in later times become, since the old-established relation
of common interest between master and servant has been unfortunately
displaced by a feeling, if not of hostility and mutual suspicion, at
least lacking the element of friendship. In former times it was
quite common for shepherds to retain during a long life the “places”
in which they had mayhap succeeded their fathers, or where they had
first been engaged as “lad-herds.” Their names were just as
naturally associated in the public mind with the “herding,” which
was their care, as was that of the owner of the flock. They came to
know the ground and the stock, and rare was the occasion when a
flockmaster parted with a shepherd to hand over the charge of his
“hirsel ” to a stranger.
On the Herd-Fair day the street was filled with a
crowd of stalwart men aud lads, all clad in home-made stuff, the
black-and-white plaid universally worn by them being either folded
carefully and thrown over the shoulder, or wound round the body so
as to cover it completely down to the knees, just as it suited the
taste of the wearer, or as the state of the weather demanded. Each
carried the most stylish stick of the large stock which he
possessed, the making and polishing of which beguiled the long
winter evenings, and had his inseparable companion, the faithful
collie, at his heels. It is to be regretted that the place of the
black-and-white plaid is of late years being largely taken by a sort
of cheap water-proof coat. Each class may be expected to know best
what suits the necessities of their daily employment, but certainly
there could be no more picturesque and appropriate “hap” for a
shepherd than the time-honoured plaid.
The contrast has been noted between the demeanour of
the mixed crowds which throng round the doors of the public-houses
on an ordinary fair night with that of the shepherds on their fair
night. The opportunities of dissipation enjoyed by the former are
more frequent, and the effect of free indulgence in the “ barley-bree
” is too often to make them quarrelsome and foul-tongued, but, in
the case of the shepherds, the manifestations are of a more harmless
and inoffensive character. These hill-men, under the same
conditions, would seem to experience a great exhilaration of
spirits, and the unwonted feeling finds au outlet in shouting and
singing. The collies, to keep them company, take to barking, the
result being many a “collie-shangie,” in which much mutually-defiant
wrath obtains utterance, and a good deal of worrying takes place,
but little damage is done.
The July Fair—the great lamb and wool market of the
year in the South of Scotland—brought together, and does still, a
large concourse of people, all interested to learn the prevailing
prices.
At the fair in November, the principal articles
traded in were vegetables—onions and carrots for winter use—and
hence this was familiarly called “The Onion Fair.” The finest
specimens of this succulent vegetable were strung round a band of
straw about twelve or fifteen inches long, and were sold at so much
per string, while the smaller and poorer sorts were sold by weight.
At all these fairs the sides of the main street, from
the pump-well westward, were lined with booths ; on the north side
these were filled with the small-wares which were required in
country houses; the candy-barrow and fruit stalls were the centre of
attraction for all youngsters who had had their fairin’,” and were
anxious to make it go as far as possible; while above the din could
be heard the cheery and inviting call of the proprietor of the
shooting-stand—“Fire away, boys! Nuts for your money, and sport for
nothing.” Crowded round him under the awning were the boys, large
.and small, of sporting proclivities. On the table was heaped up a
huge pile of nuts, and at the back was erected a board painted with
circles and other devices in strong colours, upon which was nailed a
group of brass rings of various sizes; it was the ambition of the
young sharpshooter to plant within one of these rings the little
dart discharged from one or other of the various matchlocks lying
over the heap of nuts. The range was only about a couple of feet,
and strong percussion caps were the only propelling force used. The
smaller the ring into which the dart was shot the larger was the
number of nuts allowed, but however bad the shot might prove, a few
were given in consolation. The local cooper exhibited a varied
collection of his manufactures, from the churn down to the smallest
articles used in the dairy and the country kitchen. The south side
of the street was reserved for stands for the sale of boots, shoes,
and slippers. The whole scene was one of the greatest animation, and
afforded pleasurable excitement and genuine fun to both young and
old. In the olden time the day was brought to a fitting close by the
dancing of “ penny reels ” in the Council House.
The internal trade of the country was very limited in
extent, each district being practically self-sustaining. The habits
and tastes of the people were plain and simple, both in the matter
of food and dress. With regard to the former, it consisted almost
wholly of the products of their native soil, oatmeal and potatoes
being the principal articles of diet; while in regard to dress, it
likewise, both as to material and manufacture, was a native
production. Durability was the primary, appearance only a secondary,
consideration. The scarcity of money no doubt compelled this in most
cases, but even where the means of a family would have enabled them
to indulge in dress of a more showy and expensive kind, the product
of foreign looms, they preferred for the most part to yield to the
promptings of thrift. The ambition of the housewife of this period
lay in another direction than that of personal adornment—viz., in
the plenishing of her house. Her blanket-chest was her
treasure-chest. The greatest day of all the year to her was that on
which its contents received their annual airing, and she spread out
the long row of blankets on the hedge-rows in the sight of all her
neighbours with a decided feeling of pride. The number of pairs
which a daughter received as part of her marriage outfit was a
subject of anxious inquiry among her female friends, and was a
tolerable guide to estimating the “bienness” of her family. The
stock with which she started her married life, it was her constant
care to augment from time to time, and when a division of the goods
and gear took place after the mother’s death, there was nothing the
daughters more earnestly coveted, and over which they were more apt
to quarrel, than the possession of the blankets. The store in a
long-established household sometimes numbered no less than thirty,
forty, or fifty pairs. The worship of the goddess of fashion had not
yet been set up in country parts. Household comfort, rather than
personal display, was the great aim of the matrons of that age.
What little traffic there was between one part of the
country and another was easily enough overtaken by the carriers’
carts, which conveyed heterogeneous loads of merchandise, composed
largely of small parcels, which were kept from falling off by a
square wooden “heck,” tied on the top of the heavier goods. It was
within the heck and among the parcels that the weary traveller, who
was fortunate enough to get a lift from the good-natured carrier,
was seated.
Not only in respect of the necessaries of life was it
true that each locality provided for its own needs, but the same
principle applied in trades and manufactures. The records of the
burgh make reference, for example, to the following as having been
practised here : — Plough-wright, turner, wool-comber, tanner,
stocking-framer, dyster or dyer, bookbinder, barber, and wig-maker.
The trade of plough-wright, now practically obsolete, reminds one of
the age when agricultural implements were of rude and simple
construction, and were principally made of wood. A turning-lathe is
still to be seen in country joiners’ shops here and there, for, to
the general joiner or carpentry business, is often added that of
cabinetmaking—the making of the furniture which forms the plenishing
of a young married couple’s home. This consisted of the kitchen
requisites, including a corner cupboard, made of triangular form,
and set up overhead in a corner, containing the best china, for the
display of which the door was usually left open; and further, a
cupboard and dresser, as it is called, which stood on the floor;
across the upper part rails of wood were stretched, behind which
were arrayed the housewife’s best dinner service, all set up on
edge, with her best spoons placed between, and additional
attractiveness lent to the set-out by a row of bowls ornamented in
dazzling colours, and various smaller articles similarly emblazoned.
The branch of cabinet-making is, however, a mere adjunct to the
joiner’s main business, and no one now professes the regular trade
of turner. In the early part of the century there was a tan-pit at
the foot of the Calton Close (now named Baronscourt), and a
bark-mill stood on the south side of the close. The reference to the
trades of wool-comber and dyer (or dyster, as it was universally
styled), points to the woollen manufactures, which are treated of in
the chapter on “ Industries,” as is also the old-established
manufacture of stockings, gloves, and mittens. The town likewise
boasted a bookbinder. One Thomas Brown, who followed this calling,
would appear to have been a man of some literary pretensions, for he
published in the year 1807 a “Gazeteer of the United Kingdom,” in
two vols., a copy of which is in the possession of Mr Robert
Halliday, weaver, Castle Street, who purchased it at a roup many
years ago. The work is wonderfully complete, and does the utmost
credit to the industry of one who, so situated, must have laboured
under great difficulties in the compilation of such a mass of
detailed information.
The reader will be surprised to learn that there were
in the town two tobacco factories. James Otto, the father of Provost
Otto, was a tobacco manufacturer. He had his factory in the house, 2
Church Road, the front of which was pierced by nine windows, five,
in the upper and four in the ground flat. Of these, four have been
built up, and the whole converted into a dwelling-house. The other
factory was the second house south of the police station, on the
same side of the street. It is but natural to expect to find a
brewery in a town, where, together with the immediate neighbourhood,
there were no less than about thirty public-houses, in days before
the temperance movement had arisen, and when drinking customs were
almost universal. Such an establishment was kept in the building at
the corner of High Street' and Leven Road by the firm of Brown,
Nichol, and Yass, while another, kept by Jonathan Dawson, was
situated in the range of buildings in Simpson Hoad, commonly called
“The Tabernacle.” The daily wants of the population were further
provided for by bands of travelling tinkers, who moved up and down
the length and breadth of the land, making on the spot and selling
tin utensils of all kinds ; basket-makers, who found in the woods
and marshy flats the willow wands and sticks they required in their
trade, and with these wove baskets according to the size and style
prescribed by the housewife, while horn spoons were worked out of
the horns of slain cattle, laid past for that purpose, and placed in
the hands of persons skilled in this manufacture, who moved about
from farm-house to farm-house, remaining at each till the stock of
horn had been exhausted. Coming rouud periodically like the pedlar,
to whom reference is elsewhere made, these itinerant tradesmen
established relations of friendship with their customers. They
generally belonged to the wandering tribe of gipsies, but they were
quite civil and orderly in their behaviour. Their food and lodging
they received free, and beyond that their charges were not heavy.
In days when newspapers were scarce and dear, the
news of public events travelled slowly. A copy of the
London Times of the time of the Battle of Waterloo cost sixpence,
and consisted of four pages of a small sheet, which, when spread
out, was little bigger than an ordinary sized pocket handkerchief.
Reports of murders and minor crimes, such as now help to swell the
sale of our leading weeklies, were never heard of very far from the
locality in which these occurred, but when a tragedy of unusual
horror was committed, the intelligence was carried over the whole
country by a class of newsmen, whose method of publication was after
this manner :—The various scenes were depicted on little pieces of
canvas about two feet square in pictures of the rudest type. The
first was, usually, a portrait of the criminal, whose countenance
proved him a villain -of the deepest dye ; the next represented the
actual perpetration of the crime ; in some instances the victim, a
woman, was seen seized by the murderer by the hair of tho head,
while from the wound inflicted by a long, glittering knife, ran a
stream of blood, indicated by a big splash of red paint. Then
followed the trial scene, which represented the judge perched up on
a high bench, his head covered by an enormous wig, but his
countenance giving no evidence of intellectual vigour or judicial
serenity; in truth, the whole—judges, counsel, and criminal—often
bore a striking resemblance to each other, the artist’s power of
delineation being evidently limited to but one type of feature. Last
of all came the execution. Upon a stariug white ground a huge
scaffold, black and appalling, was painted, and at the end of the
noose attached to the cross-beam hung the murderer, his body
writhing and his countenance distorted in his last agony. These
gruesome pictures were mounted in the style of maps, and were
attached by cords to the top of a poll, about seven feet high. A
bundle of little pamphlets containing “The Last Speech and Dying
Confession of,” and a little stick completed the showman’s
equipment. Taking up his position in the most public part of the
street, he commenced to recite the particular incidents of the
tragedy. He affected a style of speech which was a harsh monotone,
and it was quickly recognised by the inhabitants, young and old. He
was surrounded by an eager crowd, whose imaginations it was plain to
see were excited by the harrowing details to which they listened. As
he proceeded, the exhibitor, with the stick, drew the attention of
his audience to the picture which illustrated the point which he had
reached in his narration, and the pictures, arranged in order, were
turned over the top of the staff till the complete tale had been
unfolded. Copies of the pamphlet were then offered for sale, and
were eagerly bought up, and carried off to be read at leisure. The
practice was a most demoralising one, and happily it has been swept
away by the newspaper press. The very last occasion on which it was
seen was on the execution of Mary Timney at Dumfries in the
year 1862.
In those days, when holiday-making was comparatively
unknown, and the opportunities of relaxation and amusement were
nothing to what they have since become, the visits from time to time
of travelling showmen were a source of great delight to the
simple-minded country people. There were among themselves men of
splendid build and enormous muscular power—children of nature, whose
finely proportioned, well-knit frames had been developed by regular
simple habits of life and daily exercise in manual labour. They
enjoyed in a super-eminent degree that choicest of earthly
blessings—mens sana in corpore sano—and this gift had not been
corrupted by illness or dissipation. When, therefore, the
professional athlete, after the performance of some great feat of
mere strength, strutted round the ring, as was his wont, and threw
down his challenge to all the world, which in this instance meant
only the wondering crowd that surrounded the arena, it was no
uncommon sight to see a stalwart son of the soil elbowing his way to
the front. Encouraged by the cheers of his friends, who regarded him
as their champion, he, by the mere forthputting of the enormous
power that lay slumbering in his gigantic frame, completely
vanquished the well-trained performer. Such an one was Hewetson of
Glenmanna, of whom many a story is told of deeds done which seem
almost incredible. His achievements were the talk of the whole
country side far and near, and, coming to the- ear of the Duke of
Buccleuch, led his grace to send for Glenmanna, who was one of his
own tenants, in order that he might satisfy himself of their truth.
The result was that the Duke carried him off to London to exhibit
his powers, and it is related that the feats performed by him in the
metropolis in presence of the Duke’s guests filled them with
amazement. Notices of these are to be found in theDumfries
Magazine and other publications of the period, and his monster
putting-stone is enumerated in the appendix, in the list of articles
of antiquarian interest still to be seen in the parish. This stone
weighs 150 lbs.
It was, therefore, not so much by performances of
this kind, but rather by those in which agility and dexterity were
displayed, that the minds of the common people were most readily
impressed. Acrobatic feats and sleight of hand most puzzled their
wits and excited their interest, while the height of the showman’s
profession was, in their eyes, occupied by the owner of a large
circus or a wild-beast menagerie. The visits of these latter were of
rarer occurrence, but, when they did occur, they created a profound
sensation. The placarding of the streets with the large and highly-coloured
posters raised a flutter of expectation in the breasts of old and
young alike. The day of arrival was a red-letter day. Little work
was done, vast crowds gathered from the whole region around, and the
entire population who could move lined the streets to witness the
imposing procession of gilded chariots and gaily-caparisoned steeds.
The ground on which the “shows” congregated was the school
playground, and on such great occasions the old schoolmaster, in
letting the ground, made it a condition that his school children
should be admitted to a special afternoon performance on terms which
were within the reach of the poorest. The children assembled in the
school, and marched across to the show with their master at their
head.
Among all the showmen, however, who visited Sanquhar,
there was one who was their special favourite, and that was “Old Ord,”
as he was familiarly, nay affectionately, called by the Sanquhar
people. Mr Ord belonged to the town of Biggar, and was altogether an
exceptional man of his class. He was a thoroughly respectable man,
and most respectably connected, his father, it is said, having been
the parish minister of Ettrick, and the conduct of his business was
most regular and orderly. Drinking and swearing were alike
prohibited ; the reader will therefore understand that Ord was a
showman of a type very rare in those, and still rarer in these
times. He was a tall, spare man; and in his later years, when we
knew him, he bore a singular resemblance in both face and figure to
Professor Blackie of Edinburgh. Whenever he remained over Sabbath,
he went to church ; his contribution to the door collection, then
devoted to the relief of the poor, was a sovereign, a big coin to be
seen in a church plate in those times; and in his prosperous days,
when he travelled in his private carriage, accompanied by his
physician (for this was his practice), lie spent much of his time
reading the Bible.
But Ord, like most men of his class, experienced the
rough buffetings of fortune. When he came first to Sanquhar, about
seventy years ago, he was in a very small way, his entire stud
consisting of—a donkey. He lingered about the place for some time,
sufficiently long to enable the people to ascertain the true worth
of the man. A feeling of sympathy for him sprang up, and a public
subscription was opened to give him a fair start in life. The sum
raised sufficed for the purchase of a good horse, which he trained
to the ring. This proved the turning-point in his career, and the
kindness of heart shewn to him by the Sanquhar people in the days of
his adversity he never forgot. A strong feeling of mutual attachment
and regard was engendered, and the many visits he paid to the town
were not like the flying visits to other places of a similar size ;
he was loth to leave the place and the people where and by whom he
had been enabled first to place his foot on the ladder of fame and
fortune. The townspeople had a sort of feeling that lie belonged to
them, and they followed his career with keen interest and sympathy.
Mr Ord’s son was for some time educated at Sanquhar school.
Though reasonably prosperous, he never owned a big
stud ; he had no desire apparently to possess a huge establishment
similar to those which move about iu the season from town to town,
whose employees are compelled to lead a strange, rough life. They
may be said to live on the road. Arriving at a town, generally
during the forenoon, the procession takes place two or three hours
thereafter, a matinee performance fills up the greater portion of
the afternoon, leaving them but little time to rest and prepare for
the principal performance in the evening, which terminates at a late
hour. No sooner has the place been cleared of the audience than a
gang of camp-followers proceed to strike tent; all is bustle and
confusion; and, shouting, swearing, and jostling each other in their
mad haste, they make a perfect bedlam, and the flare of the naphtha
torches gives the scene a wild weird look. In an incredibly short
space of time the whole is taken down, and packed on baggage waggons.
A brief—very brief—interval for rest is allowed, when the word of
command is passed round ; the scene of hurry, confusion, and
shouting is enacted over again. Before morning breaks the whole has
vanished like a dream, leaving the play-green silent and desolate,
the grass trodden and crushed with innumerable feet, and the surface
cut and disfigured with the wheels of the ponderous waggons, while
all around are strewn heaps of straw and steaming manure to pollute
the freshness of the morning air. Meanwhile the poor showmen and
showwomen are pushing along on their dark night march, and those who
only a few hours before had been flying round the ring, glorious in
their spangled dresses, and flushed with the plaudits of a vast
crowd of admiring spectators, may now be seen, pale and exhausted,
vainly trying to snatch an hour’s sleep, while their wearied limbs
can ill bear the jolting of the waggons on their forced march over
the rough country roads. Such is the life of the showman, and a
rough life it is. The only good sound sleep he gets is at the end of
the week, for the stage of the journey between Saturday and Monday
is taken on the Sabbath day—at least, this has latterly grown to be
the practice. The travelling of these establishments on Sabbath,
particularly during church hours, along quiet country roads and
through quiet country villages and parishes is one that, for the
day, exercises a demoralising effect on the juvenile population over
a wide extent of country, and causes, when it does occur, just
complaint by the respectable portion of the community. It cannot be
justified on the ground of necessity ; this is proved by the fact
that only in recent years has the practice commenced. The showman of
a past generation had some regard for the sacredness of the day, and
for the religious susceptibilities of his neighbours.
Old Ord, of whom, however, we would more particularly
speak, was, as will be gathered from what has already been said of
him, a man of a very different stamp to the modern showman. In many
respects, his ways were not the ways of his profession generally,
not merely in his character and social habits, but likewise in his
method of doing business. He took things more quietly and leisurely.
His was an open-air performance, and continued to be so even when he
became a very old man. He was the sole equestrian, but, in the
estimation of all his admirers, he was a host in himself. The
preparations made were of a very simple character. A broad circular
path was formed by “flaying” the sods off the surface of the ground,
and these being piled up all round the path formed a bank, which
served to keep the youngsters off the course. Around the arena thus
formed the grown people stood, while the juveniles squatted on the
ground in front. Notwithstanding the lack of many of the accessories
of his profession, and the absence of any professional training, Mr
Ord, having learnt all that he knew by hard work and perseverance,
the entertainment he gave was undeniably one of genuine merit. It
embraced a variety of the usual tricks of daring horsemanship, but
the piece de resistance—the item which took the fancy of old and
young alike was of a burlesque kind, and was naturally kept to the
end. It consisted of a representation of characters, half-a-dozen in
number, all done on horseback. The old man retired to a neighbouring
house to dress, and, after an interval, reappeared in the ring,
somewhat bulky in figure, for he bore about his body, one over the
other, and all fixed by a mysterious arrangement of strings, the
whole series of vestments required for the representation. Into the
centre of the ring had meanwhile been brought the various stage
properties necessary. Mounted on his best trained horse off he went,
twirling a shillelagh, dancing an Irish jig, and giving a
wonderfully realistic sketch of Irish character. Flinging away stick
and bonnet, he pulled a string and forthwith the entire suit fell
away, revealing him next as a sailor, whereupon clapping on his head
a straw hat, which had been tossed up to him by his attendant, he
placed his arms a-kimbo, and danced a hornpipe to the tune of “Jack
a Tar.” This done, another string was drawn, and he appeared as a
“soldier bold.” To this succeeded “the drucken fishwife.’’ With a
clean white “mutch,” the old man looked the part of the auld wife to
perfection, his face, it is said, closely resembling that of Bettie
Sloan, an old Sanquhar woman. He staggered about on the horse’s back
in the most reckless manner, but ever kept his feet. Still another
string was pulled, and off flew the skirt, when, last of all, he
appeared in all the glory of the tartan-kilt—a warlike Highland
chieftain. There were handed up to him a bonnet and plume, a shield
and a gleaming broadsword. Rousing his lagging steed, with a hoarse
roar, he flew round the ring, his face aglow with the passion of
war, cut and thrust, parried and fenced, as if engaged in a
desperate single-handed combat. On the duel went with increasing
determination and fury to the inspiring strains of “Rob Roy
Macgregor O,” played by his fiddler. Higher and higher.rose the
enthusiasm of the rustic crowd, till, both man and horse exhausted,
he sprang to the ground, amid a perfect whirlwind of applause. The
transformation could go no further, for he had now got to the bare
skin, and thus ended a display which can never be forgotten by those
who had the good fortune to witness it.
Another favourite representation of his was what he
dignified with the title of “The St. Petersburg Courier,” and
consisted of his riding six bare-backed horses abreast. With his
feet planted on the outside pair (and this he was only enabled to do
by the length of his legs, which were disproportionately long for
even a tall man like him), he made the circuit of the course a few
times, then liberated a pair of the horses, which immediately dashed
to the front ; by and bye another pair were freed, and so in pairs
they pursued each other till, gently reining in the pair which he
continued to ride, he allowed the first and then the second pair to
overtake him, each pair as they drew up resuming their places in the
team. This was repeated time after time, and the exhibition was
justly regarded as a good example both of training and horsemanship.
Variety was given to the entertainment by his
son-in-law, Delaney, also a tall man, who was equally great in his
department of acrobat. He turned somersaults with perfect ease, and
bent his body into shapes and forms wonderful to behold. Oue feat
which he performed will itself give an idea of his capabilities. He
mounted step by step a ladder 12 or 15 feet in height, set up on the
bare ground, and totally unsupported. Slowly and steadily he
ascended, till he had reached the top. The ladder was so constructed
that the one side, with the steps, could be detached by a jerk from
the other. Seizing then with his right hand the head of the one
side, he with his left sharply jerked away the other with the steps
attached, which then fell to the ground. Poising himself on the top
of the bare pole which he grasped, he swung his body gradually
upwards, and finished by standing on his head on its very top.
The entertainment being open and free, the reader may
ask—How was the establishment kept up 1 It was by a lottery, the
tickets for which were sold round the ring in the intervals of the
performance, and by the proceeds of a dramatic representation, which
took place in the Council House, the favourite piece acted being
“Gilderoy.”
Ord, having reached what for him was a state of high
prosperity—when his stud embraced half a scoro of valuable horses,
bethought himself that he would take a journey over the Border, and
seek “fresh fields and pastures new.” He travelled over a
considerable part of England, and eventually found his way into
Wales. Here a sad disaster befel him, for, by their having drunk
water impregnated with some poisonous substance, he lost his whole
stud except two. He retraced his steps to Scotland, sore stricken in
spirit. For some years longer he wandered up and down the country,
but in a sadly-reduced state, and finally disappeared from the road
about thirty years ago. His ashes rest in the churchyard of his
native town, Biggar. R.I.P.
The lame fiddler appeared in his old haunts at fitful
intervals long after his old master had passed away, and many a
copper was tossed to him for the sake of “Old Ord.”
There were but few amusements to relieve the dulness
and gloom of the long winter nights. During the day, whenever frost
occurred, the game of curling was followed with great spirit, and in
the evenings the games were played over again by the curlers either
at their own firesides or in the public-houses over a “dram.” The
opportunities of curling were more regular and extended in the early
years of the century than they have been in recent times. At least,
it is a prevailing impression among the older people that the
seasons were then more severe, and that, from whatever cause, the
winters now are more open and mild, as a rule, and this idea seems
to be borne out by the records of the Curling Society, which shew a
comparatively unbroken round of games winter after winter. Though
that was the case, there were, however, many weeks of every season
when there was no frost, and other forms of amusement had to be
sought after. Among these, draught playing was practised to a
considerable extent, and there were many excellent players in the
town. Here, and in the neighbouring parish of Kirkconnel, especially
in the latter, there was a group of players who could hold their own
with the best exponents of the game. Wylie, “The Herd Laddie,” and
the world’s champion at one period, came to Kirkconnel when quite a
lad. He had already attracted attention as a promising player, and,
finding a congenial society in the little village, he stayed about
the place for weeks, having nightly encounters with the more notable
players. In Jamie Steel he found his match, and the young lad, whose
fame was destined to spread wherever the game was known, confessed
that, during his sojourn in Kirkconnel, his play was much improved.
Amateur theatricals were likewise a source of
amusement. A company composed of young men of the town performed
winter after winter. It cannot be said they displayed any great
degree of histrionic talent, but their efforts proved quite
satisfactory to their audiences. At the same time, there were
individual cases where an intelligent and sympathetic rendering of
the part was really accomplished. In the “Gentle Shepherd,” for
example, which was naturally a special favourite with such an
audience, illustrating, as it did, incidents which were those of
their own daily lives, the uncouth manners and broad humour
of “Bauldie” were admirably interpreted by Charlie M'lver. In
successive representations in later times of this comedy the part
was assumed by others, but it was generally allowed that none could
compare to “Charlie.” The whole of the characters, male and female,
were sustained by men, none of the girls ever venturing upon the
stage ; any one who did would have been held lacking in modesty.
Female parts were assigned, therefore, to those who were of moderate
stature, and of that feminine cast of countenance which would
readily lend itself to a successful make-up, for this, even more
than the acting, was held of the highest importance; and thus “The
Button,” as he was called, a lively little man, played the part of
Mause. So completely was he disguised, and so perfectly did he look
the old crone, that on the last occasion on which he ever played,
one of the audience who sat near the stage, and who knew him well,
inquired of a neighbour—“Whae’s Mause?” and received for
answer—“Whae’s Mause? D’ye no ken ‘The Button?’ He’s as like what
his auld aunt Mary was as she had sputten him.” But “The Button”
revealed himself before all was done. Those who have seen the play
know that it is brought to a close by the singing of “Cora Rigs and
Barley Rigs.” The whole of the company had assembled on the stage in
a circle, and the chorus began. “The Button,” tired of the restraint
to which he had been subjected the whole evening, and entering
thoroughly into the spirit of the occasion, suddenly broke forth on
his own account. He had a fine tenor voice, and suiting the action
to the words, he sang this fine old song iu a style that fairly
captivated the audience.
The ideas of stage representation possessed by
amateur companies were certainly crude and original, and would have
sent an habitue of city theatres into fits of laughter, but in this
case ignorance was bliss, and these theatrical entertainments served
the admirable purpose of brightening by innocent amusement the minds
of simple country folks, whose lives at the best were dull and
monotonous enough. Incidents, the humour and ludicrousness of which
were, however, apparent to even such a simple audience, did
sometimes occur, as, for instance, in the representation of Sir
Walter Scott’s “ Rob Roy.” The person who sustained the role of
Andrew Fairservice had diligently learnt his part, learnt it in
truth too well. The little manual contained, at a certain point, the
stage direction {Enter Andrew Fairservice—drunk). He failed to
understand that he was simply to act as herein directed—that is,
swagger on to the stage as if in a drunken condition—but at the
proper moment he rushed on the stage, with neither staggering gait
nor befuddled countenance, but straight and steady, aud having
assumed what he thought a striking attitude, announced himself by
shouting—“Enter Andrew Fairservice, drunk.” This
ridiculous contretemps fairly brought down the house.
These representations were given in the Council
House, in the principal room, which, however, only measured about
400 square feet on the floor. The stage was necessarily very
limited, and in order to accommodate as many as possible, the
audience sat in one steep gallery, reaching from the verge of the
stage to the back, those on the top bench having to bend low under
the very ceiling. Night after night the place was packed to
suffocation, but in spite of the crush and the heat, the company
made, performers and spectators together, a right merry party.
“Douglas,” “The "Rose of Ettrick Yale,” “Rob Roy,”
“Pizarro,” and other dramatic pieces, were put on the stage from
time to time, but the “Gentle Shepherd” it was that most correctly
hit the popular taste.
The foregoing is a sketch, and only a sketch, of the
social condition and economics of the life of the inhabitants of
this and many other districts of Scotland during the period
immediately prior to the introduction of the railway system into the
country.
Let us now glance at the effects, immediate and
ultimate, of the introduction of railways on the life and manners of
the inhabitants of every region into which they have penetrated, for
this was an event which amounted to a revolution, the results of
which were deep and far-reaching. The first effect was a quickening
of trade, caused by the circulation of the money paid in wages in
connection with their construction. The bands of navvies
employed—English, Scotch, and Irish —were a reckless and improvident
class, and the whole of their earnings were spent in the
gratification of their appetites. The public-house came in for a
large share, but every branch of trade benefited to a certain
extent; and the tradesmen and dealers who were careful to make hay
while the sun shone, found themselves speedily in a position of ease
and comfort. This immediate quickening of trade was a result of
railway making which had been foreseen by the bulk of the country
people, and was a consideration which largely accounted for the
extraordinary enthusiasm with which they hailed the advent of this
new and expeditious mode of travelling, but they had failed to grasp
what its enduring results in the course of time would prove. No
sooner, however, was the work completed, and the floating
population, to which its construction gave rise, had gone, than the
people had leisure to realise that, so far from the railway having a
permanent influence towards the improvement and development of
trade, the tendency was to be altogether in the opposite direction,
so far as small country towns were concerned. In addition to the
trade of the resident population, Sanquhar had benefited to n
considerable extent from the passenger traffic by coach and
otherwise, and by the extensive cartage of coals from the pits in
the vicinity all over a wide district of country. The whole of the
passenger traffic was immediately, and the large proportion of the
goods traffic gradually, but surely, swept from the countiy roads,
the result being that, when the influence of this new power had had
time to have its full effect, the trade of such small towns was
found to be irretrievably ruined, and the peace and quiet of many a
country district, after the din and stir which awoke it up for a
brief period had ceased, reigned more profound than ever. Speaking
of trade, it may be here incidentally remarked that the streets of
country towns have likewise been rendered more silent still by a
change in the method of trading of late years, for which the keener
competition in all branches of enterprise is principally, and the
railway system in a minor degree, responsible. Part of the produce
of the farms, butter, eggs, &c., was carried to the town to market,
and this was a part of her work, which, though the burden was
sometimes very considerable, was cheerfully undertaken by the
dairymaid. It was a pleasant outing, and further, as it afforded
possible opportunities of flirtation with one or other of the young
gallants who might offer to carry her basket, or give her a good
long Scotch convoy on her way home, she, with a true woman’s
instinct, made careful preparations for going to the town. Her hair
was put up with special care, and her dress consisted of a loose
jacket, called a “juip,” made of printed cotton, the favourite
pattern being a very small pink tick or stripe, tied at the neck by
a bright ribbon, formed at the throat into a neat bow or rosette,
and her best and newest striped drugget petticoat, worn
comparatively short. A sun-bonnet, clean and well starched, shaded
her comely face, which had the hue of ruddy health and happy
content, while, as often as not, she tripped along barefoot, which
she was none ashamed to do, particularly if she was conscious of the
possession of a shapely foot and a well-turned ankle. No one
received a more hearty welcome by the shopkeeper than the dairymaid,
for not only did the sweet fragrant rolls of butter and the fresh
laid eggs, swathed in the folds of a towel spotlessly clean, which
she bore in the basket over her arm, find a ready sale among his
customers, but as their payment was generally, on the system of
barter, taken out in kind, consisting of household necessaries, the
transaction was one of double advantage to him.
This practice has almost entirely disappeared, having
given place to a system of travelling-shops. From each small town a
string of carts belonging to the various traders daily scour the
country in all directions, vieing with each other for the trade, not
only of the farm-houses, but likewise of every cottage within reach.
They bear loads of every conceivable thing, in the way of
provisions, required by the housewife. A considerable change had
already taken place in the diet of town families ; baker’s bread and
biscuits having been substituted for porridge and oatmeal cakes, and
the consumption of such things as jams and jellies, tinned meats and
other dainties had become very great; but up to the time, about a
dozen years ago, when these travelling shops began to go their
rounds, this change of diet had not been adopted among the families
of shepherds and agricultural labourers. With these fancy articles
brought to their doors, however, and pressed upon them by the
traders, they have been gradually led to abandon to a great extent
their former simple and wholesome diet. For this great and grievous
change the housewives must be held responsible, and a heavy
responsibility it is, for to it is in large measure due the
deterioration in physique which is observable in the classes
referred to. Mothers have, unfortunately, had more regard to their
own ease and convenience than to economy in household management and
to the health and physical well-being of their children.
In the matter of dress, likewise, the changes were
comparatively unimportant. The inhabitants of country districts had
no acquaintance with the vagaries of fashion, which nowhere, it is
true, either in town or country, were then so frequent or
extraordinary as they have since become, owing to the vastly
increased wealth now distributed over large classes of the
population. Their dress more nearly conformed to the necessities of
their calling, or of the climate, and, therefore, the prevailing
style continued very much in the form in which it had been handed
down by a previous generation. In rural parts, indeed, there was
then less distinction 'of classes ; the people were all, with very
few exceptions, more on a general level of material condition. There
were among them no social leaders, from whom new ideas in dress
might be borrowed; the only glimpse they could have of the
prevailing fashion was from a lady-passenger by the coach.
But the effects of the railway, in leading to an
assimilation in manners both as to food and dress of the people in
the town and country, are self-evident, through the more frequent
and regular intercourse which was secured between the inhabitants of
one part and another, so that those in rural districts have been led
to abandon their simple tastes, and to ape the more artificial, or
if you will, refined tastes of the dwellers in towns.
Another effect of the railway was to accelerate and
increase the depopulation of the country districts, to which
reference has been made. It is true that in Scotland, more than in
any other country, people of humble condition prized highly, and
made in many instances considerable sacrifices to secure to their
children, the benefits of education, brought within their reach by
the excellent system of parish schools. A large proportion of the
masters of those schools were university bred men (the profession of
schoolmaster was that upon which many “stickit ministers” had to
fall back), and so it came about that the bright and promising
scholar was able to gather a knowledge of the classics, sufficient
to enable him to step up into the university, and the ranks of the
students were to such a large extent swelled by raw country lads who
had to “cultivate philosophy on a little oatmeal,” for their
parents’ circumstances compelled them to practise in their
scholastic days the humble style of living in which they had been
brought up. They were sprung from a shrewd, hardheaded race, and the
habits of industry, of self-restraint, and self-reliance, to which
they had been accustomed, enabled them to hold their own in the
contest for scholastic honours, and afterwards in the arena of
public life, against those who had been nursed in the lap of luxury,
and enjoyed the advantage of influential social connections.
The numbers, however, who were thus drawn away to
other spheres of labour than their own native vales, or who
voluntarily migrated to the towns, or even went beyond seas in quest
of their fortunes, never represented at any time more than the
natural surplus of population, the regular excess of births over
deaths; in truth, in many country parishes, in spite of the drain
from these causes, there was rather a tendency to increase of the
population; but the introduction of railways marked the point from
which a movement of the inhabitants of country parishes to the large
centres of industry and commerce has gone on in ever-increasing
volume. The extent of this shifting of population is revealed in the
last census returns, those of 1891, in figures which have startled
the country, and caused grave concern in the minds of thoughtful
men. It is to be attributed to the double influence of, on the one
hand., the attractions of town life, consisting of a higher rate of
wages, and amusements and other social considerations, which
powerfully affect the imagination of people whose daily life and
habits are simple and homely; and on the other, of the expulsive
force exercised by the short-sighted policy of the land-owning
class, according to which many of our small country towns are, as it
were, bound with an iron ring of restriction. “Hitherto thou shalt
go, and no further,” is the fiat of the landlord—a fiat as
irresistible in the present state of the law as the divine decrees,
and has effectually quelled the enterprise of what might have been
thriving communities in many districts of the country. So long as
communication was difficult and expensive, the rural population
remained in a condition of passive submission to a state of matters
which there seemed no hope of bettering, and from which there
appeared no way of escape. The history of one generation was
repeated in the next, and so long as they knew no better, so long
did the people remain contented with their lot. But the railway
changed all that. The opportunity was now offered to those living in
out-of-the-way places to make an excursion into the great world,
which had been hitherto beyond their ken. The cheap trips which were
organised by the railway companies brought enormous numbers of
country folks to the large towns. No sooner did these crowds step on
the streets than they stood still, bewildered and amazed. The houses
appeared to the eyes of those who had been accustomed all their
lives to little low-roofed thatch cottages as if they towered up to
heaven. They gazed, open-mouthed, while their minds were awed with
the vast crowds of human beings as they passed along with keen,
eager faces and quick hurried steps, and with the roaring tide of
traffic. By aud bye, when they had become somewhat accustomed to
these marvellous sights and sounds, their attention was attracted by
the shop-windows, and there they speedily found fresh cause for
wonder, for there they saw such a display of wealth and splendour as
they had never dreamt of.
Many of them dared not venture out of sight of the
railway station, fearful lest they should lose themselves in what
appeared to them a labyrinth of streets and lanes, from which, once
they were entangled, there would be no hope of escape ; but though
their sight-seeing was thus of a very limited extent, they came away
profoundly impressed with the greatness and glory, the wealth and
magnificence of the city. The whole presented to their wondering
eyes and their simple minds a dazzling vision, which, on their
return, they vainly tried to describe to the folks at home, who in
turn longed to view the wondrous sight. One can easily imagine how
powerfully it affected the younger people, teaching them to sCorn
their slow dull life and simple ways, aud firing them with the
desire to see more of the world, of which they had had but a passing
glimpse, and to share in the excitement and pleasure of a life which
seemed to their unsophisticated minds one of supreme happiness.
Their spirit was stirred in them; no longer could they settle
contentedly down to their quiet humdrum existence; they must hie
away to where fame and fortune were to be reaped, and where pleasure
waited on them at every step.
In another way the railway operated towards the
depopulation of rural districts. Prior to this time there had
existed in country parts a large number of small factories and
manufacturing works and many home industries, principal among which
was hand-loom weaving, affording employment to thousands of
families, but the railway tended to draw together these industries
into large centres. Immense factories sprang up, in which the
power-loom was introduced; the coal and iron industries, now
increasing by gigantic strides, offered a rate of wages which,
notwithstanding the many drawbacks of the work, proved an
irresistible attraction to those whose earnings were barely
sufficient to keep life in, and the consequent development of the
general trade of the towns in all its branches caused the tide of
migration to rise higher and higher. With regard to those who still
inhabit the rural parishes, notable changes, as has been said, have
occurred within the last forty years in their habits, in the matter
of food and dress, and these changes are directly traceable, in a
large degree, to the influence of the improved communication brought
about by the system of railways. Brought into contact, as they never
were before, with the denizens of the large towns, the country
people have been led to discard their former simple habits, and to
adopt the more artificial habits of townsfolk. From every centre of
commerce there issues a perfect army of commercial men, who spread
themselves over the whole land, pressing the sale of articles of
daily use—preserved fruits, spices, tinned meats, and a countless
variety of articles of foreign produce, now brought into our ports
from every quarter of the globe. These again are carried to the very
doors of the people in the remotest corners of the country by
strings of vans and carts, and thus the habits of the people have
been entirely changed, some will say, corrupted.
What is true with respect to food is equally true in
regard to dress. The stray visit of the pedlar was the only
opportunity afforded of seeing or purchasing anything of a fancy
kind in the way of dress. In truth, his pack was made up rather of
the finer sorts of house plenishing, linen and the like, and even
the stock of the draper and clothier in small towns was almost
wholly composed of woollen materials designed for wear, and not for
display. The tailors or dressmakers in Sanquhar could be almost
counted on the fingers of the hand, the system of working in the
homes of their customers, subsequently referred to as practised by
tailors, was likewise followed by dressmakers, who were expected to
finish a lady’s dress in a day, so plain were the fashions of the
time; and, perhaps, to cut out a child’s frock, to be sewed by the
mother at her leisure, her wage for this being Is per day and her
food. Now, dressmakers can be counted by the dozen. They pay
periodical visits to the large towns “to see the fashions,” and make
the purchases necessary to enable them to keep their customers
abreast of the times. Magazines giving directions for the
manipulation of these fashions are read not only by all engaged iu
the business of dressmaking, but likewise in many private families,
shewing to what an extent women’s thoughts are now given to their
personal adornment, in contrast to the habits of their grandmothers.
In the department of millinery likewise, the change
is noteworthy. Down to fifty years ago, the milliner, with her
ribbons, lace, and gum-flowers, had not yet appeared, nor had the
flimsy, fantastic creations with which she now crowns the head of
her fair devotees. Our mothers contented themselves with good, plain
straw, their only ambition in this connection being to be possessed
of a “ leghorn.” These leghorn straws, though expensive at the
ontset, served as the foundation of their head-gear for years, and
frequently passed to the daughter at the death of the mother. At
intervals they were confided to the care of the straw-bonnet maker,
the prototype of the modern milliner, by whom they were taken to
pieces, cleaned, and remodelled in the favourite form of the day.
The advantage of the leghorn was that, besides being much superior
in appearance, it was the only kind of straw that would stand the
cleaning, by which process it was turned out as good as new. A few
yards of ribbon, arranged according to the taste of the wearer, and
by which it was tied uuder the chin, was all the expense incurred in
the making-up.
While, therefore, the influence of the railway on
small country towns and rural districts has spelt ruin to trade, and
has, for the plain, homely, frugal habits of the people, substituted
a more artificial style of living, it, at the same time, has brought
in its train incalculable advantages of an educative and social
character. In this respect, it has proved a potent factor in the
work of civilisation and refinement. Both in the facilities which it
afforded in the dissemination of the daily press, which, on the
abolition of the paper duty, was so largely extended, and likewise
in the numberless other agencies for the public information and
instruction, the railway played an important part, and, but for it,
the growth and development of these agencies would have been less
rapid and complete. There has been an undoubted improvement in the
manners of the people, due doubtless to the opening up of the
country aud the closer inter-communion of one district with another
and of class with class, and the deathblow has been given to many an
objectionable feature of the social life of the rural population.
There is one change, however, which we cannot but regret, and has,
by many who have studied the matter closely, been largely attributed
to this inter-communion brought about by the railway, viz., the
disappearance to a great extent of the “characters,” who were to be
found in country towns—persons of strong individuality, of ready
wit, or eccentricity of manner. Whether the railway and the altered
conditions of life in which it resulted are responsible, as has been
supposed, for the gradual disappearance and threatened extinction of
this race of characters whose sayings and doings gave a zest to the
life of their neighbours and friends, and are an interesting subject
of study, will probably remain a matter of opinion, but that they
are diminishing in number is unquestionable, and the fact that this
is so renders tamer and less interesting the daily ways of our
country people, and is a cause of regret to all who interest
themselves in the study of Scottish life and character. Typical
examples of them are to be found in the pages of Sir Walter Scott,
where the peculiarities of their mental constitution and manners are
admirably pourtrayed, and .where the social life of the Scottish
people of the olden time is drawn with inimitable power and
felicity. |