Ministry of Mr. Alexander Scot—Lord
Morton's protest against his admission—Ebenezer Erskine’s testimony
to Mr. Scot’s excellence— Acts of Kirk-Session pointing to pastoral
diligence, in reference to education, morality, and care of the
poor—John Stevenson has his ruinous house rebuilt—Troops in the
Castle give much trouble—The Jacobite rising in 1715 tells severely
on the parish—The Communion season in 1718, with tent-preaching on
the Castle green—Mr. Scot’s death— Wealth of the box—Revenue derived
from mortcloth dues—Banking business of the Kirk-Session—Glance at
general condition of the Church—The ‘Marrow’ controversy—Balance of
parties in the Presbytery—Story of the forced settlement of Mr. John
Liston—Lord Morton’s high-handed measures—Protest of Ebenezer
Erskine and others—Ordination of Mr. Liston by a ‘ Riding Committee
’—Mr. Nairne’s sermon and ill-chosen text—Alienation of the people
from the Church of their fathers—The dreary period that
followed—Strange case of discipline—Elders deserting, and parents
going elsewhere for baptism—John Millar deposed from the
eldership—Strange mendicancy on the part of the Session—A badge for
beggars within the parish—Begging cripples carried away on a 'slead’—Collections
made in Mr. John Liston’s time—Mr. Robert Liston appointed colleague
and successor—Fulness of secular details in Minutes—The
mort-cloths—The minister’s travails in getting a church bell—Notices
of times of dearth—Condition of the parish, its inhabitants and
industries, at the close of the eighteenth century—Mr. Liston chosen
Moderator of General Assembly—Dr. Bryce becomes minister of the
parish—The Volunteer movement—Notable persons connected with
Aberdour. We
have now traced the fortunes of our village and neighbourhood from
the twelfth century down to the close of the seventeenth. The
notices of it in the earlier centuries, as might have been
anticipated, were meagre, being chiefly incidental references found
in the charters of the Monastery of Inchcolme and papers belonging
to the Morton family. Yet few as they are, these notices we have
found to be far from uninteresting. For they tell us that as far
back as the year 1178 the village of Aberdour existed, and had its
church under the charge of the Canons of Inchcolme; and no one can
say how much further back the history, - both of church and village,
might have been traced had authentic documents been preserved. In
that case, we doubt not, its church would have been identified as an
early settlement of the Culdees, and the village, in some form or
other, might have been descried far away in the misty period of the
Roman occupation. In the absence of written documents one may indeed
exercise a large discretionary power in conjecturing what may have
been, and then the difficulty is not how far to go, but where to
stop. In the humbler domain of history to which we confine
ourselves, it is something to be able to point to evidence which
proves the church of St. Fillan of Aberdour to have been in
existence in the twelfth century. And it is something to be able to
point to such names as those of Vipont and Mortimer, and Randolph
the Regent of Scotland, as the owners of our old Castle ere the
lordly Douglases possessed it and its surrounding domain. Beginning
our investigations in those old times, we have found our way by easy
stages down to the close of the seventeenth century, as I have
already said. We have traced the rise and growth and fall of the
Monastery, and its offshoot, the Hospital of St. Martha, renowned
for the shelter it gave to the many pilgrims who came from afar to
get healing from the waters of St. Fillan’s Well. We have seen the
old church pass from the hands of Roman Catholic priests to the care
of Reformed pastors. We have marked the changes that came over the
population, as early Reformation times gave place to declension,
both in Church and State, under the kingcraft and tyranny of James
the Sixth; and how these in their turn stirred up longings for
freedom, and led to heroic actions, which ushered in the times of
the Covenant—the first half of which was a period of life and
progress, the latter half a season of darkness and blood. At length,
however, the Revolution Settlement came as a morning of joy after a
night of weeping, and the land had rest. Speaking more particularly
of the parish, and the labours of the ministers and elders in it,
from the period of the Reformation down to the time when the Session
Record begins in 1649, we have, with the aid of such side-lights as
were available, tried to reproduce the men and manners of the time.
And then, availing ourselves of the Record of the Session’s labours,
we have endeavoured to glean from it what it tells of the work of
ministers and elders, in the various departments of their official
duty, down to the close of the seventeenth century. In resuming our
narrative, and bringing it to a close in the present lecture, I may
as well forewarn you not to expect the same fulness of details in
the Record of the Session’s labours as we have had in the past. The
eighteenth century was a tame one, compared with that which preceded
it, and much of what was done by the Session has been recorded in
the briefest manner. Still I think we shall find it worth our while
to survey the annals of the eighteenth century; and for various
reasons I do not at present intend to prosecute these investigations
beyond the close of that century.
The first minister of Aberdour, on the traces of whose labours we
come at the beginning of the eighteenth century, is Mr. Alexander
Scot, the successor of Mr. David Cumming. Mr. Scot was a student of
the University of Edinburgh, and was licensed by the metropolitan
Presbytery on 3d September 1701. The right of the patron to present
to the charge having lapsed, Mr. Scot was called by the Presbytery,
and ordained 24th September 1702. This settlement it appears was in
direct opposition to the wish of the Earl of Morton, but his
opposition in the circumstances did not avail much. His Lordship
was, however, determined to let his sentiments be known, for, on the
day fixed for the ordination, he openly protested against Mr. Scot’s
admission. Notwithstanding this, it must be said that Mr. Scot was
an excellent man, and proved himself to be a pastor of the right
stamp. Indeed, with all desire to estimate as highly as possible the
various ministers of Aberdour who have come under our notice, it
must be said that, in our estimation, he holds a higher place than
any one of the whole line, from the period of the Reformation down
to the close of the eighteenth century. Speaking of Mr. Scot’s
labours, the celebrated Ebenezer Erskine, in a paper which I have
been fortunate enough to discover among the Wodrow mss. in the
Advocates’ Library, Edinburgh, and to which I shall afterwards more
particularly refer, says:— ‘When it’s considered that the said
congregation [at Aberdour] did enjoy the blessing of the Rev. Mr.
Scot his faithful and painful [painstaking] ministry about the space
of twenty years, and were privileged with many solemn Communions,
with which, and the Christian, serious, tender carriage of that
people on the said occasions, sundry reverend ministers within this
province have expressed their great satisfaction, we may conclude
the number of serious seekers of God is much increased there, and
that this people do more deserve the character and privileges of a
Christian congregation than formerly.’ It is delightful to have this
testimony, from such a competent and thoroughly reliable source,
given at the close of Mr. Scot’s ministry. And although the Minutes
of Session all throughout his ministry lack the fulness that could
be desired, they yet point to just such a ministry as Ebenezer
Erskine has sketched in the above extract. The cause of education
engages the attention of Mr. Scot and his elders, from time to time,
the attendance of the poorest children at school not being
neglected. The staff of elders is gradually brought up from eight to
sixteen, and their office is not experienced to be a sinecure. They
are regularly questioned by the minister, at the meetings of
Session, in reference to the state of morality and religion in their
several quarters, and abuses of various kinds are firmly and
earnestly dealt with. The following extracts will give some idea of
the manner and spirit in which the Session acted in reference to
such matters:—
July 2, 1704.—‘It’s enacted, this day, that those who are found to
absent themselves from the ordinances, as also those who shall be
found drinking on the Lord’s day or otherways, as also those who
sell ale to such drinkers, are to be censured, as the minister and
elders think fit; and the minister is desired to make intimation of
the said Act from the pulpit, the next Lord’s day.’
June 15, 1712.—‘This day, sermon being preached anent the duties of
elders, after Divine service in the forenoon, William Weems of
Cuthilhill, John Bell [in Aberdour], John Russell [in Bucklyvie],
William Whyte [in Mountquhey], were ordained elders. They were
exhorted to be vigilant in their duties, in repressing of vice and
cherishing virtue; and to set up the worship of God in their own
families, and to press others in their several quarters to do the
like.’ The elders ordained four years later—making sixteen in
all—were John Turnbull, in Bucklyvie; Alexander Henderson, in
Couston; Robert Livingston, in Torryhills; Robert Moyes, James
Cousin, Alexander Bell, and Archibald Davidson, in Aberdour.
Feb. 7, 1717.—‘This day the minister did recommend it to the elders
that each of them, in their several quarters, should see to the
putting to school of the young ones, that were capable of learning,
and to bring a list of those that were not at any school to the
Session.’
Feb. 26, 1717.—‘Some of the members of the Session gave in an
account that all the youth in their quarters, that are capable of
learning, are at school. Others were again desired to bring in a
list of any that could not read within their bounds.’
Jan. 2, 1718.—‘This day the Session allowed six pounds Scots to a
poor man, called John Walls, in the north part of the parish, who
teaches some poor ones who are not able to come to the head school.’
Other extracts with a similar tone pervading them might be given,
but these will suffice regarding the departments of work to which
they refer.
The period of Mr. Scot’s ministry seems to have been a prosperous
one, not merely as regards the domains of religion and morality, but
also in as far as temporal matters were concerned. A list of paupers
is given in a Minute of October 1717; and there are only eleven in
the parish— the allowance to each of them being sixpence fortnightly
! There are, however, occasional glimpses of ways in which extra aid
is bestowed. Thus on December 14th, 1718, the following Minute
occurs:—‘This day the distressed condition of several poor folk in
the parish was represented to the Session, and to them was
distributed as follows: Colline Hunter, a poor sick child, was
allowed seven pence per week, till he should recover. Item, John
Walls, a poor dying man, in the north end of the parish [he whom we
saw engaged in teaching poor children there, a year before this
date], was allowed two pounds. Item, John Meldrum, a poor man, was
allowed a crown, “to help him to an horse.” Item, Christian
Robertson, a blind woman, was allowed a pound.’ The following Minute
gives us a striking instance of the way in which a case of great
destitution was met in Mr. Scot’s days : Sept. 18th, 1719.—‘This day
John Stevenson appeared before the Session, with a petition
representing his afflicted and necessitous condition, his house
being ruinous, and himself left a widower with five young children,
all naked, for the most part, and himself an old man, altogether
unable to do any thing, either for the sustentation of his family,
or the rebuilding of his house. The Session taking this to their
serious consideration, did think it meet that his case should be
laid before the congregation, in the words of his own petition, that
so every one might give something towards his relief, and that on
the Sabbath following.’ It gives a pleasing view of the neighbourly
spirit existing in our parish at that time, when we find that, on
the following Sabbath, ninety-nine pounds Scots were raised for
relieving the necessitous condition of John Stevenson and his
family, and for rebuilding his ruinous house. These objects, it
should be noticed, were to be secured in a business-like way, a
committee of elders being appointed to see the money laid out to the
best advantage.
During Mr. Scot’s ministry, as on former occasions, the troops
quartered in the Castle gave the Session much annoyance, many cases
of discipline arising from their misbehaviour. An examination of
some of these cases brings to light unmistakable evidence of the
contamination of manners which resulted from their presence in the
village. In one of these cases a question arises whether or not one
of the dragoons, named Dunbar, is a married man ; whereupon the
minister of Dalkeith is written to, and in answer says that there is
a woman there who calls herself Margaret Dunbar, ‘in the English
fashion.’ According to the Scotch fashion, I need hardly say,
married women still went by their maiden name.
The great occasion which led to the quartering of so many troops in
the Castle at this time, was the Jacobite Rising in 1715, when the
Earl of Mar embarked on his foolish and bootless attempt to
overthrow the Hanoverian dynasty, in favour of the old Pretender.
This movement told severely on our neighbourhood. It could hardly
fail to do so, when Burntisland was in the hands of the rebels.
Francis Stuart, the brother of the Earl of Moray, was implicated, to
some extent, in the movement, and so were the laird of Kilrie and
Colin Simpson of Whitehill, both of whom were heritors in the
parish. Some strange scenes were witnessed both at Auchtertool and
Burntisland at that time; but we can only notice the fact that, from
August 23d, 1715, till February 8th, 1716, no meetings of
Kirk-Session at Aberdour are minuted. In the Record the words occur,
£ An interruption occasioned by the Rebellion and troubles in this
country.' It shows in what an unsettled state the parish was, when
for six months the Session had to suspend their meetings.
Owing to the want of details in the Minutes during the time of Mr.
Scot’s ministry, I cannot speak with confidence as to the frequency
with which the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper was ministered in the
parish. Apparently it was not oftener than once a year; and although
the date fluctuates a little, August is the month in which we find
it most frequently observed. Communion Fast-days begin to appear in
1710. On August 10th, 1718, six men were appointed to ‘keep the
doors’ of the church on the Communion Sabbath. On another occasion,
two years later, the elders are appointed to wait at the kirk-doors
and Castle gate, in their turns; and in connection with this
observance of the Sacrament, the singular notice occurs, that the
sum of nineteen shillings and sixpence was given for glasses broken
at the Castle green at the Sacrament. It is evident that the tent
was pitched, on such occasions, on the Castle green, which explains
the provision made for elders being at the Castle gate. On October
28th, 1720, Henry Stocks, the village wright, gets nine pounds
eighteen shillings Scots for putting up and taking down the tent at
the Communion, erecting the tables, and mending the south dyke.
Mr. Scot died in the month of February 1721, in the forty-eighth
year of his age, and the nineteenth of his ministry. He met with his
Session for the last time on 8th December 1720; and on the 22d of
February 1721 Mr. Henderson of Dalgety presided. It gives one a
striking view of the temporal prosperity of the parish at this time,
to learn that, when the Kirk-box was opened in the presence of Mr.
Henderson, there was found in it, of money £674, 18s. 8d., and of
bonds no fewer than seven, of which one was for 100 marks, two of
£100 Scots each, one of £24 Scots, and one of £12 sterling. This was
evidently the great period for the accumulation of poor’s money in
the parish of Aberdour. Nor is this prosperous condition hard to be
accounted for. The coal trade was at that time giving full
employment to a great many, and this not only at the north end of
the parish, where the pits were, but to those who were employed in
carting the coal to the harbour, those who loaded the vessels there,
and to the skippers and others who traded between the harbour and
Leith. The shipping trade was evidently extensive; and the music of
the loom, however harsh in the ears of modern amateurs, told of
money-making in double-quick time. And there cannot be a doubt that
the population must have stood high, and that money must have been
plentiful in the village at that time, for during the last three
years of Mr. Scot’s ministry there was handed in to the Session, of
mortcloth dues alone, no less a sum than £150, 19s., being at the
rate of £50 a year. The income from this source alone, calculated
for the whole period of Mr. Scot’s ministry, would give no less a
sum than ^1000 Scots; and they who bear in mind what a pound Scots
could purchase at the time will be the first to acknowledge how
large a sum this is. If it is asked whether the money thus
accumulated was allowed to lie and rust in the box, the bonds we
have just referred to give a decided negative to that supposition.
The Session evidently did a large stroke of banking business.
Lending money on good security, and at good interest, they made a
handsome thing of it, and as if a spring of molten gold had been
tapped in the bottom of the box, it was gradually filling. Indeed, I
much fear this state of matters proved an entanglement to good Mr.
Scot and his Session, and that the amount of their banking business
with the ‘gold that perisheth’ interfered somewhat with the higher
kind of trading with which the Master had charged them.
One of the strangest chapters of the history of Aber-dour is that on
which we now enter, dealing with the incidents which occurred
immediately after the death of Mr. Scot. The parish had at length
enjoyed the benefit of the labours of a minister Evangelical in
creed and devotedly pious in character; and labouring as he did for
nearly a score of years, time had been given him for making more
than a surface impression on the people of Aberdour. That such an
impression was actually made we have already shown on the authority
of the Rev. Ebenezer Erskine, who, when he made the statement, had
for many years been minister of Portmoak, in the neighbouring
Presbytery of Kirkcaldy, and so had ample opportunity of knowing the
state of affairs in Aberdour. It comes to us with all the greater
force when we find such a man speaking, as he does, of the blessing
the parish enjoyed under the faithful and painstaking ministry of
Mr. Scot, and it also gives a high value to the testimony borne to
the solemnity of the Communion seasons at Aberdour, and the serious
and tender demeanour of the congregation on these occasions. The
natural wish of every earnest heart in glancing along the line of
the history of the parish up till this time, must be that Mr. Scot’s
successor may be a man of like spirit, who will take up his work,
and carry it forward to a still more prosperous issue. This was
evidently what the great bulk of the people wished, but how sadly
they were frustrated in their desire we have now to relate.
Before doing this we must, however, take a glance at the general
condition of ecclesiastical matters in Scotland at the time.
Patronage had been virtually abolished at the Revolution Settlement,
when it was enacted that the heritors and elders were ‘to name and
propose the person to the whole congregation, to be either approven
or disapproven by them;’ but it was restored again by the Tory
Government in 1712. For a considerable time, however, a numerous
body of the ministers in the Church regulated their proceedings in
such a way that the patron’s rights were not allowed to set aside
the rights of the people, or the regulations laid down in the
Standards of the Church on the subject. A tide of worldliness and
indifference to the sound Evangelical doctrines which had so greatly
distinguished the Covenanting times had, however, now set in; and
along with this the rights of the Christian people in the calling
and settlement of ministers came to be disregarded. Those who are
acquainted with the history of the period are aware how the ‘Marrow
Controversy’ was raging about the time of Mr. Scot’s death. This
controversy, I may state in a sentence, was one which arose
regarding a book characterised by Evangelical views, and designated
the Marrow of Modern Divinity—a work written by Edward Fisher of
Oxford in the sixteenth century, and republished at the time with
which we are dealing, with the view of recalling Scotchmen to
sounder views of Gospel truth than those which had begun to be
generally entertained. And so far had the Church of Scotland
declined from Evangelical views, that, in 1720, the teaching of this
book was condemned by the General Assembly; and there was a most
marked contrast between the severity shown to those who had been
instrumental in spreading these views, and the tenderness shown to
others who had espoused Pelagian or even Arian error. It soon became
evident that those who treated such errors so tenderly were not the
men to respect the God-given rights of the Christian people; and
among the cases in which these rights were most thoroughly trampled
under foot, hardly any one was more flagrant than that of Aberdour.
Public attention was at that time a good deal turned to the
Presbytery of Dunfermline, to which Aberdour belonged. Some able
defenders of Evangelical truth and the rights of the Christian
people were found in it; of whom Ralph Erskine, minister at
Dunfermline, was one. It so happened that, at the time of Mr. Scot’s
death, the Presbytery was nearly equally divided on these questions.
There were at that time fourteen charges within its bounds ;
Aberdour was vacant; four of the ministers were either sick or
dying, and so could not attend the meetings of Presbytery ; four of
the remainder held the Marrow doctrine, and five were opposed to it.
In this way it became a serious question with the leading party in
the Church on what side the minister might be who should be settled
at Aberdour. If he should be on the Evangelical side, the parties in
the Presbytery would be equally balanced; and if in the meantime any
of the anti-Marrow men should be removed to other charges, the
Evangelicals might have a positive majority. In point of fact, when
Mr. Hepburn of Torry-burn was called to New Greyfriars Church,
Edinburgh, this matter of the balance of parties in the Presbytery
was so prominently before the eyes of the General Assembly, as to
lead them to enact that, in the event of Mr. Hepburn being
translated, the Presbytery of Dunfermline were not to ordain his
successor, except with the consent of the Synod of Fife. The bearing
of all this on the Aberdour case will speedily appear. Listen,
meanwhile, to a sentence or two from Ralph Erskine on this matter.
‘The disposition of the judicatories,’ he says, ‘too evidently
appeared, whenever any student or candidate was supposed to be
tinctured with the Marrow, that is, a Gospel spirit. There was no
quarter for such ; queries upon queries were formed to discourage
them and stop their way, either of being entered on trials or
ordained into churches; while those who were of the most loose and
corrupt principles were most favoured by them. These things are too
notour to be denied; and these were some of the sad and lasting
effects of the foresaid Acts of Assembly [regarding the Marrow
controversy], and the sad occasion of planting many churches with
men that were little acquainted with the Gospel, yea, enemies to the
doctrine of grace.’ It was in these circumstances that the vacancy
in the charge at Aberdour was to be filled up.
Let me now give you a simple narrative of the facts of the case.
A few months after Mr. Scot’s death we have the following Minute of
Kirk-Session :—
June 25, 1721.—‘John Millar and John Davidson were appointed to
attend at Dunfermline, the next Presbytery, to get a hearing of Mr.
Thomas Kay, Mr. Thomson, and Mr. Don.’
Some formidable difficulty appears to have arisen, for in the month
of October of that year, the Minutes of Session bear that ‘it was
agreed unanimously that James Bell and Alexander Henderson should
attend at Dunfermline, to address the Rev. Presbytery for supply,
and ask their advice anent the comfortable settlement of this
parish.’ From time to time similar notices appear, until, in May
1723, two years and three months after Mr. Scot’s death, it is
intimated that Mr. John Liston has been ordained minister of
Aberdour. These are very meagre notices, but I shall now attempt to
fill up the gaps. You have observed the request of the Kirk-Session
to the Presbytery, that the congregation should have a hearing of
Mr. Thomas Kay, Mr. Thomson, and Mr. Don. It would appear that from
the first Mr. Kay was the object of the people’s choice ; but James,
the sixth Lord Morton, who had protested against the ordination of
Mr. Scot, found a successor of similar views in his brother, Robert,
the seventh Earl. His Lordship had resolved that Mr. John Liston
should be minister of the parish ; and having presented him to the
charge, he had the courage to ask the Presbytery to ordain the
presentee without the formality of a call. It was scarcely to be
expected that a Presbytery which counted among its members such men
as Ralph Erskine, and Samuel Charters of Inverkeithing, would
consent to this proposal. In point of fact, the Presbytery refused
to do it, ‘ as not agreeable to Presbyterian principles.’ And, now,
what was to be done? It was necessary to get something of the nature
of a call, if Mr. Liston’s settlement was to be proceeded with; and
it remained to be seen what the complexion of that call would be,
and how the Church Courts would deal with it. And even at this
distance of time we know a good deal about that call. The day fixed
for the moderation came round. Two candidates were proposed,—Mr.
Thomas Kay and Mr. John Liston. In favour of Mr. Liston there
appeared Lord Morton, the patron; several heritors, of whom we shall
speak presently; two of the elders, and seventeen heads of families.
In favour of Mr. Kay there appeared one heritor, nine elders, and
nearly the whole body of the people, including many who were feuars,
with the exceptions which I have just stated. From this you will see
that it was very much a case of Patron and Heritors versus the
People. And very questionable tactics had been resorted to in order
to swell the list of the heritors. The laird of Kilrie and Colin
Simpson of Whitehill had been out in the Rebellion of 1715, and so
were civilly disqualified for voting, yet the names of both appeared
in favour of Mr. Liston’s call. Moreover, it was known that the
laird of Kilrie had not given warrant to any one to append his name
to the call; and Colin Simpson, with considerable forethought as to
the civil consequences of his disloyalty, had, it was reported,
already sold his land to the Earl of Morton. Fagot votes, too, even
in ecclesiastical matters, would seem to have been in vogue at that
time, for Sir James Holburne of Menstrie and Otterston, and his son,
both voted as heritors, on the ground that they were proprietors of
a part of the lands of Couston, called Delmyre, a small enclosure
without so much as a house on it. And Sir John Henderson ofFordell
appeared to register his vote, in favour of Mr. Liston, on the
ground that he (Sir John) was proprietor of that same pendicle. It
was objected at the time that this was unfair; but the defence was
forthcoming, in lieu of a better, that it did not belong to a Church
Court to decide on the question of the validity of claims of a civil
kind. On this ground a hundred persons might have appeared, and
registered their votes as heritors owning the same property, and no
objection have been taken. It was urged further, that as the Earl of
Moray and Sir John Henderson had ceased to belong to the Church of
Scotland, they could not legally sign the call; and it was argued
that, as the two Orroks of Balram seldom entered a Presbyterian
place of worship, a similar objection stood in their way. This
combination of the heritors, to thrust on the people a minister whom
they did not wish, and who therefore was little likely to do them
good, does little honour to these men. And it looks ill on the part
of the Church, when we know further that the Presbytery of
Dunfermline were not allowed to preside, in accordance with the
usual mode of procedure, at the moderation of the call. That which
was once only feared by the leaders of the Church had now evidently
taken place,—a preponderance of Evangelical influence in the
Presbytery,—and a Committee of Synod are intrusted with the
management of the call. The Committee evidently see everything in
the light which the heritors’ wishes shed on it; and it is a trying
day for the people of Aberdour. ‘And how' you will ask, ‘did they
behave?’ The great bulk of them, it must be said, demeaned
themselves calmly and circumspectly, so as to win the respect of the
onlookers; but the truth must be told,—this was not the case with
all. ‘One sinner' the proverb tells us, ‘destroyeth much good.’ And
when the sinner is a rude and boisterous one, the amount of good
destroyed is frequently very great. That there were persons of this
type at the exciting meeting in the old church of Aberdour on the
occasion referred to is undeniable; and even at the risk of being
thought ungallant, it must be said that those who signalised
themselves most in this way were of the gentler sex. On delicate
ground like this I am glad to give place to such a courtly man as
Ebenezer Erskine, who probably was present on the occasion, or at
least had ample opportunity of knowing the true state of matters.
Hear the minister of Portmoak: ‘It cannot be denied that the
congregation of Aberdour is Christian, having right to choose their
own pastor. Indeed, the carriage of a few women at the moderation,
and the day thereafter, was very unchristian and offensive, and
therefore justly testified against by the Reverend Synod; but this
cannot be laid to the charge of the elders or body of that people,
especially when they witnessed their detestation and abhorrence
thereof, as was declared before the Reverend Synod.'
What, now, was the result of all these strange proceedings ? The
call to Mr. Liston, secured in this extraordinary way, went up to
the Synod, not at one of its ordinary meetings, but one called for
the occasion. A full statement of the facts of the case was made, on
the side of the congregation, by their good friend Ebenezer Erskine,
who was supported by Mr. William Moncrieff, minister at Largo, and
Mr. George Gillespie, minister at Strathmiglo, a grandson of the
celebrated minister of that name in Covenanting times. But it did
not avail. The leading party in the Church had forgotten the
traditions of the First and Second Reformations. They had placed
themselves on the inclined plane of worldly policy and doctrines
devised by men ; and they made short work of the objections urged by
the congregation and those who spoke on its behalf. They ordered a
committee of their number—one of the ‘Riding Committees,’ as they
came to be called—to repair to Aberdour and ordain Mr. Liston, which
was accordingly done, as the following extract from the Session
Record shows:—
May 7, 1723.—‘This day Mr. John Liston, preacher in the Presbytery
of Linlithgow, was ordained minister of Aberdour by a Committee of
the Synod of Fife. Mr. Nairne, minister of Anstruther, preached the
ordination sermon, on 1 Thessalonians, chapt. v., verses 12 and 13.’
The words that formed the subject of Mr. Nairne’s sermon on that
memorable occasion are as follows: ‘And we beseech you, brethren, to
know them which labour among you, and are over you in the Lord, and
admonish you; and to esteem them very highly in love for their
work’s sake. And be at peace among yourselves.’ A beautiful and
solemn text this is; and we trust Mr. Nairne’s sermon was in some
measure worthy of it. But, even at this distant date, we protest
against the selection of it, as altogether inappropriate to the
occasion, and, in the circumstances, fitted to do dishonour to the
Word of God. He would have found a text far better suited to the
occasion in John x. i: ‘Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that
entereth not by the door into the sheepfold, but climbeth up some
other way, the same is a thief and a robber.’
Before the deed was done by the Synod, which to a large extent
blighted the religious prospects of the parish, which rendered the
great mass of the people disaffected to the Church of their fathers,
and created a rankling feeling of injury in their breasts to the
heritors who had forced on the settlement, Ebenezer Erskine, and
those brethren who along with him espoused the cause of the
congregation at Aberdour, tabled a clear, able, and dignified
protest against the Synod’s decision. This paper, to which I have
been much indebted in drawing up the narrative I have now laid
before you, is too long to read, and, from its technical character,
would, I fear, prove wearisome to a general audience, but I shall
give you its closing sentences:‘ The Synod having now voted the
approbation of that call, and ordered Mr. Liston’s settlement
thereon, notwithstanding the weighty objections offered against it,
and the opposition of the eldership and body of that congregation,
we fear the deed of the Synod (though not so intended by them) may
be interpreted as an homologation of the usurped powers of Patrons,
or may prove a dangerous precedent for countenancing Heritors and
others who may incline to invade the Rights and Liberties of the
Church, and obtrude ministers on Christian congregations without
their call, yea, against their mind, in direct opposition to the
Word of God, our Books of Discipline, and Standing Acts of the
General Assembly. And, considering that ministers of the Gospel and
Church Judicatories are bound by many sacred ties to maintain and
defend the Rights and Liberties of Christian Churches, and of
Christian Congregations, and that we are under strong apprehension
of the bad consequences of this sentence, not only in the parish of
Aberdour, but elsewhere : Therefore we now beg leave hereby to
protest that we are not chargeable with them, and that this sentence
shall not be impleaded as a precedent in time coming.’ These words
read like a prophecy, and the sad forebodings they express proved
only too well grounded. From one infatuated step to another the
dominant party in the Church proceeded, till they refused even to
receive such a protest as this, which saved the consciences of those
who were not chargeable with the wrong done. And when the domain of
conscience was thus ruthlessly invaded, Ebenezer Erskine led the way
to the formation of the Secession Church, in which the rights of the
Christian people and the inviolability of the consciences of
ministers could both be preserved. The forced settlement at Aberdour
proved one of the wedges by which the old Church of Scotland was
rent in twain. This case, moreover, explains the fact, otherwise so
inexplicable, that, when Dissenting MeetingHouses were opened in
Burntisland and Inverkeithing, the church-going inhabitants of
Aberdour flocked eastwards and westwards, and connected themselves
with these congregations. The story is told that, on a certain
Sabbath-day, a servant at the manse said to the minister’s wife that
the whole people of the village seemed to be flocking to Burntisland.
‘ And did you notice,’ was the reply, ‘ whether they were carrying
the stipend on their back?’ ‘No,’ said the unsophisticated damsel;
‘I did not see that.’ ‘Then,’ rejoined the matron, ‘let them go!’
According to this view, little was lost if the stipend were but
saved. Miserable standard! The people were carrying with them a
sense of the oppression that worldly-minded heritors and hireling
pastors had imposed; they were also carrying the principles of their
persecuted forefathers, which had been bought with blood; and they
were carrying with them an unsullied conscience, which no amount of
money can purchase.
There is no more dreary period in the whole ecclesiastical annals of
the parish than that which refers to the incumbency of the elder Mr.
Liston—for, as you are no doubt aware, he was succeeded by his son,
Mr. Robert Liston. Let me glean from the Session Record such notices
as demand comment. We have no written statement by means of which we
might discover what the doctrines were which the elder Mr. Liston
preached to the small body of parishioners who still waited on his
ministry 3 and there are hardly any Acts of Session that bear
directly on the question of practical religion. Occasionally,
however, we have gleams of light that do reveal something of the
kind. Here is an extract from the Record, so peculiar in its way
that we have seen almost nothing, of that or any other period, to
match it:—
August 30, 1724.—‘It being reported that David Allan, Robert
Thomson, and John Reid had broken the Sabbath-day by stealing apples
on that day, they were cited, and compearing they all acknowledged
that it was only eleven of the clock on Saturday night, and that
they were very sorry it should so have happened, and promised never
to border so near on that day again; and were exhorted to carry as
Christians, to behave themselves as those that know that God will
not let them go unpunished that break His day, without serious
repentance.’
Now we may well be excused if, after reading this extract, we
exclaim, with Trinculo, ‘What have we here?’ Three boys have been
guilty of the theft of apples—a breach of the Eighth Commandment;
and it is alleged that this crime has been aggravated by the
circumstance that the theft was committed on the Sabbath—thus
involving a breach of the Fourth Commandment. The boys, however,
deny that it was on Sabbath that they stole the apples—the deed was
done no nearer Sabbath than eleven o’clock on Saturday night. And
yet, although the theft is admitted, there is not a word said to
them regarding the sin of stealing. It looks as if Mr. Liston and
his three elders had seen nothing very far amiss in the act of
theft, provided that it did not occur on the Sabbath, or very late
on Saturday night, and so £ bordering near ’ the sacred day. The
boys, too, you will have noticed, are not asked, and do not promise,
not to steal again; they only engage that, should they go
a-pilfering again, they will keep at a respectable distance from the
Sabbath. Finally, they are exhorted to £ carry as Christians,’
which, in the light of the context, they are entitled to regard
themselves as doing, if they are so self-denying as not to do what
is wrong on Sabbath. Anything more confused than this, either in an
intellectual or moral point of view, it is hardly possible to
conceive, in connection with the proceedings of a court of
conscience.
There is not a word in the Minutes about the ministration of the
Lord’s Supper from the time of Mr. Liston’s ordination, in 1723,
till the year 1728. The same may be said of the period from 1736 to
1742; and, when regular notices appear, it is evident that the
observance occurs only once every alternate year. There are many
evidences, throughout both these periods, of deep disaffection to
Mr. Liston’s ministry. At one time several heads of families are
cited before the Presbytery for going to Dunfermline to get baptism
for their children. At another time, it is enacted by the Session,
that the poor who absent themselves from the parish church and from
pastoral examinations shall get no allowance from the poor’s fund.
And, in 1738, there are frequent notices of elders who have
‘deserted,’ as it is called; by which we are, no doubt, to
understand that they have gone off to join the Dissenters. In this
connection we may say that some of the elders who remained would not
have been greatly missed had they taken their departure, if we may
judge of their qualifications from the following instance:—
January 2, 1743.—‘This day the Session was informed that John
Millar, one of the members thereof, did, on the 24th of the last
month, throw down Hugh Marshal, another of the members of the
Session, from a chair in William Anderson his house, and threatened
to beat him, with a staff in his hand, and said twice [using a
profane oath] that he would beat him and all that were with him.’
The Session, being much moved at this, appointed another diet to
consider the affair, and that John Millar should be cited to compear
before them on the 9th instant.
The 9th instant came, and with it came John Millar, acknowledging
all that had been laid to his charge, with the exception of the
oath, which he rather thought he did not use. But ‘the Session
having considered the affair, were all of the mind that he deserved
deposition.’ Accordingly they did depose him from being an elder in
the parish; and ‘this being intimate to John, he departed.’
A few notices of the management of the poor at this time may be
interesting. There is a singular entry, of date June 21st, 1724—that
is, within a year from the time when Mr. Liston was settled as
minister of the parish. It runs as follows:—‘This day it was thought
fit that some application should be made to the Sessions of Dalgety
and Burntisland, that they may contribute something, as they can
spare, for the relief of our poor, since our poor are daily
increasing here.’ Now, we are naturally led to inquire what the
meaning of this can be. That the poor were daily increasing in the
parish at the time may be taken for granted, seeing the Session tell
us that such is the case. But the question remains whether they had
no funds of their own to meet the increasing demand thus caused,
that they should go a-begging from other parishes. Little more than
three years had passed since the time we marked a great accumulation
of money in the Box. Was this store now exhausted? Far from it. Many
of the bonds in favour of the Session are still lying in the Box;
for the Minutes show that the interest is regularly coming in. And
there is the same evidence to show that, since Mr. Liston’s
settlement down to the date of this strange Minute, no less a sum
than 850 marks have been lent at interest. Stranger still, within
two months from the date of the begging Minute, other 400 marks are
lent on interest. And, to crown the whole, in the course of a few
years after this, the Session purchase three houses from Andrew
Moyes for the sum of 1550 marks. It is easy to tell from what source
these accumulated funds mainly came: it was from mort-cloth dues.
The inhabitants of the parish seem to have attached vast importance
to the velvet covering under which the dead were carried to their
long home. I mentioned that, during the last three months of Mr.
Scot’s ministry, the mortcloth dues amounted to about £50 a year.
During the first three years of Mr. Liston’s ministry, the amount
raised from this source was £199, 17s., or little short of £70 a
year. And yet in the face of such facts, Mr. Liston, in concert with
the other members of Session, went a-begging from the parishes of
Dalgety and Burntisland! This was not the way to elevate the cause
of morality in the parish, or to keep alive the spirit of
independence.
It is a dull, cold, dead period of the history of the parish with
which we are now dealing, and although the truth must be told, we
shall not linger over it a minute longer than we can possibly help.
It is a curious glimpse of the state of the parish that we get in
the following Minute:—
August 27, 1725.—‘This day some of our Heritors and their
Representatives—viz.: the Laird of Cuthilhill, the Laird of Balram,
Henry Stevenson of Templehall, Mr. Alexander Christie, for the Earl
of Morton, met with the
Session, by desire of the Justices of Peace, to consider the case of
the poor of the parish; there being so many sturdy beggars going,
that few can serve them all, and a great many thefts, etc.,
committed by them. They at length came to this, that each poor
person should have some badge or mark, having on the one side “Aberdour,”
and on the other “Parish,” and that this badge is to be made of
lead, and every poor person that begs, belonging to the parish,
shall be acquainted not to go out of the bounds thereof, otherwise
they will be proceeded with according to the Acts made against
Beggars. The constables were also told to do their duty.’
Such a Minute as this shows us how it was practicable to keep the
poor on such a pittance as was then doled out to them by
Kirk-Sessions. It was evidently intended, in the case of all who
could move about, that the allowance given should be supplemented by
begging. And it was a very unusual thing indeed, for such as went
a-begging, and had some amount of physical strength, to confine
their operations entirely to their own parish. Instances occur in
which a good deal of trouble was given to the parish authorities,
even by cripples, who had taken it into their heads to wander about
over a pretty wide area. A Minute, of date November 3d, 1723, tells
us ‘the Session allowed Robert Fleming two marks Scots, to buy a
slead to carry away the cripples that come to the town.’ We are not
to suppose from this that wheeled conveyances were at that time
entirely unknown in the parish; although a considerable amount of
agricultural work was performed by means of sledges. But it was
probably thought good policy on the part of the parochial
authorities to adhere to the use of the ‘slead’ in transporting
beggars. The roads were of course very rough; the main street of the
village being at that time causeyed in the middle, in a similar way
to what you may still see in the Coal-wynd. And as the ‘slead,’
laden with cripples, went bumping along, the honour of this mode of
conveyance would far transcend its comfort. In addition to which,
there falls to be considered the great tendency on the part of the
travellers to fall off the sledge from behind, in going up a very
steep hill; and the still greater evil of rolling off in front,
while going down the hill on the other side. I most sincerely
believe that a single ride on Robert Fleming’s ‘slead’ would, in the
case of the soundest in limb among us, have been sufficient to cure
us of any lingering desire for a repetition of the honour.
An old mode of conveyance suggests to our mind an old form of
disease, referred to in the Minutes about the same time, when Robert
Weems got five pounds Scots to help to nurse his child, ‘because his
wife was weak, and sore distressed with an ague.’ Agues contracted
in this country are, I suppose, nearly as rare now as native
sledges. Before bidding good-bye to Mr. John Liston and his time,
let me mention one or two little incidents, which show to what kind
of foreign objects the people were sometimes asked to contribute of
their means.
November 3, 1723.—‘This day the Session was informed that a
collection had been made in other parishes for the poor distressed
Protestants in Saxony; which they took into their serious
consideration, and appointed that the recommendation of the General
Assembly for that effect be read out of the pulpit the next Lord’s
day, and that the Sabbath after shall be appointed for that pious
contribution.’ The collection was made accordingly, and five pounds
Scots contributed.
June 7, 1724.—‘This day a recommendation, from the Assembly and
Presbytery, for a collection for building a kirk for the
Presbyterians in New York, was read in the Session, and appointed to
be read on Sabbath next.’ For this object four pounds were
collected.
At another time, ‘Christian Fandy, a man skilled in Oriental
languages, who has been cruelly used by the Turks,’ comes in for a
collection of three shillings; while public works at home, just as
we saw in the previous century, still get the contributions of the
people in a congregational capacity. In this way, during Mr. John
Liston’s time, there are collections in aid of the harbours of St.
Andrews and Arbroath, the bridge over the Stinchar—a stream that
Burns was by and by to render famous,—the Edinburgh Infirmary, and
other similar objects. There is also a notice, in 1736, of the
Society for the Propagation of Christian Knowledge. But one cannot
help lamenting the indifference displayed to missionary effort among
the heathen, notices of which, in those old days, are conspicuous
only by their absence.
There is no reference in the Minutes to any interruption caused by
the Rebellion of 1745, in which the young Pretender figured;
although there must no doubt have been days of stirring interest
connected with that season of turmoil.
Mr. John Liston died on the 17th of September 1764. I should perhaps
have noticed at an earlier stage that he was the son of William
Liston, farmer at Newliston, and that he was licensed by the
Presbytery of Linlithgow, on the nth of September 1717. He had been
presented to the parish of Kirkmahoe, by the Duke of Queensberry, in
1720, but this presentation did not take effect, and we have already
seen that he was ordained minister of Aberdour in 1723. For ten
years before his death he had the assistance of his son Robert as
colleague and successor.
Mr. Robert Liston, thus referred to, had been a student of the
University of Edinburgh, was licensed by the Presbytery of
Dunfermline on 5th September 1753, and was ordained as colleague to
his father on 2d April 1754. He was in many respects superior to his
father, and reached the distinction of being Moderator of the
General Assembly in the year 1787,—the last who filled the
Moderator’s chair without having the degree of Doctor of Divinity.
There is, however, little of much interest in the Minutes of
Kirk-Session during his incumbency that makes it necessary for us to
linger over them. They deal chiefly with details regarding the
secularities with which the Session had to concern themselves, and
cases of discipline, which, we regret to say, reveal a very low
state of morality among the people. We have no Acts bearing on the
spiritual and moral elevation of the people, such as those which
distinguished the ministry of Mr. Donaldson of Dalgety, to which, in
another series of lectures, I called your attention some time ago.1
Indeed, the religious condition of the people, which ought to be the
paramount object of the Kirk-Session’s care, is hardly ever noticed.
There are, however, a few matters of local interest, which, were
they important enough, might be related with the greatest minuteness
of detail. If any one wishes to immortalise himself by a description
of the Aberdour mortcloth—the source of so much revenue in those
days,—he will find the amplest materials for the task in these
Records, the Genoa velvet that formed the staple of the article, the
shalloon that was necessary in order to make it up with effect; and
the fringes that gave the finishing touch of adornment to it. All
these are detailed, and dwelt on with the most scrupulous care; and
the number of the loops and buttons is told with as much exactitude
as if they had belonged to the ephod of the High Priest in the days
of the old economy. Or if any one wishes to acquaint himself with
all the agony of mind which Mr. Robert Liston underwent in order to
procure a decent church bell, in these Minutes will be found all the
acts and scenes that go to form the tragedy: how he had, first of
all, two small bells, which together weighed 197 lb.; and how, on no
fewer than three inevitable occasions, the bells cracked after being
re-cast; and how at length a bell of perfectly new metal was got,
weighing 197I lb., at i8d. per pound, costing, with expenses, £17,
18s. 9d., or, deducting the value of old metal, 1, 7s. 5d.; and how
the new bell was hung in the belfry; and how at length the belfry,
following the example of the earlier bells, cracked; and how, after
that, the bell was swung up on an old ash-tree. All this is told
with such religious scrupulosity, that to repeat it would set your
very ears a-ringing!
But there are notices of other matters in the Minutes which are both
interesting and important; and of such a nature are references to
times of dearth and famine. The year 1757 was remarkable for the
scarcity and dearth of provisions. In the month of May of that year
the Session considered ‘the melancholy and crying condition of the
poor in the parish,’ and agreed to purchase ten or twelve bolls of
meal to be distributed among them. Mr. Liston wrote to Mr. Chambers,
merchant in Edinburgh, about the matter; but he was unable to supply
the meal. He informed the Session, however, that he had good ‘pease,’
which he could sell at twenty shillings sterling per boll; whereupon
the Session ordered ten bolls. When the pease arrived, they were
sent, in equal quantities, to the Upper and Nether Mills to be
ground, and a list of needy people was made who were to receive a
stated portion weekly.
The year 1773 was also a very trying one for the poor, and the funds
at the disposal of the Session seem to have been inadequate to meet
the great demand. With a view to show this, the Session prepared a
statement of their income and expenditure, to be laid before the
heritors. From this summary it appears that the Session’s income
from land and house-rent amounted to £8, 3s. 4d.—sterling money, no
doubt; and that the ordinary collections, with marriage and
mortcloth dues, amounted to £13,—making in all £21, 3s. 4d. From
this sum there fell to be deducted, for feu and vicarage* duty,
Session-Clerk’s salary, Synod and Presbytery dues, and Beddel’s
allowance, £3, 0s. 4d, leaving for the support of the poor £18. The
Session, in submitting this summary, declare that ‘the necessitous
have not been, and never are, half supplied by all that is in the
Session’s hands to give.’ To Lord Moray’s credit it has to be said
that he was the only one of the heritors who responded to this
appeal, and he did so in a very substantial way, by giving twelve
bolls of oats.
There was likewise much suffering among the poor in the years
1782-83. In addition to ten persons on the roll of paupers, there
were nineteen getting occasional relief. The heritors did the poor a
great service at this time by purchasing meal, and selling it
considerably below the cost price.
A few years later the parish suffered from a visitation of a
different kind. A species of fever made its appearance about the
beginning of the month of June 1790, and continued, with little
intermission, till January 1791. About a fourth part of the
inhabitants suffered from it.
From the accurate and detailed Statistical Account of the parish,
which Mr. Robert Liston contributed to Sir John Sinclair’s great
work, it is possible, even at this distant date, to reproduce pretty
fully the state of the parish towards the close of the eighteenth
century. The Wester Village projected itself, at the east end of the
main street, nearly down to the old bridge, and there the houses of
the Easter Village began, and continued the line, sweeping round the
north shoulder of the Castle knoll. Many of the houses on both sides
of the Dour, but especially in the Easter Village, were of a
superior kind, telling both of the desire for comfort, and the
possession of the means for obtaining it. A good solid
causey—although of a somewhat rough kind, as we have already
hinted—had run throughout the entire length of the village, but
before 1792 it had given place to a modern Macadamised road. And Mr.
Liston, for one, does not approve of the change ; for he thinks it
makes the houses on both sides of the street damp in winter, and
chokes the people with dust in summer. You hear the rattle of the
looms as, in imagination, you walk along the street. When all the
shuttles are in full play, you may hear the click of thirty-six of
them. You enter into conversation with one of the weavers, and find
him a very intelligent man. Invited into his loom-shop, you see,
without needing to ask, that the chief manufacture of the village is
a coarse kind of linen cloth, and a species of ticking; and your
friend the weaver tells you that about 530 of these webs are turned
out of the village looms in the course of a year,—more than ten
every week; and with his feet still resting on the treadles, and
looking over his glasses at you, he says there are from seventy to
eighty yards in each of these webs. Going out to the street, you
hear the birr of ever so many wheels, by means of which the wives,
or daughters, or sisters of the weavers, are preparing the pirns for
their use, and you begin to see what a number of persons this
weaving trade keeps busy and supports. Passing an open door, you see
a woman spinning lint on the two-handed wheel. You ask her what she
earns in the day at this kind of work, to which she replies, from
sixpence to eightpence, according as she is more or less busy. What
a number seem to be employed in spinning! But this is not all. As
you pass along the bridge—long ago a ruin—on your way to the Wester
Village, you see what a number of webs and hanks of yarn are spread
on both banks of the burn for the purpose of being bleached; and the
little stream purls none the less sweetly, and the trees look none
the less fresh and beautiful, and the Castle none the less lordly,
because the traces of industry are there, and the pleasant murmur of
human voices, and the happy laugh of children. But you have not
traced all the ramifications of the weaving trade yet. You see these
fields of lint, with flowers of azure hue, which meet you at every
turn in approaching the village. A good many of the inhabitants get
employment there at different seasons of the year, although,
perhaps, better-paying crops have now taken their place. And as the
master weaver, who employs several hands, flourishes, he gets masons
and carpenters to build new houses for him, or repair the old. You
ask the masons who are busy at a new house what their wages are a
day ; and the carpenters and they answer at the same time that their
wages are alike—eighteenpence a day. You put the same question to a
tailor who has stopped to speak to one of the masons, and he tells
you that he works in the homes of his employers, and for a day’s
sewing gets sixpence and his food.
You saunter down to the shore, and wonder that you see no carts
conveying coals to the harbour. You are told that work at the parish
coal-pits is suspended at present. Making inquiry as to the price of
coal at the nearest colliery, you learn that it is sixpence for the
load of eighteen stones. You have at length reached the harbour, and
getting into conversation with a seaman standing by, you ask him how
many of his craft there are in the village. He tells you that if all
the vessels belonging to the village were hauled on shore at the
‘Auld Moorins,’ and a muster made of the seamen, there would be
found about sixty of them. This, you conclude, must bring a good
deal of comfort into the village; and the old wives are beginning to
relish the tea and other dainties that their husbands or sons bring
them; and there are a few things in the village which the exciseman
would like to see, but will never be the better for knowing.
Sauntering up in the direction of the main street again, you meet a
farmer in the Coal-wynd, and puzzle him by asking how many of his
class there are in the parish. He counts his fingers over several
times, and tells you there are twenty-three, and that the real
rental of the parish is ^2600. You would like to know what the
arable ground in the parish brings, in the shape of rent. He tells
you that forty shillings the acre is a fair price for the most of
it; but some of it near the village is let at fifty shillings, and
even as high as sixty-five. You wish to know how many ploughs there
are in the parish. He owns himself fairly beat, but after a little
conference with a neighbour farmer, who is met as he is going to the
harbour, he informs you that there are fifty-eight, and that
eighteen of them are drawn on the village acres, which extend
westwards as far as the Dounans—Lord Moray’s avenue being as yet
unformed. You put a few queries regarding the wages of agricultural
labourers, and find that, when hired for short periods, their wages
run from eightpence to fourteenpence a day; but when hired from term
to term the wages of male farm-servants are from five to eight
pounds a year, and of female servants from two to three pounds, with
their food in both cases. You ask how many ale-houses there are in
the parish, and discover that there are five. Finally, you are
solicitous to know what the population of the parish is, and are
assured that just two years ago—that is, in 1790—the Census was
taken, when it was found that the number of inhabitants in the
village was 840, and in the landward part of the parish 440— 1280 in
all.
How strange to think that this was really the state of the parish
within the lifetime of some of the oldest men who are hearing me
to-night—who, if they in their turn were questioned, could tell
strange stories of the herring fishery at Aberdour and other places
on the Firth, first discovered by old John Brown at Donibristle. But
this, and other matters that come up along with it, are not within
the period with which it is our business to deal. Yet, think of it
again: all those busy looms are silent now, and they who plied them
are silent too in the churchyard. There is no bleaching of webs or
yarn now on the banks of the Dour. Where is the shipping of the
place, and where the sailors? Where, it may be asked, is the trade
of the place? and what is to become of the people when the trade is
entirely gone?
Now I must say I do not cherish gloomy forebodings as the result of
these questions being put. The aspect of village affairs has often
changed during the past years. These changes are really due to
general progress ; the next may be for the better. The exquisite
beauty of the place must ever make it a popular resort in summer,
and if its intensely interesting history were only known, and if the
Monastery of Inchcolme, the Hospital of St. Martha, the old Church
and Castle, and other interesting relics of the past, were only, to
the mind’s eye, peopled with the forms that once made them instinct
with life, a new charm would be added to the many which the
neighbourhood already has.
But with all the interest which I have in the things of the past,
and the lessons they are fitted to teach, I would on no account have
them back just as they were. If all the ‘outs and ins’ of those old
days had come as closely and fully before your eyes as they have
come before mine, you would not sigh for them either. The good that
characterised the past is often unconsciously exaggerated by the
aged, while the disagreeable and the bad are forgotten. In many
things we are far ahead of those who lived at the close of the
eighteenth century. Shame on us, if this were not the case! But let
us at the same time not forget that there are many noble lessons
taught us in the annals of the past, by which we ought to profit.
Before letting the curtain fall on the Rev. Robert Liston, it should
be mentioned that he died on the nth of February 1796, in the
sixty-sixth year of his age, and the forty-second of his ministry;
and his widow, who was a daughter of Mr. Henry Hardie, minister of
Culross, died at the close of the year 1814. They had five sons and
five daughters. Two of these sons became ministers,—Henry, at
Ecclesmachan, and William at Redgorton. Robert Liston, the
celebrated surgeon, was a son of the former, and descendants of the
latter have also distinguished themselves. Mr. Liston was succeeded
in the 'parish of Aberdour by the Rev. William Bryce, a son of the
Rev. Alexander Bryce of Kirknewton. He was presented to the charge
by George, Earl of Morton, and ordained in 1796. He had the degree
of Doctor of Divinity from the University of St. Andrews in 1820,
and held the appointments of one of His Majesty’s Chaplains in
Ordinary, and one of the Deans of the Chapel-Royal. But, for various
reasons, I am not to prosecute these researches further than the
close of the ministry of the Rev. Robert Liston.
There are, however, a few things connected with that period which
still demand a hasty glance. Near the close of last century the
threatened invasion of Britain by the French called forth a burst of
loyalty, which surprised even the friends of our country, and made
her enemies look aghast. And this feeling of loyalty, in accordance
with the genius of our countrymen, took a very practical turn
throughout the length and breadth of the land, and found decided
expression in our own parish. For, the formation of the Aberdour
corps of Volunteers was only one of a thousand similar
demonstrations that told of devotion to King and Country. The corps
began to drill on the 31st of July 1798, when their services were
declared to be accepted; and they were not disbanded till 1802. The
officers of the corps were Captain Hugh Coventry, Lieutenant James
Stuart, and Ensign David Cunningham; and the number of volunteers
was seventy. I believe I am speaking to some who remember their
evolutions in the ‘Volunteers’ Park,’ as it came to be called. I
find that only six members of the corps are now (1863) alive, viz.
James Law, Adam Brown, Gavin White, Robert M'Cartney, and Andrew
Grieve. The motto on the colours is an admirable one: Fidens in
am'mis, atque in utnimque paratus —Trustful in soul, and prepared
for whatever may happen —a motto that has a still higher
application, when used in reference to a still nobler kind of
warfare.
There are a few names connected with Aberdour, either by birth or
residence in it, which one likes to recall as reflecting honour on
the place. I have already referred to the sons of the Rev. Robert
Liston. From among the common people sprang George Bennet, who
wrought at the trade of a carpenter in the village, ere the
insatiable love of learning, which he unmistakably displayed, led
him to college halls. He was a man of remarkable scholarly
attainments, and had he published nothing more than his View of the
Intermediate State, as it appears in the Records of the Old and New
Testaments, the Apocryphal Books, in Heathen Authors, and the Greek
and Latin Fathers, it would have given him a high place among
scholars. Bishop Horsley says of this book, which was published in
1800, that ‘it is a work of various erudition and deep research.’
Mr. Bennet was a minister of the Gospel at Carlisle, and his son
became minister of the parish of Closeburn in Dumfriesshire. It may
not be known to all of you that a volume on Political Economy was
written in our village by Mr. Syme, uncle of the distinguished
surgeon and professor of that name. And I may recall the fact,
mentioned at an earlier stage, and in another connection, that Mrs.
Elizabeth Hamilton, authoress of Letters on Education, The Cottagers
of Glenburnie, and other works, not only lived for a time in the
parish, but drew from the neighbourhood many of the scenes depicted
in the last-named book,—although we have no wish to claim the
prototype of Mrs. M‘Clarty as a parishioner. James Stuart of Dunearn,
a cadet of the Moray family, has some claim as an author on our
notice. His name is unfortunately linked with the duel in which Sir
Alexander Boswell fell at Auchtertool. Mr. Stuart long lived in our
parish, at Hillside, the grounds of which he greatly beautified.
After the melancholy incident to which I have alluded, he travelled
in the United States, and afterwards wrote two volumes, giving a
description of his wanderings. These volumes are specially inviting
to those who know this neighbourhood, as objects of interest in
America are frequently compared or contrasted with familiar objects
in our own landscapes. There is another name that I must not pass
over, for, although not an author himself, a descendant of his
became famous as a theologian. In 1774 one of the Rev. Mr. Liston’s
elders was Andrew Cunningham, gardener to Lord Morton at Aberdour
Castle. He appears to have been a man of superior education, for we
frequently find him acting as Session-Clerk. This Andrew Cunningham
was the grandfather of Principal Cunningham of Edinburgh—one of the
greatest theologians which our country has produced.
And now I have finished my self-imposed task of telling you
something of what I have learned of the history of Aberdour and
Inchcolme; and I confess that it is with some feeling of sadness
that, after travelling with you through nearly seven centuries, my
labours in this domain are over. What at one time was a somewhat
obscure region has had some light shed on it, and what at first was
to my mind a dim, uninhabited district, has been peopled with forms
which look as if I had known them long. May I indulge the hope that
it has not been entirely in vain that so many hours have been spent
in trying to reproduce the past of our neighbourhood? It shall not
have been in vain if to any considerable extent it helps on in the
parish the causes which it has been my wish ever to keep prominently
in view in my humble labours,—the cause of intellectual progress,
the cause of social amelioration, the cause of moral purity, and the
cause of religion. |