GENEALOGICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL REMARKS
Family of Blackader—Notices of the Colonel’s early life—He studies
at Edinburgh—Enters the Army—Anecdotes of Dr. William Blackader.
Lieutenant Colonel John Blackader was a
native of Dumfries-shire. He was born in the parish of Glencairn, on
the 14th of September, 1664. His father, the Rev. John Blackader,
was minister of Troqueer in the presbytery of Dumfries; and expelled
at the restoration of Charles IL for refusing to comply with
Episcopacy, which the government had imprudently introduced in
opposition to the wishes of the church and the nation. Of his early
life, very little is known beyond a few incidental notices, until he
entered the army in his 25th year. It is then, chiefly, that our
acquaintance with him must commence : But as there is, in general, a
curiosity to know more of the history of a distinguished individual
than his personal adventures, some preliminary notices of his family
will not, I am persuaded, be unacceptable to the reader.
Genealogical detail is not our purpose, and has been given elsewhere
; yet on this subject, a few observations may be premised, without
overstepping the restrictions of Biography.
Colonel Blackader’s parentage was highly respectable. He had the
honour to be connected, by propinquity of blood and hereditary
descent, with the ancient baronage of Scotland. The original family
was Blackader of that Ilk in Berwickshire, who had acquired
considerable renown for their military achievements in the Border
feuds, so early as the minority of James II. towards the middle of
the fifteenth century. The lands from which they derived their name
were the gift of that prince, conferred as a reward for their
patriotic and enterprising activity in defending the eastern
frontier, against the frequent and often sanguinary depredations of
the English. An extensive addition was afterwards made to their
property, by a marriage with the heiress of Tulliallan, an estate in
Perthshire. This became afterwards the seat of the family, when the
avaricious pretensions of arrival clan, the Homes of Wedderburn, had
violently dispossessed them of their patrimonial estate in the Merse.
The castle, now in ruins, stands on the northern bank of the Forth,
near Kincardine. It belonged to the late Lord Keith, and; was for
several generations, the residence of the Blackaders, Barons of
Tulliallan.
The House of Blackader formed at various times matrimonial
connexions of the first respectability. They were allied, by
intermarriage, to the noble family of Douglas of Angus, Graham Earls
of Monteith, and Bruce of Clackmannan, whose line still survives in
the Earl of Elgin and Kincardine.
Living in the days of war and chivalry, they seem to have imbibed,
in no inconsiderable proportion, the-martial spirit of those heroic
ages. Stimulated by the maxims of a perverse errantry, which made it
fashionable to court danger for the love of fame,—to seek military
glory in every perilous enterprise, their romantic courage led them
to wander in search of honourable adventures under the standard of
foreign princes. A small body of them volunteered for the cause of
Henry VII. in the wars of York and Lancaster. They were present at
the battle of Bosworth, the field that terminated the life and reign
of the ambitious Richard, and restored the Red Rose to its ancient
ascendancy. The heir of Blackader followed the banner of the
Douglases at Flodden, and perished, with many of his kinsmen, in
that disastrous contest. They espoused the part of the unfortunate
Mary, and sided with the Cavaliers in the parliamentary wars of
Charles I. There was a cadet of this family in the Spanish service,
under Ludovic, Earl of Crawford; and another served with Gustavus
Adolphus, King of Sweden, in his campaigns for relief of the
distressed Protestants in Germany. One of their last lineal
representatives, raised a body of troops, and joined the Earl of
Glencairn, who, with some of the • Highland Chiefs in 1653,
assembled a considerable force in the North to repel the usurpations
of Cromwell—the last effort that was made to retrieve the departing
liberties, and preserve the ancient independence of Scotland.
The Blackaders made some figure in the ecclesiastical,' as well as
in the military annals of their country. Prior to the Reformation,
they possessed official jurisdiction and monkish’ dignities in
various churches and monasteries. In those days, the rich patrimony
of the church offered a prize worthy of competition. Spiritual
titles and monastic revenues were contested with the same eagerness
as earthly crowns, and. often with the same arms. The lucrative
endowments of religious foundations were either monopolized by the
nobles, or seized by those who could hack their pious claims with
force, and by casting the sword into the scale, make the balance of
justice turn in their favour. The Priory of Coldingham was, filled
repeatedly by members of the Blackader family, one of whom was
murdered, with six of his domestics, to make way for William
Douglas, brother to the Earl of Angus. Another of them was Dean of
Dunblane, and suffered the same fate; another,' Archdeacon of
Glasgow, who fell in a skirmish at Edinburgh with the rival faction
of the Homes; and another, Abbot of Dundrennan in Galloway. Of this
House also, was Robert,. Bishop of Aberdeen, who was afterwards
translated, to Glasgow, and became the first Metropolitan of that
See. It was during his incumbency, and chiefly through his interest
with Pope Sextus IV. and his successor, Innocent VIII. that this new
Archbishopric was erected,—a measure, resented with jealous
indignation by his Grace of St. Andrews, and like to have occasioned
a dangerous schism in this remote province of the Catholic
dominions.
The Last Baron of Tulliallan, Sir John, was, in 1626, created by
Charles I. one of the Knights Baronets of Nova Scotia,—a dignity
which none of his posterity over enjoyed. Being of a wasteful and
extravagant turn, he impoverished his estate, and. retired to the
eontinent. He bore a commission for some time in the French Guards,
and died in America about the year 1651. To the title of this Knight
Baronet, Colonel Blackader’s father lived to be the lineal heir,
having survived all nearer claimants. But as the prodigality of its
first possessor had reduced it to an empty honour, it was never
assumed either by himself, or any of his descendants.
Colonel Blackader was from a younger branch of the Tulliallan
family, who possessed the lands and barony of Blairhall, near
Culross. One of his immediate progenitors, his great grand-father,
married a daughter of the celebrated Robert Pont, minister of St
Cuthberts, near Edinburgh, an eminent Reformer, son-in-law to John
Knox, and one of the last of the clerical order that sat as a Lord
of Session.
But of all this remote and once opulent ancestry, nothing remained
to Colonel Blackader except the name. He inherited no other
advantage from it than the frivolous boast of an ancient and
honourable pedigree. Long before his birth, the fortunes of his
family had become extinct, partly through domestic embarrassments,
and partly from the desolating effects that always follow the storms
and convulsions of political or religious hostilities, in a kingdom
divided against itself. These deficiencies, however, he repaired by
the celebrity of his own character. His reputation as a brave
officer, is a monument that will survive when the glory of
hereditary distinctions has perished. His piety, as a devout
Christian, has earned him a more illustrious title than any he could
have derived from antiquity of blood, or elevation of birth.
His father, as has been already noticed, was a minister of the
church of Scotland. The history of this worthy and excellent man,
besides his personal sufferings, exhibits, at considerable length, a
detail of the various cruelties and oppressions to which this
country was subjected for twenty-eight years, under the Episcopal
persecution. He bore a proportional share of the toils and
harrassings of that unhappy period, being one of the most
indefatigable and intrepid preachers of his time. Though expelled
from his charge at Troqueer, he did not renounce the ministerial
privileges of his office when deprived of its temporalities. Denied
access to the established pulpits, he erected the standard of
religious liberty in the fields, and was one of the first three who
ventured their lives for the free preaching of the gospel.
His itinerary labours were continued for nearly twenty years, with a
zeal and perseverance truly apostolical, and a success altogether
astonishing. His exertions were not circumscribed to Dumfries-shire
or Galloway, but extended to almost every county south of the Tay.
There was scarcely a hill, a moor, or a glen in the southern and
western districts of Scotland, where he did not hold a conventicle,
or celebrate a communion. In these excursions he was frequently the
companion and co-adjutor of Welsh, Peden, Cargill, and other
undaunted Covenanters, who maintained the rights and the freedom of
their national worship, in the face of peril and sword. In 1674, lie
was proclaimed rebel and fugitive, and a premium of a thousand merks
offered to any that should kill or apprehend him. But the goodness
of providence, with every danger, made a way for his escape,
preserving him from the violence of barbarous edicts, and bloody
executioners. After the defeat at Bothwell-Bridge, he went over to
Holland, where he made a short stay, and proved eminently
serviceable in allaying those irritations and ill-natured debates
that had sprung up among the refugees, from want of proper
information on the true state of Scottish affairs. On his return, he
was apprehended at Edinburgh, in his own house, and sent a prisoner
to the Bass Rock, then employed as a convenient receptacle for the
persecuted victims of Prelacy. In this bleak and solitary isle, he
lingered several years in rigorous captivity. The harshness of his
treatment, and the ungenial air of the place, terminated his days.
He died in 1685, and was buried in the church-yard of Nortli-Berwick,
the adjacent parish.
It was about two years after his father’s ejection, that Colonel
Blackader was born. He was the youngest of five sons, all of whom he
survived.
The act that extruded the presbyterian ministers, strictly forbade
residence or intercourse with their vacant parishes. The penalties
of the law, in case of nonconformity, were a total suspension of
their salaries, banishment without the bounds of their respective
presbyteries, and a prohibition to settle within ten miles of their
former churches. In compliance with these injunctions, Mr Blackader
had retired to Glencairn, which was beyond the boundaries of the
act. There he was accommodated with the house of Barndennoch, a seat
of the Dowager Lady Craigdarroch, in the immediate neighbourhood of
Minnyhive. In this retreat, he had continued until the winter of
1666, when he was obliged, for greater security, to withdraw to
Edinburgh, as reports of his boldness in field-preaching had reached
the ears of the council, and attracted the notice of the military
who were posted in the districts of Galloway and Nithsdale, to guard
the new Episcopal incumbents, and compel the refractory parishioners
to attend their sermons.
A party of Sir James Turner’s men attacked his house, but
fortunately he had made his escape. Disappointed of their prey, they
threatened to wreak their vengeance on the objects that remained.
They burnt the furniture, destroyed or carried away books and
provisions, and having pillaged the house, they left the helpless
family to shift for themselves. The eldest son went to Edinburgh.
The Colonel, then a child, and the rest of his brothers, were
secreted by such people in the neighbourhood as dared, on their
account, to hazard the penalties of Reset and Converse. From the
state of the country at that time, when it was peremptorily
forbidden to hold intercourse with disaffected persons, or make
charitable contributions for their support, it required both courage
and humanity to afford them shelter or concealment. All who were
found guilty of these benevolent transgressions were punishable by
fine, imprisonment, or death. But the rigour of the law could not
shut up the channels of compassion, or extirpate the common
sympathies of nature. Notwithstanding these legal prohibitions,
charity was often brave enough to extend her relief, and
sufficiently ingenious to elude detection. Many were ready to peril
their own comfort and their own lives, in pity to those little
victims of oppression. Hundreds of destitute and wandering fugitives
found a sanctuary in the compassionate hospitality of tlieif
countrymen.
So soon as circumstances would permit, Mr Blackader collected his
scattered family. They resided chiefly in Edinburgh, until his
death, sharing with him his privacy and restraints, according as the
storm of persecution raged or abated. In the midst of confusion and
distraction, he seems to have paid every attention to their literary
and religious attainments; employing the intervals of his
professional engagements in storing their minds with useful
instruction; He himself taught them the rudiments of classical
learning, and furnished them with an education, apparently beyond
his means and opportunities. They had all attended the ordinary
courses of Humanity and Philosophy in the College of Edinburgh,
notwithstanding the political impediments with which academical
studies were then fettered.
Shortly after the Restoration, the Universities were subjected to
the same restrictions as the church. It became a matter of the
greatest importance to secure the seats of learning, and have the
instructors of youth seasoned with proper principles. No professor,
regent, or master was allowed to continue, or he admitted into
office, unless he took the oath of allegiance to the king, and
acknowledged the government of the church by bishops. And none,
except persons thus qualified, were allowed, under pain of
rebellion, to congregate any number of scholars, or teach such
languages and sciences as were taught at the Unhersi-ties. The
College of Edinburgh was more tardy in her compliance, than her
sister seminaries. Disaffection was there more firmly rooted, and
continued longer; and some of her members even chose deposition, in
preference to conformity. Matters, however, were not urged with the
same violence and precipitancy in the schools, as they had been in
the church.
Impositions so adverse to the prevailing sentiments of the nation,
greatly impaired the interests of learning, and the prosperity of
the Universities. Such as had adequate finances, repaired to the
continent, and studied under foreign masters. At Edinburgh, about
.the time of Colonel Blackader’s attendance, the number of students
had fallen off exceedingly. So few were the candidates for the
annual degrees, that it was sometimes thought needless to go through
the ceremony of public laureation. One reason of this extraordinary
deficiency was, the conditions imposed upon all applicants for
literary' honours. No candidate was permitted to graduate without
taking the oaths to the government, civil and ecclesiastical. This
constrained many, after finishing their regular course of studies,
to take their degrees in some foreign University, where letters were
not shackled by any political disabilities. For this purpose, Mr
Blackader sent two of his sonff abroad, the eldest to graduate as a
physician at Leyden, the most celebrated school of Medicine in the
world, and the other to study Theology at Utrecht, where it would
appear he had also designed to send his youngest son, the Colonel,
had he been in a capacity to defray his expenses. Whether his father
had destined him for the church, may be uncertain, but be speaks of
him as a youth of promise and abilities, and laments the degraded
and neglected state of education in his own country.
From Colonel Blackader’s future life and reflections, it is manifest
he had imbibed early impressions of religion. At twelve years of
age, he is said to have been admitted a communicant to the sacrament
of the Lord’s Supper. He appears to have frequently attended
conventicles and communions, which were celebrated in the open
fields, and which had begun about 1677, to attract immense crowds of
hearers from all parts of the country. He speaks, in his Diary, with
rapture of those quickening and refreshing ordinances, and
complains, that he felt not on Sabbaths, in the army abroad, the
same ardent desires and tender meltings of soul that he used to have
in Scotland. Amidst the confusion of battles, and the licentiousness
of camps, he reverts, with a mixture of delight and regret, to the
days of old, when he went with the multitude that kept solemn fast,
and took sweet counsel together. His piety, though early, proved
uniform and abiding.
Much, doubtless, in the formation of his character, hmst be ascribed
to the influence of his father’s instructions and example; yet
devotion seems, as it were, to have been inherent in his
constitution, and all his inclinations, from his tenderest years,
happily predisposed to virtue. His infant steps were trained with
care to the paths of righteousness. In his heavenly career, he
marched onward steadily and progressively, without straying or
degenerating from his course,—his life advancing to perfection like
the morning light, and shining to the last with increasing
brightness. It Was his glory and felicity to maintain his integrity
in a station, so replete with dangers and temptations, where the
mind is so apt to contract a contrary bias, and where a negative
innocence, or an exemption from the more flagrant vices, may be
regarded as virtues of rare and difficult attainment.
We have not, in his instance, an example which we sometimes find in
the histories of good men, of the subduing power of regenerating
grace over a reprobate and unrenewed heart,—of the mysterious
efficacy with which it operates in awakening and transforming
sinners, to all appearance irrecoverably lost, who, after having
given in to every lawless excess, have been suddenly recovered, as
by miracle, from the most daring profanity, or the grossest
licentiousness. It is remarkable by what variety of means the plans
of mercy are accomplished, and what trivial, and as it were,
fortuitous incidents are often made the occasion of producing the
most surprising and memorable changes. The hearing of a sermon, the
accidental perusal of a book, an afflicting dispensation, or some
unforeseen deliverance, has frequently been to many the instrument
of removing the scales of error and darkness from their eyes, and
altering the whole course and system of their lives. We read of
some, who, having outlived the religious impressions of their youth,
and the?, companions of their folly, and after years spent in utter
alienation from God, have been reclaimed from their long wanderings,
back to the paths of virtue and piety. Conviction is made to
rekindle those sparks of divine grace which seemed Utterly quenched
in the sink of depravity,—to touch, as it were, with a live coal
from the celestial altar, that truth which had lain so long buried
and captive in their hearts. We have seen the most devoted slaves of
vice, arrested in their wiki career of profligacy, while pm-suing,
with headlong eagerness, the phantoms of unworthy delights—overtaken
with mercy at the solitary unexpected hour, when concerting with
their own corrupt hearts some new scheme of guilty pleasures. Even
the sceptic and the infidel have been subdued in spite of all their
reasonings and their railleries ; remorse has touched their
consciences, or a ray of heavenly light has penetrated their minds,
and unveiled their danger in all its horrors to their terrified
imaginations. Frequently has religion thus seen her bitterest
enemies become her most zealous votaries, and transformed into her
brightest ornaments. These truths require not the corroboration of
particular instances, they are illustrated in the lives of departed
saints, as well as in many living examples who still remain
monuments to the victorious power of divine grace. Let none,
however, take encouragement from such recoveries to continue in sin,
that for this cause they may obtain mercy, or that a miracle of
special grace may he wrought in their behalf. To reckon fearlessly
on this interposition, is to tempt the Holy Spirit, and rely on the
grossest presumption. Such instances are recorded or permitted for
our instruction, and not for our imitation: and though it he true
that there may he joy in heaven over a repentant sinner, more than
over ninety-nine righteous persons that went not astray; yet ought
we to carry this caution along with us, that where one escapes the
consequences of his presumption, nine hundred perish in their
iniquities.
With such a religious cast of mind, it may appear singular that
Colonel Blackader should have embraced a military life. It seems to
he the profession, to which, by habit and education, he was least
adapted, and in which he was likely to encounter more occasions of
annoyance and vexation than in any other. The army, however, may
probably have been an object of necessity, more than of choice with
him. Other situations might be more eligible, but considering the
political and pecuniary circumstances of his family, we may suppose
they were placed beyond his reach. The government that had
proclaimed his father a rebel, was not likely to open to him the
gates of favour and preferment. But at the time he entered the
service, there were inducements of a peculiar kind. The memorable
Revolution was achieved, but not yet confirmed. The country,
emerging from slavery, and still smarting under the rod. of
oppression, made an appeal to the patriotism of every citizen, to
take arms in the common cause,—an appeal which must have been doubly
enforced by the remembrance of past in-j uries, and the hope of a
glorious deliverance. These considerations laid an imperative
command on every man of public spirit and right feeling, to stand
forth, if not to avenge their common wrongs, at least to secure
their recent victory. In this light, they must have appeared to
Colonel Blackader, who had himself been a sufferer, and seems to
have possessed an abundant share of natural bravery. A sense of duty
alone, at such a juncture, might overcome that scrupulous reluctance
to war and bloodshed, which is a characteristic of every true
Christian.
Whatever dislike or aversion may be felt, and every humane spirit
must feel a dislike to engage in civil or foreign hostilities, yet
there are times of necessity when the public welfare rises paramount
to every other consideration, when backwardness or negligence would
be criminal. Although it is forbidden to propagate or maintain
religion by force, the use of the sword is nowhere prohibited in
defence of the established authorities. When the peace and safety of
the state are in danger, the magistrate is not only empowered, but
obliged to employ arms for the suppression of anarchy and
insubordination. The military profession, so far from being
condemned as unlawful, is expressly countenanced and sanctioned in
Scripture. The manifest tendency of religion undoubtedly is, to
disincline and restrain men from quarrelings and fightings; to
abolish war, not by proscribing the use of carnal weapons, but by
rooting out of the heart those passions of envy, hatred, and
ambition that make them unlawful; by rendering men just, merciful,
and peaceable; by inspiring them with that benevolence and
philanthropy which is the distinguishing badge of Christian
fellowship. But unfortunately, men do not yield themselves up to its
dominion, nor allow its benign influence to predominate and take the
lead in their affections. And so long as human nature is constituted
in its present form, to expect the universal reign of peace and
good-will, were to indulge a chimerical hope, a millennial dream,
that will never be realized. Thus, while Christianity condemns
decidedly unjust aggressions and unnecessary bloodshed; while it
recommends strongly to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of
peace, it inculcates, at the same time, energy and activity when the
country requires the aid of defensive arms. Such being the case,
every patriotic citizen will feel it his duty to make his private
inclinations give way to the general interest. These were evidently
the views and feelings which Colonel Blackader entertained upon the
subject, and which alone could have reconciled him to an occupation
to which lie was naturally disinclined.
Previously to his entering the army, two of his brothers, especially
the eldest, had made themselves rather conspicuous by the active
share they had taken in public affair^, and it is probable, had not
the power of the Council been disarmed by the Revolution, the whole
family might have felt the effects of their vengence. 2 Dr Blackader
was much in the confidence of the leading characters, both in
Scotland and Holland, and had frequently been employed by them in
negotiating political transactions. He had several times passed
between the two countries on expeditions of intelligence; and twice
narrowly escaped torture. The first time was in 1685, when he came
over with the Earl of Argyle, who had made a descent on the western
coast of Scotland. He and Spence, the Earl’s secretary, had put
ashore at Orkney, to procure information, hut were apprehended and
despatched to Edinburgh to he examined. On their landing at Leith,
they were conducted by the guard for examination before the Privy
Council. The sister of Dr. Blackader joined the crowd that followed
them, anxious to be of service to him, for none of his brothers
durst appear. But she was not allowed to approach near enough for
conversation. The soldiers repulsed her with their muskets. Her
person, however, had caught his eye, for she observed him looking at
her with expressive steadfastness; and pointing at his hat, as if to
draw her attention particularly to it. Struck with the idea that
this was the mysterious symbol of some important secret in reference
to his examination, she immediately returned to Edinburgh, and
finding among his luggage, which had been forwarded to a private
lodging, a hat belonging to him, she discovered papers concealed
under the lining, of such a nature, that had they been detected, the
consequence might have proved fatal to himself, as well as to
several others. These she immediately destroyed, and by this
well-timed resolution, averted the danger that threatened his life;
for immediately a party of soldiers entered the house in search of
papers, but without success, as nothing suspicious was to be found.
He and Spence, however, were closely imprisoned in separate rooms,
in order to try if evidence could be expiscated by torture. They
were interdicted all communication with their friends, and denied
the use of pen, ink, or paper.
Here again Dr. Blackader was rescued by an intrigue of his brother,
who had but recently returned from Stockholm in Sweden. He had
provided himself with a large tin or white-iron box, with a secret
opening underneath, and a double bottom, between which writing
materials might be concealed. This he took with him, and ascending a
common stair immediately opposite the prisoner’s chamber, he
remained there until he observed him through the grating of his
window. He shewed him the secret opening, and the materials with
which it was furnished. Next day he sent a servant with the open
box, full of salad, in the one hand, and a shoulder of roasted
mutton in the other, which were admitted by the keeper without
suspicion. The Doctor immediately wrote a letter to Holland to the
Pensionary Fagel, who represented his case to the British Envoy, and
by his means, an express was sent to the Council granting the
prisoner a remission, and ordering his liberation, Dr. Blackader was
apprehended a second time in the year 1688. He and Colonel Cleland
were sent over by the banished lords and gentlemen in Holland, the
former to Edinburgh, the other to the west country, to pave the way
for the Prince of Orange’s landing, by encouraging their friends,
and sounding the dispositions of the people. The Doctor had a
commission to transmit to the Prince a weekly account of all that
passed, and let him know how the nation stood affected to his cause.
.He was also charged with the secret correspondence between Murray
of Tibbermore, and Lord Murray, son to the Marquis of Athole.#
Having imprudently ventured into the castle, he was seized by order
of the Governor, the Duke of Gordon. Some letters and mystical
characters being found upon him, he was committed for trial, and
threatened with the boot and thumbkins. His examination, however,
was delayed, until the rumour spread that the Prince of Orange was
landed, and had got possession of London. The fears of the Council
then superseded their desires of revenge, and the prisoner, was
immediately set at liberty. |