AMID these "excursions and alarms"
democracy may be said to have made its first bid for power in modern
times in this country. It is notable enough, and significant of the
spirit and hereditary character of the people, that movements such
as this and the war of the Covenant against the arbitrary actions of
Charles I, should both have had their opening act played in Glasgow.
It may be claimed to have been the same racial quality which urged
William Wallace of Elderslie, near Glasgow, to strike the first blow
for freedom against the usurped authority of Edward I of England.
Meanwhile it is curious to remark that,
at the actual time of the Radical Rising, the Town Council had
reason to complain of certain acts of the Convention of Burghs which
illustrate one of the weaknesses and dangers of democracy. In the
Convention the representatives of all the royal burghs had equal
votes, though these burghs did not all contribute equally to the
funds at its disposal. A tendency had arisen for the representatives
of the smaller burghs, which had the majority of votes, to combine
in voting considerable sums to each other for purposes not always
strictly legitimate. Glasgow had always been generous in affording
help when disaster overtook any other community, or some smaller
burgh was faced with such extraordinary expenditure as the building
of a bridge or a harbour. But it was quite another matter when the
smaller burghs combined to impose assessments and then vote the
money for the relief of their own debts and the carrying out of
ambitious local schemes, in defiance of the larger burghs, which
were called upon to furnish nearly all the funds. So serious became
the grievance that in 1822 the Town Council appealed to Parliament,
suggesting that the money grants of the Convention should be
decided, not by majority of votes alone, but by majority and value
of votes. The appeal was without result. In 1823, out of the common
fund, Dumfries secured £400 for improvement of the navigation of the
Nith, and two years later Crail was granted £500 "upon public
grounds." With difficulty several later applications for grants of
money by the minor burghs were successfully resisted, but these
attempts at plunder brought the Convention itself into such
disrepute that after the passing of the Reform Act, it was proposed
to bring in a bill for its complete abolition. [Burgh Records, 27th
June, 23rd Sept., 1816; 9th Dec., 1818; 9th May, 1822; 25th July,
1823; 12th Aug., 1825; 19th July, 1832; 19th July, 1833.]
Strangely enough, at the same time,
progress in another arena had also its obverse to show, and Glasgow
had something more than its own share of a terror which affected not
so much the living as the dead. The medical schools at the
universities of Edinburgh and Glasgow were then developing rapidly,
and one of their difficulties was the scarcity of subjects for
dissection in the anatomy classes. The bodies of criminals who were
hanged were handed over for the purpose till one terrible occasion
when, in the course of an experiment in galvanism in Glasgow the
murderer came to life again. To the horror of those present, the man
opened his eyes, breathed, and began to rise from his chair,
whereupon the professor, Dr. James Jeffrey, sprang forward and
plunged a lancet into his jugular artery. After this occurrence the
judges ceased to order the bodies of executed criminals to be handed
over for dissection.
To secure subjects a practice then
grew up of plundering graveyards of their newly buried dead.
Spring-guns and other devices were employed by the public to prevent
desecration, and one student was actually shot in the Blackfriars
churchyard ; but the practice went on. When it was known that even
the Cathedral graveyard had been plundered, public indignation
reached its height, and a mob smashed Dr. Jeffrey's windows in the
College. Following the disappearance of the body of a Mrs.
M'Allister from the Ramshorn burying-ground, a warrant was issued,
and a police raid was made on the dissecting rooms of Dr. Pattison
in College Street. There, at the bottom of a tub full of water, were
found some remains, including a jawbone with teeth, recognised by
her dentist as those of the missing woman. In consequence, Dr.
Pattison, his assistant, and two of his students were tried before
the High Court in Edinburgh on 6th June, 1814. The accused were
acquitted because of a technical flaw in the evidence—parts of the
body identified as that of Mrs. M'Allister, who was a mother of
children, were proved to be those of an unmarried woman. But public
resentment was so strong that Dr. Pattison found it necessary to
emigrate to America, and the activities of the resurrectionists
ceased for a time. On a revival of these activities in 1823
associations of watchers were formed in the different parts of the
city, [Burgh Records, 20th May, 25th July, 1823; 23rd Feb., 1825.]
and till quite recently in certain of the city burying-grounds were
to be seen the heavy railed iron enclosures erected by the wealthier
classes over their family graves, and the watch-towers from which
relatives kept guard till the danger of desecration was past. It was
not till after the trial in Edinburgh in 1829 of the notorious Burke
and Hare, who had murdered no fewer than fifteen persons, and sold
their bodies to the College professors for dissection, that
arrangements were made by law for an adequate supply of subjects for
anatomical purposes. [The Anatomy Act, 1832, 2 and 3 Will. IV. C.
75. The story of the Glasgow resurrectionists is given with much
detail by Peter Mackenzie in his Reminiscences of Glasgow, vol. ii.
pp. 462-500.]
Another need of the University just
then provided the city with an amenity which may be allowed to have
offset the terror of the body-snatching. Hitherto, as part of its
pleasure-grounds, the college had possessed a botanic garden on the
ground which sloped down, behind its quadrangles, to the Molendinar.
But the building of the Hunterian Museum there, and the increasing
smoke of the city, had destroyed the suitability of the spot. These
drawbacks led to the formation of another pleasure-ground for the
citizens. In 1816 a society was formed, for which nearly £6000 were
subscribed in ten-guinea shares, to establish a Botanic Garden in a
more favourable location. The University subscribed £2000 on the
understanding that a lecture room and the plants in the garden
should be available for the use of the Botany class, and the
Government also made a grant of £2000 out of the teinds of the burgh
and the Barony parish. [Burgh Records, 5th March, 1824.] The society
was incorporated as the Glasgow Royal Botanic Institution by the
Prince Regent; it bought some six acres of land on the Sauchiehall
Road, a mile to the west of the city, and proceeded with much
enthusiasm to lay out the ground for the twin purposes of science
and pleasure. [Later in the century Fitzroy Place was built on the
spot, and the Gardens were removed to Great Western Road. They
remained a private possession till 1887, when they were taken over
by the Corporation, and they were opened as a public park in 1891.]
An amenity of greater importance was
the lighting of the city by coal gas. As early as 1792 William
Murdoch, the Ayrshire engineer and inventor, who was afterwards
manager of Boulton and Watt's engineering works at Soho, lighted the
offices and miners' cottages at Redruth in Cornwall with gas
distilled from coal. In 1813 Westminster Bridge was lit with the new
illuminant, and the device began to spread throughout the country.
Glasgow was still lit by dim oil lamps in 1816, [Mackenzie,
Reminiscences, ii. 141.] when a committee approached the Town
Council with the suggestion that it should either itself embark on
the enterprise of lighting Glasgow with gas, or give its countenance
to a private company to be formed for the purpose. The Town Council
cautiously chose the latter alternative, but agreed to take shares
to the amount of £500 in the Gas Light Company, [Burgh Records, 15th
Oct., 19th Nov., 27th Dec., 1816.] which was then formed, with a
capital of £40,000. The Company's light was first turned on at the
grocery store of James Hamilton, at 128 Trongate, on 5th September,
1818, and on the 18th, when a great audience crowded the Theatre
Royal in Queen Street, to see Mozart's "Giovanni," the grand crystal
lustre hanging from the roof was, for the first time, "illuminated
with sparkling gas." [Mackenzie, Reminiscences, ii. 141. A
very full account of this great occasion is furnished by the gossipy
historian.]
Notwithstanding the progress and
growth of the city thus indicated, it is curious to note that, so
late as 1817, when a public market was formed upon its site, there
was still a bowling-green on the east side of Candleriggs, [Burgh
Records, 28th Feb., 1817.] and that not till the same year could
imported goods be placed in bond in Glasgow, Greenock and the parent
city having been regarded, for customs purposes, merely as "creeks"
of Port-Glasgow till 1812. [Ibid. 16th Dec., 1817; 18th May, 1818.
"Reminiscences of Glasgow Custom House." in Glasg. Archeol. Soc.
Transactions, 1st Series, vol. i. pp. 55, 57-8.] Not less curious is
the fact that as late as 1818 the Town Council actually consented to
the proposal of Campbell of Blythswood to have his lands of
Blythswood, which were separated from the royalty of Glasgow only by
St. Enoch's Burn, erected into a separate burgh of barony. [Ibid.
25th June, 1818.] In dealing with this proposal, however, the Town
Council was sufficiently alive to the possibilities of the city's
development to stipulate that its consent should form no bar to
future extension of Glasgow's boundary to the westward.
The Council was also sufficiently
conscious of the development of democratic ideas to agree to join
the Merchants House and the Trades House in considering whether a
change in the method of electing its members might be "conducive to
the public welfare." This was a concession to the stalwarts of the
Trades' House, which had made an attack on the time-honoured plan of
the Town Council itself electing its successors. [Ibid. 9th July,
1818; 27th May, 1819.]
The city fathers also showed
themselves so modern and free from prejudice as to concede a
substantial request of the four Seceding congregations in the city.
The form of the oath to be taken by burgesses at their enrolment had
brought about the notorious split between the "Burgher" and the
"Anti-Burgher" religious bodies. This oath, as a matter of fact, had
for a long time ceased to be applied in Glasgow, and the Town
Council found no difficulty in agreeing to abolish it altogether.
[Ibid. 25th March, 1819.]
Shortly afterwards the Council
conferred a favour on another of the dissenting "bodies" of the
city, by agreeing to purchase the Methodist chapel and schoolrooms
in Great Hamilton Street. The building was transformed into yet
another city church—the ninth—and received the name of St. James's.
The new church was expected to relieve the Tron and St. John's of
part of the immense Ioad of pauperism attached to them, and also to
afford a fair trial to Dr. Chalmers's plan of management, and thus
reduce the city's assessment for the poor. [Ibid. 28th Jan., 14th
Feb., 27th July, 1820.]
By that time the reign of George
III.—one of the longest in British history—was drawing to a close.
On 29th January, 1820, the old King died. The Town Council duly sent
an address of congratulation to his successor, George IV., [Burgh
Records, 11th Feb., 1810.] but one of the first acts of the new King
raised an undesired commotion in the city. The bill of pains and
penalties which he caused to be introduced into the House of Lords
to procure a divorce from Queen Caroline excited throughout the
country a large amount of sympathy for the Queen. A granddaughter of
George II. and a cousin of the King, she had been forced as a bride
by George III. upon his son, and she had been deserted by her
husband a year after her marriage, persecuted by his mistresses, and
subjected to repeated indignities. Glasgow was just then distracted
by the Radical Rising and the trials and executions which followed,
but an address was drawn up by a committee of citizens, and sent,
with 35,000 signatures, notwithstanding the opposition of the
magistrates, to the unhappy Queen. The majority for the third
reading of the bill in the House of Lords on 10th November was so
small that the Premier, the Earl of Liverpool, withdrew the measure,
and when the news reached Glasgow the event was celebrated with
illuminations and the lighting of bonfires. Fearful of trouble,
after their recent experience, the magistrates caused the Riot Act
to be read, and called out the dragoons and artillery. No
disturbance took place, but on the soldiers proceeding to disperse a
crowd at the foot of Saltmarket, large numbers crowded upon the
wooden bridge at the spot, and under their weight it broke down, and
threw them into the river. Fortunately the tide was out and no lives
were lost. [Macgregor, History, p. 410.]
In the following year the King's
coronation was celebrated in Glasgow with an entertainment in the
town hall and fireworks on the Green; [Burgh Records, 24th July,
1821.] but in London the poor Queen was forcibly excluded from the
coronation ceremony itself in Westminster Abbey, and soon afterwards
died broken-hearted.
A year later still saw George IV.'s
visit to Scotland. Largely on the invitation of Sir Walter Scott, he
was splendidly feted in Edinburgh, which had received no visit from
a crowned monarch since Charles I. came and went uncomfortably,
nearly two centuries before. Before the event Glasgow Town Council
enquired whether the King intended to honour their city with a
visit, but received an answer from the Home Secretary, Mr. Peel,
that on account of the limited time at his disposal His Majesty
would be unable to visit the West of Scotland. No doubt the recent
Radical Rising, and the rejoicings in the city over the failure of
his action against Queen Caroline, had not a little to do with this
decision, as with the previous refusal of Prince Leopold.
The questionable reputation of
Glasgow as a law-abiding place was under a cloud just then for other
reasons also. In the preceding February, on the rumour that a colour
merchant named Provand was implicated with the resurrectionists, a
furious mob broke into his house in Clyde Street and destroyed its
contents. So serious was the outbreak that the Riot Act had to be
read and the military called out. In consequence five persons were
transported, and one was whipped through the city. [The culprit on
that occasion was the last on whom the punishment of public whipping
was inflicted in Glasgow.]
Again on Saturday, 21st July, less
than a month before the King's visit to Scotland, occurred the great
outbreak in which a mob threw down the wall at Westthorn, by which
Thomas Harvey, a distiller, sought to close the footpath by the
riverside. On this occasion an actual conflict occurred with the
Inniskilling Dragoons, and several persons were thrown into the
Clyde. [The question of right of way was decided against Harvey by
the Court of Session in the following year.]
No whit daunted, however, by the
King's refusal to come to Glasgow, the Town Council voted £1000 for
the expenses of a deputation to Edinburgh, where the Lord Provost
duly presented a somewhat effusive address. The deputation stayed in
the capital for upwards of a week, "in suitable style and with state
equipage." It had the honour of kissing hands at a levee at the
Palace of Holyrood House on 17th August, and a month later the Town
Council subscribed one hundred guineas for an equestrian statue to
commemorate His Majesty's "auspicious visit to Scotland." [Burgh
Records, 2nd Aug., 6th Sept., 26th Sept., 1822.]
While the civic chiefs were thus
sunning themselves in the smiles of royalty at Edinburgh, it is only
fair to say that they were by no means neglecting the town's
interests at home. They were widening and strengthening the Old
Bridge of Glasgow at the foot of the Briggate, on plans drawn up by
the engineer Telford, at a cost of £5590; [Ibid. 8th March, 1822.]
they were carrying on active operations to ascertain the value of
the coal seams under Glasgow Green; [Ibid. 15th, 26th Nov., 1821;
31st May, 23rd July, 19th Nov., 1822; 3rd June, 1824. There were
found to be six seams of coal, of a thickness altogether of 24 feet
9 inches.] and they were anxiously considering the possibilities of
applying a recent Act of Parliament for the consumption of the
factory smoke which already was darkening the city's atmosphere and
blackening its walls. [Ibid. 8th Nov., 1822.]
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