In December 1701 the Town Council
debated the method to be taken for addressing the King regarding the
serious decay of trade in Glasgow, [The economic condition of the
Northern Kingdom altogether had reached a depth of very serious
depression. Dr. Thomas Somerville, author of The History of Great
Britain during the Reign of Queen Anne, has painted it in sombre
colours. "The history of Scotland," he says, "from the union of the
two crowns, exhibits a gradual tendency to national depression,
which, at the accession of Queen Anne, had reached an extremity
almost incapable of any aggravation or redress. Science and
literature languished; commerce, manufactures, and population
declined; luxury, from the example of a more opulent neighbourhood,
advanced with rapid steps among the higher ranks. The specie of the
country was drained, and poverty, like a gangrene, had overspread
the whole body of the people."—p. 147.] but the project was stopped
by the death of William on the eighth of the following March. Queen
Mary having died eight years earlier, the crown passed at once to
her younger sister, who then became Queen Anne. The Council duly
covered the King's seat and its own in the High Kirk with
seventy-six ells of black baize, and, headed by the Provost, Hugh
Montgomerie of Busby, took the oath of allegiance to the new
sovereign. Already, while this was being done, Queen Anne herself
had revived the project which was to become the most important act
of her reign, and was to open a new era of prosperity for Glasgow
and of progress for Scotland. On the iith of March, the third day
after her accession, in her first speech to Parliament, the Queen
recommended the opening of negotiations for a union of the
Parliaments of England and Scotland.
The idea was not new. All the world
knows how Edward I. had effected his purpose, by crafty and
overbearing methods and with disastrous results. James VI., on his
accession to the English crown, had at once made a proposal for an
incorporating union of the kingdoms, and actually assumed the name
of King of Great Britain. [Magna Britannia was the name given by the
ancient geographers to the larger of the British Isles, to
distinguish it from Britannia Parva, the smaller isle, which is now
Ireland.] Fifty years later, during his domination in both kingdoms,
Oliver Cromwell carried the transaction through, and governed the
two countries as a single republic, which was only broken up again
at the Restoration. Latest of al], King William, in his first
communication to the Scottish Parliament, had pointed out the
advantages of a union, and the Scots had appointed commissioners to
complete the project.
All these movements of a hundred
years, however, had been frustrated by the reluctance of the English
merchants to admit Scotland to the advantages of their foreign
trade. It was only upon the arrival of another consideration, a real
danger to themselves, that these English merchants showed eagerness
to secure the union. Queen Anne was without a direct heir. Her last
remaining child, the Duke of Gloucester, had died two years before
her accession. In the event of her own death there was the
possibility of serious trouble over the inheritance of the crown,
and the English saw with alarm the likelihood of disastrous results
if once more there should be separate kings ruling on the two sides
of the Border. In England a recent Act had settled the crown on the
House of Hanover, but no such Act had been passed in Scotland, and
in the event of Queen Anne's death it seemed quite possible that the
northern kingdom might invite the actual nearest heir, Her Majesty's
half-brother James, to occupy the throne. England was then at war
with France, and the issue was doubtful. The battle of Blenheim had
not yet been fought. And if the weight of Scotland were thrown into
the balance in favour of the fleur-de-lys the prospect would be
serious indeed. In this emergency Queen Anne's first Parliament at
once appointed a commission to treat with Scotland for a union.
But the English were not yet prepared
to meet Scotland on equal terms. While anxious to obtain for
themselves the political security which a union would give, and to
admit certain products of Scotland which would be helpful to their
own manufactures, they proposed to shut out other Scottish products,
such as wool, which might compete with their own; they refused to
allow Scottish merchants to trade with the English plantations in
America; and they insisted that the Company of Scotland must cease
its operations. [Hill Burton, viii. 82.] In view of the unfairness
of these terms it is not surprising that on 9th September, 1703, the
Scottish Parliament withdrew its commissioners, and in emphatic
language declared their commission to be "terminate and extinct."
Among the Scottish commissioners
whose labours were thus suddenly cut short was Hugh Montgomerie of
Busby, the Provost of Glasgow, on account of whose expenses, before
he set out for London, the Town Council ordered 2000 merks to be
borrowed and placed in his hand, and at the same time obliged
themselves to meet any bills he might draw upon them. [Burgh
Records, 10th Oct. 1702.]
Scotland was now dangerously
exasperated. When the next Parliament met, in May 1703, a political
firebrand, of strong republican views, Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun,
led a definite crusade of hostility against England. The English
Parliament had settled the succession to the crown of that country
on the Princess Sophia, wife of the Elector of Hanover, and daughter
of the Queen of Bohemia, daughter of James VI. and I. Now the
Scottish Parliament passed an Act of Security declaring that
Scotland would choose a different sovereign unless its demands were
satisfied. There were rumours of a great tinchel or deer drive by
the Highland chiefs in Lochaber, at which a rising for " James
VIII." was to be planned, and certain stormy petrels of the Jacobite
court in France, like the notorious Lord Lovat, were known to be in
the country. [The Duke of Queensbery's Letters, 11th Aug. 1703; 14th
Jan. 1704. Somerville's Queen Anne, p. 179.]
But the exasperation of the people of
Scotland was most alarmingly shown by a tragic event at Edinburgh.
The Annandale, a ship belonging to the Company of Scotland, which
had been fitted out for a voyage to the East Indies, had been seized
in the Thames at the instance of the English East India Company. At
the moment when the passion of Scotland was excited to flaming point
by this outrage, an English vessel, the Worcester, trading to India,
was driven by stress of weather into the Firth of Forth. The ship
looked like a pirate, with her guns and numerous crew, and strange
rumours regarding her began to be passed from mouth to mouth. Some
of her sailors when in liquor made strange statements. In particular
a black slave described how, off the Coromandel coast, the Worcester
had captured a ship with English-speaking men on board, had thrown
the crew into the sea, and had sold the vessel to a native trader.
The people of Edinburgh, with rising resentment, identified the lost
ship with one belonging to their own African Company, and Green, the
master of the Worcester, and his crew, fifteen men in all, were
seized, tried, and condemned to execution. The evidence was flimsy,
and the Government would have reprieved the prisoners, but a furious
mob surged round the Tolbooth, and demanded their lives. The
Government yielded, and Green, his mate, and the gunner of the ship
were dragged to Leith, amid the curses and pelting of the crowd, and
there hanged, while they protested their innocence to the last.
[Defoe, Hist, of Union, p. 78.]
That was in April 1705. Meanwhile,
under the Act of Security of the previous year, and in order to be
prepared to resist any further English aggressions, including the
attempt to force the English choice of a monarch on Scotland, every
man in the country who could bear arms was being trained by monthly
drills. In Glasgow captains, lieutenants, and ensigns were appointed
for the various companies, and severe penalties were imposed on any
who did not accept their appointment and fulfil their duties.
Certain Glasgow merchants, also, anticipating a demand for munitions
of war, began to import gunpowder on a considerable scale, and the
magistrates took the opportunity to lay in large supplies. [Burgh
Records, 12th and 17th Feb. 1704.] Nothing seemed more likely than
that, should the Queen die, the two kingdoms would be embroiled
almost immediately in the flames of war.
With these facts in view the English
Parliament and the English nation at last saw it to be their
interest to arrange a union of the kingdoms on something like equal
terms. Commissioners were accordingly appointed, thirty-one on each
side, and after secret and exciting labours, which lasted for a week
more than two months, a scheme of union was produced.
When the details of this scheme were
made known in Scotland a storm of opposition at once broke out. The
country was treated to a shower of pamphlets which declared that the
commissioners had been bribed, and had sold their country. What
Scotsmen had wanted was a federal, not an incorporating union, and
the arrangement which had been made placed the kingdom, it was
averred, for ever under the heel of its ancient enemies, the
English. [Hill Burton, viii. 137.] Behind the storm was the whole
force and interest of the Jacobite party, who saw in the union a
destruction of their hopes that Scotland as a separate kingdom might
see a restoration of the direct line of its ancient Stewart kings,
in the person of the Queen's brother, as James VIII. The
Presbyterians also, and especially the Covenanters of the west, were
enraged at the thought that they were to be placed once more under
the rule of bishops, who comprised an important part of the House of
Lords.
The first act of physical violence
took place in Edinburgh itself. On 23rd October, 1706, while
Parliament was sitting to consider the measure, a rabble gathered in
the streets of the capital, hooted and stoned the High Commissioner,
and smashed the doors and broke the windows of the Lord Provost, Sir
Patrick Johnstone, who had been one of the commissioners at the
drawing up of the treaty. Further trouble was only averted by the
bringing of troops from the castle into the city, and the posting of
guards of soldiers in the streets. [Defoe, p. 238; Lockhart Papers,
vol. i. p. 163.]
It was not long before the bad
example of the capital was followed in Glasgow. Here an address was
drawn up urging the Government to abandon the project of union, and
the magistrates were asked to give it their official sanction. This,
under the direction of the Lord Advocate, they refused to do, and,
on the refusal being made known, a ferment began to rise in the
city. In the midst of the public excitement and fever, the General
Assembly thought fit to appoint the keeping of a national fast. In
Glasgow there was a popular preacher, the Rev. James Clark, minister
of the Tron Kirk, who seems to have inherited the instincts and
proclivities of John Knox. He chose for his text Ezra, ch. viii, v.
21: "Then I proclaimed a fast there, at the river of Ahava, that we
might afflict ourselves before our God, to seek of him a right way
for us, and for our little ones, and for all our substance." His
congregation were already irritated and excited enough, when, waxing
eloquent in his peroration, he declared that addresses would not do,
prayers were not enough, exertions of another kind were needed.
"Wherefore," he concluded, "up and be valiant for the city of our
God!"
The sermon ended about eleven
o'clock, and by one o'clock the drum was beating in the back
streets, and the mob was getting together in dangerous fashion. As
an indication of its temper it burned the Articles of Union at the
Cross. [Curiosities of Glasgow Citizenship, p. xiv,] Next day, the
7th of November, the crowd, led by some of the deacons of the
trades, surged round the Tolbooth, shouting, raging, throwing
stones, and raising a great uproar. Finding the Provost had escaped
from the building, the rioters rushed to his private house, where
they seized all the arms in his possession, some twenty-five
muskets, with other property. They then proceeded to break the
windows of the laird of Blackhouse, who had advised against them.
Provost Aird meanwhile, with rather
more discretion than valour, fled to Edinburgh. He returned when all
was quiet, but the trouble soon broke out again. A little firmness
on the Provost's part would probably have prevented any disturbance,
but he was of the sort that fails to be firm out of fear that it may
provoke reprisals. The result which followed was that which may
always be expected from such a policy. To conciliate the populace
Aird released from the Tolbooth a man who had stolen one of his
muskets, and took a bond from him to appear when called upon.
Scenting weakness at once, as a mob always does, the crowd stormed
into the Town Clerk's chamber, and demanded that the bond be given
up. The leader was one Finlay, "a loose sort of fellow," without
employment, who had once been a sergeant in Dunbarton's regiment in
Flanders, and whose mother kept a "changehouse" or small tavern in
the outskirts of the town. Thinking to pacify the rabble, the
Provost yielded again, and gave up the bond. The only result,
however, was to make the crowd more insolent. When the Provost came
out of the Tolbooth they assailed him with villainous language,
hustled him, and covered him with dirt. Seeing it impossible to
reach his own house, he dashed up a common stair, and took refuge in
a house, where they failed to find him. Defoe, who tells the whole
story, declares that if they had found him they would have murdered
him. But the Provost was hid, somewhat ingloriously, like Falstaff,
in a bed folded up against the wall, which they never thought of
taking down; and, having escaped the danger, he was conveyed out of
town next day by his friends, and retired for a second time to
Edinburgh.
By that time the mob had obtained
complete mastery of the town. No magistrate durst show his face, and
all the houses of the burgh were searched for arms. It was only at
last, when the magistrates saw the citizens disarmed and the rabble
possessed of their weapons, with the prospect that they might seize
their houses, wives, and wealth, that they took heart of grace and
ordered the captains of the city companies to call out their
reliable men. When the rabble, headed by Finlay, next attacked the
Tolbooth they were surprised to find it defended. At the first
sally, and the firing of a few shots, the rioters dispersed and
fled, and they were soon cleared from the piazzas and closes.
Finlay then, who had established a
guard of his own in the castle ruins near the Cathedral, declared
that he would march upon Edinburgh, and force the abandonment of the
union. He set off with a company of forty-five men.
Meanwhile the Government, seeing the
danger of the situation, hastily, on 29th November, passed an Act
repealing the order to train companies, and ordering the return of
arms to the magazines. When this was read from the usual place of
proclamation, the head of the Tolbooth stair, the riot broke out
again. The officers were stoned, the town guard was disarmed, and
the mob, breaking into the Tolbooth, possessed itself of two hundred
and fifty halberts stored there. They then marched about the town,
with a drum beating at their head, breaking doors and windows,
entering and plundering houses, and carrying the spoil to their
headquarters at the castle.
While these scenes were being enacted
in Glasgow Finlay and his party had reached Kilsyth. They found no
signs there of the great contingents of malcontents which they had
expected to join their march from different parts of the country. On
the other hand, they heard that a body of some two hundred dragoons
was on the way from Edinburgh to suppress the rising. Finlay then
marched his men to Hamilton, hoping to find another muster there.
There was no news of it, however, and so, says Defoe, "he bestowed a
volley of curses upon them," and marched back to Glasgow, where he
arrived, "to the no small mortification of his fellows," on the day
after the plundering riot above described.
The marchers made haste to hand over
their weapons, not to the magistrates, but to certain deacons of
crafts, who, it appears, had been secretly their friends, and
hastily dispersed to their homes. Within two hours afterwards the
dragoons entered the town. They seized Finlay and a comrade, one
Montgomery, whom they found sitting with him by his mother's fire.
They then rode to the cross, and cleared the streets, and presently,
finding nothing further to do, rather inadvisedly marched away again
by Kilsyth to Edinburgh with their prisoners.
But no sooner were the soldiers out
of the town than the mob gathered again, and, knowing that they had
only the pusillanimous magistrates to deal with, demanded that the
Town Council should send a deputation to Edinburgh to secure the
release of Finlay and his friend. Faced by force majeure, the
magistrates again yielded, and sent two of their number, with
several of the deacons of trades, to interview the Government. That
deputation received short shrift from the Chancellor, but by the
time its members returned to Glasgow the outbreak had died away.
[The fullest account of these riots is given by Defoe in his History
of the Union, pp. 267-280. Details are also given in the Hist. MSS.
Corn. Report, XV. pt. iv. p. 352, and in The Union of 1707,
published by the Glasgow Herald in 1907.]
At the same time another
demonstration was being made in the west country. On 20th November a
party of Covenanters, several hundreds strong, rode into Dumfries,
drew up in military order at the cross, and burned the Articles of
Union. Arrangements were also made for a great rising, to be led by
one Cunningham of Eckatt. The malcontents were to meet at Hamilton,
eight thousand strong, march upon Edinburgh, and disperse the
Parliament. On being told, however, that they were being used as
cats'-paws by their old enemies the Jacobites, the Covenanters lost
enthusiasm, and, when only four hundred appeared at the rendezvous,
they abandoned the project. [Memoirs of Key of Kersland, vol. i.] It
was this party which Finlay had hoped to meet when he led his men
from Kilsyth to Hamilton.
Provost John Aird and his bailies
cannot be said to have made anything like a heroic appearance during
these troubles, but it is agreeable to know that their incapacity
and pusillanimity have had no counterpart in the civic annals,
either before or since. A notable feature of the occasion was the
action taken by John Bowman, Dean of Guild, and George Buchanan,
Deacon-Convener. In the midst of the disturbances these gentlemen
called their respective houses together, and drew up a list of
emergency measures for quelling the tumult and protecting life and
property. These they submitted to the provost and magistrates on
i8th November, but the necessary firmness seems to have been lacking
on the part of the city fathers to make them effective. [Burgh
Records, 18th Nov. 1706.]
On 16th January, 1707, the Act of
Union passed through its final stages in the Parliament House in
Edinburgh, and was duly touched with the sceptre by the Queen's High
Commissioner. Notwithstanding the opposition it received from the
populace of Glasgow, the Act was to form one of the most important
turning-points in the fortunes of the city, opening up for it a new
era of prosperity through the golden gateways of the West. |