ONE of the most
distinguished men who ever possessed land in East Lothian, or perhaps in
Scotland, was John Cockburn, proprietor of the estate of Ormiston.
Descended from a family long and honourably known during the various
struggles which Scotland made to shake off the fetters of tyranny, Mr
Cockburn inherited with the estate of Ormiston a genuine and liberal
patriotism. He was born about the year 1685, and was the son of Adam
Cockburn of Ormiston, Lord Justice-Clerk of Scotland after the
Revolution of 1688. He sat as a member of the last Scottish Parliament,
during the life of his father, and took an active part in the Union of
Scotland, with England, which was consummated in 1707. Afterwards he was
successively elected to represent the county of Haddington, from 1707 to
1741, in the Parliament of Great Britain. For many years he filled
office as one of the Lords of the Admiralty with much credit, and proved
himself to be of much service to the State. It is, however, as the first
great improver of land, and as an able and energetic instructor in
husbandry in East Lothian, that we desire to notice him.
In the period in which Mr
Cockburn lived, the land in East Lothian, as elsewhere, was in a very
low and miserable state of cultivation. Tenants were poor, and rarely
accepted leases; they were oppressed by the lairds. Many farms were
unoccupied and untilled. Lord Karnes declared, in his usual
characteristic style, that the tenantry were so benumbed with
oppression, that the most able instructor in husbandry could have made
nothing of them,
Fletcher of Salton, a
contemporary of Cockburn, describes the situation of the tenants as
truly deplorable. In one of his discourses concerning the affairs of
Scotland, written in 1698, he says:—“The causes of the present poverty
and misery in which the commonalty of Scotland live are many. Yet they
are all to be imputed to our own bad conduct, and mismanagement of our
affairs. *Tis true; trade being of late years vastly increased in
Europe, the poverty of any nation is always imputed to their want of
that advantage. And though our soil be barren, yet our seas being the
richest of any in the world, it may be thought that the cause of all our
poverty has been the neglect of trade, and chiefly of our own fishing.
Nevertheless, were I to assign the principal and original source of our
poverty, I should place it in the letting of our lands at so excessive
rates, as makes the tenant poorer even than his servant, whose wages he
cannot pay; and involves in the same misery day-labourers, tradesmen and
the lesser merchants who live in the country villages and towns, and
thereby influences no less the great towns, and wholesale merchants,
makes the master have a troublesome and ill-paid rent, his lands not
improved by inclosure, or otherwise, but for want of horses and oxen fit
for labour, everywhere run out, and abused. The condition of the lesser
freeholders or heritors (as we call them) is not much better than that
of our tenants; for they have no stocks to improve their lands, and
living not as husbandmen but as gentlemen, they are never able to attain
any. Besides this, the unskilfulness of their wretched and half-starved
servants is such that their lands are no better cultivated than those by
beggarly tenants.”
The science of
agriculture was at that time so imperfectly understood, and the
situation and means of tenants so reduced, that substantial improvements
could not be undertaken by them, unless their minds were previously
enlightened and their condition mended. To the accomplishment of these
objects Mr Cockburn’s mind was directed, and he entered so energetically
into the improvement of his estate of Ormiston that in a few years great
success attended his efforts.
“Ormiston in a little
time was flocked to by the amateurs of husbandry to see the improvement
made, and we have not only traditionary, but even written testimony to
prove that the first dawn of Scottish improvement appeared upon the
estate of Ormiston.” (See Farmers' Magazine, Vol. V., from which we
quote freely a memoir of Mr Cockburn, written by Mr Brown of Markle.)
Four farms south of the
Tyne, viz., House o* Muir, Muirhouse (now called the Murrays), Dodridge,
and West Byres, though containing the poorest soil in the estate, were
the first improved by Mr Cockburn. They were enclosed by ditches, and
hedges and trees planted on the banks. In 1698, the Lord Justice-Clerk
granted to Robert Wight, son of Alexander Wight, one of his tenants in
Ormiston village, a lease of the farm of Muirhouse, to endure for eleven
years. It was the first enclosed, and Robert Wight was the first tenant.
Again, in 1713, his
lordship granted a lease to the said Robert Wight of the adjacent farm
of House o’ Muir for nine years. About this time, and after the death of
his father, Mr Cockburn entered upon his agricultural career with great
energy. Finding that Robert Wight and his son, Alexander, entered with
zeal into his views, he granted a new lease to Alexander of the Murrays
for thirty-eight years, at a rent of 750 pounds Scotch (£40 sterling),
and upon paying 1200 pounds Scotch (£64 sterling) in name of fine, or
grassum, at the expiration of that term, a renewal thereof for other
nineteen years, and so on from nineteen to nineteen years, in all time
coming, or as long as “wood grows and water runs.”
In 1725 a new lease of
House o’ Muir was granted for thirty-eight years and three lives,
therein named. Alexander Wight having entered heartily into all Mr
Cockburn’s measures for improving the estate, got the above lease
cancelled in 1734, and a new one was granted for nineteen years,
renewable for every nineteen years in all time coming, upon payment of a
grassum. Leases of the other farms on the estate were granted on similar
terms, with slight modifications. Thus some are held upon a tenure of
three lives, in which case, when one dies, the tenant upon renewing it
is bound to pay his grassum. If he does not renew it, and one of the
remaining lives fall, he. forfeits his lease. Several attempts have been
made by the present proprietors to set aside these old leases, but they
have not succeeded. The old leases have been sold again and again, and
none, or few, of the descendants of the old Wights of Ormiston (the
original lessees) now remain. Mr Cockburn, in consequence of his
official situation, had to reside much in London, and was seldom at
Ormiston. He kept up, however, a regular correspondence with Alexander
Wight and several other of his tenants, and pointed out excellent rules
and useful hints for the management of soils, and the way in which
improvements should be executed, such as planting and enclosing, making
public roads, sowing fallow wheat, raising turnips, ryegrass, and
clover, planting potatoes, feeding cattle and sheep, a knowledge of the
culture of which he had acquired in the southern counties of England.
Alexander Wight was
probably the first tenant who raised turnips in drills. He brought the
culture of them to such perfection that in 1736 a turnip of his raising,
which weighed 34! lbs., was sent to Edinburgh, and exhibited in John’s
Coffee-House, Parliament Square.
Mr Cockbum’s letters to
his tenants evinced his extreme solicitude for the welfare and
prosperity of every person on his estate. In one dated 24th February
1735, he thus expresses himself in this noble manner:— “My tenants are
quite upon a different footing from those of other people, and all of
you are interested in the future as well as the present prosperity of
the place, which is not the case with people who are only from year to
year, and at the end of the year, or at most at the end of a few years,
are not sure of having any more to do with the place or parish. But the
advantage of your children’s children in some measure depends upon your
putting a helping hand in advancing improvements, and your children are
sure of being the better for what you do, which is not the case with
your neighbours.”
In another letter to
Alexander Wight, he says:— “No father can have more satisfaction in the
prosperity of his children than I have in the welfare of persons
situated upon my estate. I hate tyranny in every shape, and shall always
have greater pleasure in seeing my tenants making something under me
they can call their own, than in getting a little more money myself by
squeezing a hundred poor families till their necessities make them my
slaves.”
The whole of his
constant, hearty, and lengthy correspondence with Mr Wight and others is
filled with useful information and instruction how to bring the soil
into the best possible condition for raising heavy and remunerative
crops.
The following extract
from one of his letters, intended, no doubt, for his tenant’s wife as
well as himself, shows his characteristic kindness in thinking of
household matters :—" If you manage your garden right at first, I
daresay you will have all sorts of roots and herbs for your pot in
perfection. A neck of mutton made into broth, with herbs, roots, and
some slices of bread, well boiled upon a slow fire till the roots and
meat are tender, is a good dish, and not expensive. Instead of the bread
you may put in a little barley, and half a handful of meal, to thicken
it a little. A pound or two of beef will make it much the better, and
give a great deal more of it than the mutton alone. In short, you will
find roots and herbs in your garden of advantage in your family many
ways. I shall always be ready to answer you any question, or give you
the best advice I can. So write freely as you think the hearing from me
can be of service.—Tottenham, 18th August 1725.”
Mr Cockburn, finding his
improvements to succeed on the south side of his estate, set about
improving two farms on the north side containing the best land, viz.,
Cotterwell and Limielands, with Tynemount, also other lands around the
village.
Mr Cockburn, being far
advanced with the enclosing and other improvements on the different
farms on his estate, in 1726 devoted himself with energy to improve,
rebuild, and renovate the village of Ormiston. Situated in the
south-western boundary of the county of East Lothian, it is naturally a
pleasant and healthy place, and must have been made much more so by Mr
Cockburn’s improvements. The houses built by him, or feued by others,
were erected in a superior style, and remain to this day. A wide, neat,
and regular street was formed, with a village cross in the centre, from
a plan by Mr Lewis Gordon, a land surveyor brought from England.
Ormiston can vie in
beauty and salubrity with the pretty little villages of Dirleton or
Gifford, and is admired by every stranger, and the railway communication
to it must now make it a convenient place at which to live. It was about
this time also (1726) that the land around the village was feued at low
rents for planting, and forming the numerous gardens and orchards which
exist to the present day. The finest vegetables and fruits are raised,
and Ormiston strawberries have long been famous.
In connection with the
improvement of his lands, and the consequent increase of the produce of
grain, Mr Cockburn gave encouragement to Alexander Wight, as a tenant,
for the erection of a brewery and malting, as also a distillery in
Ormiston. Malt and good ale, and excellent whisky, were manufactured,
all of which contributed much to the promotion of agriculture in the
neighbourhood, and the increase of the population. The distillery
continued in operation until a late date —somewhere about 1820. The
brewery, however, was given up at an earlier date. Mr Cockburn warmly
encouraged the manufacture of linen, and considered it one of the staple
trades of Scotland, and intimately connected with husbandry, the land
producing the raw material to the manufacturers, while they furnished
hands for carrying on the works, and for the consumption of the various
products. One eminent in the trade was brought from Ireland to Ormiston
for the manufacturing and bleaching of linen. A favourable lease of a
bleachfield on the banks of the Tyne was granted to him. This was the
first bleachfield which was formed in the county, probably the second in
Scotland. Before 1730, linens were sent to Haarlem, in Holland, to be
whitened and dressed. Pecuniary aid was obtained from the Honourable the
Board of Trustees for Manufactures in Scotland, for the support of the
infant manufacture, and experienced workmen were imported from Holland,
under the managership of a Mr Keysar from Flanders, to instruct the
natives of the district.
A school for teaching
young girls to spin linen yarn was established under the direction of a
qualified instructor. Premiums were given by the Board for the best
growths of flax, and an annual salary for an established dresser and
heckler. A considerable quantity of linen yarn was spun on the spot,
which supplied the manufactory with materials of the best quality. These
were the days of spinning-wheels—articles of useful domestic use now
entirely unknown in households.
Lint seed was sown by
farmers, cottars, and hinds, in large quantities, and lint brairds and
tow were extensively sold by town and country merchants. It is not
certain when the Ormiston Linen Manufactory and Bleachfield was given
up. It probably survived until Mr Cockburn’s death in 1747, when the
estate passed by purchase into the hands of the Hopetoun family.
Mr Cockburn, always awake
to every circumstance which could advance agricultural interests,
instituted in 1736, a club in Ormiston composed of noblemen, gentlemen,
and farmers, who met monthly for the discussion of some appropriate
question on rural economy. The club subsisted for ten years, and was.
perhaps ended by the troublesome circumstances tinder which the country
was placed by Prince Charlie’s raid into Scotland in 1745, or by Mr
Cockbum’s death.
The first minute of the
Ormiston Society is dated 19th July 1736: the last 9th May 1747. The
original members numbered 106. Among tenants we find the old county
names of the Walkers (3), the farmer at Mainshill (Francis); the Wrights
(8); James Skirvine, tenant in Ewingston; John Carfrae, tenant in Park
of Yester; George Ronaldson, tenant in Dodridge Park, Blackhouse; the
Cuthbertsons (2), Adniston and Long-niddry; Torrence, Peaston; Wilson,
Peaston; and of proprietors the names of John Cockburn, George Cockburn,
younger of Ormiston; Cockburn of Clerkington ; Anderson of Whitburgh;
Hepburn of Humbie; Dundas of Dundas; George Broun of Coalston; Sir Hew
Dalrymple of North Berwick; Colonel James Gairdner of Bankton; Charles
Hay of Hopes; the Earl of Stair, Sir John Sinclair of Longformacus, &c.
Premiums for raising flax
were given in 1839 by the society, who were the means of getting home
the best sowing lint seed from Riga. In 1742 samples of lint were
produced, and submitted to judges, who pronounced them equal to any
imported from Holland.
At the time the Ormiston
leases were granted by Mr Cockburn, they assuredly held out great
encouragement to the tenants to improve their lands to the utmost
extent, they paying small rents to Mr Cockburn, who certainly sacrificed
his patrimony, and lost sight of his own interest, in his patriotic acts
for the good of his country, which compelled his son, after his death,
to sell the property, and leave the seat of his ancestors. It seems to
have been the practice of East Lothian proprietors, during Mr Cockburn’s
time, and after his death, to give liferent leases. On the Yester
estate, for instance, several farms were so possessed in East Lothian,
and several in Berwickshire—such as Duncan-law, Sheriffside, Townhead,
and Ewingston. The first three tenants went by the names of Duncum,
Shirrum, Townum, and were all Hays; on the Ballincrieff estate, Mr
Andrew Pringle of Ballincrieff Mains, and Mr William Mylne of Lochhill,
were the last, life-renters.
A good remark is still
remembered, which was made by the late Mr Alexander Halyburton, a very
worthy man, and the last of an old East Lothian family. He was the last
liferenter of the farm of Hollandside, on the Hailes estate. A wag said
to him one day in Bailie Neill’s shop—“Sandy, when does your lease of
Holland-side end?” Mr Halyburton replied, “It is not given me to know
that, but I hope I will have a long lease in heaven, and I hope you will
have the same.”
A story about old
liferent tenancy may perhaps be worth recording here, and be interesting
to agriculturists of the present time. Mr Richard Somner, of Ewingston,
the last of an old family of farmers, was the last liferenter of
Ewingston. As soon as he died, the occupancy ceased. He was very ill in
the month of July, and his death looked for. A large field of the farm
was intended to have been sown with fallow wheat about the usual time of
sowing, being the end of September or beginning of October. The field
was all sown and finished in the end of July, being perhaps the earliest
sown fallow wheat ever seen in East Lothian or elsewhere, thus securing
a crop of wheat to Mr Somner’s heirs, as he died in the beginning of
September.
It is believed that Mr
Archibald Ainslie, of Dodridge, is the last of the liferenters in the
county, excepting those on the same property who hold their leases as
long as “wood grows or water runs.”
Mr Cockburn, judging from
an engraving of him in the Farmers' Magazine, seems to have been a very
good-looking gentleman, with long flowing curly hair. His manly and open
countenance is uncommonly pleasing. The engraving is copied from an
original portrait which was taken in 1804, an' is in possession of Mrs
Haldane of Gleneagles, formerly the Cockburns of Sandybed, the lands
round about the Millfield Nurseries, &c., at Haddington. They and the
Cock-bums of Clerkington were branches of the Ormiston family. The
Cockburns of Clerkington were all buried in the west end of the
Haddington Churchyard, where a tombstone with a Latin inscription on it
dated 1568, now much obliterated, is yet to be seen. Mr Cockburn died in
his son’s house in London at the Navy Office, aged 62 years. He was
probably buried in London. Shortly after, the estate of Ormiston was
sold by his son, George Cockburn, Esq., afterwards Comptroller of the
Navy.
Mr Brown of Markle thus
concludes his memoir of Mr Cockburn in the Farmers’ Magazine:—“While it
is painful to state that this property was renounced by a family who for
centuries had deserved so well of their country, it is some comfort to
reflect that the purchaser was also of a branch to whom the agriculture
of Scotland has been, and continues to be, under great obligations, as
might be instanced by the case of the property of the Barony of Byres,
where improving leases were granted many years ago. In a word, the name
of John Cockburn will not soon be forgotten in East Lothian. His
numerous successful attempts to promote the prosperity of the county are
riveted in the hearts of the inhabitants, and will be handed down from
father to son for many successive generations. When the whole of his
life is considered, we are warranted to pronounce him the father of
Scottish husbandry, an ornament to his country, and an honour to the
county of East Lothian, which gave him birth.”
Ormiston can boast of
being the birth-place of the venerable African missionary, Dr Robert
Moffat, father-in-law to David Livingstone, the still more celebrated
African missionary explorer. He first drew breath in a small cottage in
the village, now rebuilt, on 21st December 1795, and is thus in his
eighty-eighth year.
A doubt expressed by some
neighbouring influential persons that Ormiston was not his birth-place,
was recently dispelled by a letter addressed to Thomas Fairgrieve, Esq.,
of Ormiston Cottage, by the venerable old missionary himself, in which
he says, “As to my birth-place, there need not be a shadow of a doubt,
for well do I remember, during my boy days, my mother during one of her
visits to Ormiston, taking me to the spot, and pointing with her hand,
adding, there my ‘dear laddie" is the very spot where you were born. I
have since visited the place now built over, with emotion easier felt
than described.” Two brothers were also born in Ormiston. His father,
who was a custom house officer, was removed to Portsoy, and afterwards
to Inverkeithing.
The venerable
missionary’s name ranks with, and can be honorably associated with those
of David Brainerd, missionary to the North American Indians, of Carey,
missionary to India, of Dr Duff, and many others who nobly went forth,
and spent the best of their days, and their godly talents, in civilizing
and christianizing heathen and savage lands. A movement is at present
going on among influential persons, to erect at Ormiston, a lasting
tribute in remembrance of this famous and Christian man. It has been
well responded to, and will, no doubt, be soon successfully
accomplished. |