The Kilsyth Estates—The
York Buildings Company—The Edmonstone Achievement—The Edmonstone
Family—Princess Isobel — Royal Descent — Cadency—Princess Mary — First
Three Edmonstones—The Fourth Sir William—Connection with Sir William
Wallace—The Fifth Sir William—Murder of Sir James Stewart —Sir James
Edmonstone — The Gowrie Conspiracy—Apprehended by Arran—A Deep Plot—
Popular Fury—Settles in Ireland—Duntreath Redeemed—The Ninth Laird—His
Brief but Brilliant Career—Sir Archibald Edmonstone, the Eleventh
Laird—Buys Kilsyth—M.P. for Dumbartonshire—Sir Charles, Second
Baronet—Sir Archibald, Third Baronet—Contests Stirlingshire—Sir William,
Fourth Baronet—A Brush with Pirates—Visits Lord Byron—Captain Wild—Sir
Archibald, the Fifth Baronet.
The Kilsyth estates were
held by the Livingston family for a period of over 300 years. William
Livingston, the first proprietor of that name, died in 1459; and as his
father fell at the battle of Homildon Hill in 1402, he must have entered
on the possession of the Kilsyth property some time before that event,
because it was to his father he owed his establishment in Monyabroch
parish. After the Rebellion of 1715, Lord Kilsyth had to flee the
country. His estates were forfeited, and became the property of the
Crown. After being a few years in the hands of the Government, in 1720
they were bought by the York Buildings Company. This corporation were in
possession of them till 1782, when they sold them to Campbell of
Shawfield. In the following year this gentleman parted with them to Sir
Archibald Edmonstone of Duntreath. Although, from time to time, this
family has sold portions of them, the
greater part is still in
their hands, and thus for over a century they have had uninterrupted
interest in the prosperity of Kilsyth,
A glance at the Arms of
the Edmonstones is suggestive of some of the distinguishing incidents in
the history of the family. A Scottish eye at once notices with pleasure
the double tressure on the field with its flore-counter-flore
embellishment. The crescents are indicative of cadency. The sinister
hand couped gules in the middle chief of the upper tressure, is a
witness of Irish connection. The helm affront—an important distinction
in heraldry—declares the bearer to be of the blood-royal if barred. The
helm of the Edmonstone escutcheon appears, however, to be only that of a
baronet. The annulet is adorned with strawberry leaves. The crest was
originally a camel’s head. It next became a horse’s, and now it is a
swan’s. The camel’s head is the undoubted crest, but its meaning and
origin are alike unknown.
The Edmonstones are a
very old family. It is probable they are the descendants of one or other
of those Saxon barons who accompanied Margaret, sister of Edgar
Atheling, to Scotland, when she was married to Malcolm Canmore, Their
first appearance in authentic history dates from 1248, when there was
living in Midlothian a certain Hendruas de Edmondiston, an intimate
relation of the Setons, another ancient Scottish house. The first Sir
William Edmonstone of Duntreath was the son of the brother of Sir John
Edmonstone, who married the Lady Isobel, daughter of King Robert II, It
was long believed that this first Duntreath Edmonstone was the son of
the Princess Isobel; but this error was fully exposed by the late Sir
Archibald Edmonstone, who was too veracious a historian to allow the
pride of a double descent from the Scottish Royal family blind his
interests to the truth, His investigations have indicated the Edmonstone
achievement and placed the cadency of the family beyond dispute.
In 1425 the first Sir
William Edmonstone, then designated “of Culloden,” married the Lady Mary
Stewart, second daughter of King Robert III. It was owing to this
marriage that Sir William received the barony and lands of Duntreath.
Sir William was the fourth husband of the fascinating Princess Mary. In
*397 sbe was married to George, Earl of Angus. The earl dying in 1404,
the princess married, in the following year, Sir James Kennedy, son of
Sir Gilbert Kennedy of Dunure. Sir James, the second husband, having
been killed in a quarrel with his elder brother, after a very brief
space, she took for her third husband Sir William Graham of Kincardine
and Mugdock. A year after his death she married Sir William Edmonstone.
The Princess Mary had family by all her husbands, and by Sir William she
had a son William, and a daughter Elizabeth. The first Sir William was a
man of affairs. He died in 1460. The date of the death of his princess
is unknown. Her remains were deposited in Strathblane Church. Near the
centre of the church there is a tombstone, bearing the following
inscription :—
Here lyes IN THE SAME
GRAVE WITH MARY, COUNTESS OF ANGUS,
sister to King James the First of Scotland, from
WHOM HE IS LINEALLY DESCENDED, ARCHIBALD EDMONSTONE, Esq.,
of Duntreath, in this Kingdom, and of Redhall in Ireland, who died in
the year 1689,
AGED ABOUT FIFTY-ONE YEARS.
The first Sir William
Edmonstone and his princess only held Duntreath in life-rent. Their son
having, however, married Matilda Stewart, a daughter of the noble house
of Lennox, through the influence thus acquired—Lord Avondale, his wife’s
brother, being the Chancellor and favourite of King James III.—he got
himself securely established as proprietor of the Strathblane lands. His
eldest son, the third Sir Archibald, held high office at the Court of
the King. He married the sister of George Shaw, the Abbot of Paisley and
Lord High Treasurer of Scotland. This marriage was as fortunate for his
house as his father’s or even his grandfather’s had been. The abbot was
one of the kindliest of men, and a prime favourite with James IV. He
used his position to forward the interests of his sister’s husband, to
secure a good appointment for him, places for his brothers, and husbands
for his sisters.
The fourth Sir William
Edmonstone, on his succession to Duntreath, was appointed Captain of
Doune Castle and Steward of Menteith. He was four times married. His
first wife was Sibylla, daughter of Sir William Baillie of Lamington,
and the marriage was solemnised on the 17th May, 1497. It is through
this union that the Edmonstones trace their descent from the great
Scottish deliverer and patriot, Sir William Wallace. On this subject
Blind Harry is the chief authority. In lively verse he describes the
courtship and subsequent marriage of Sir William Wallace and Marion
Bradfute. Of the latter, the old poet has left a picture daintily done.
"In Lanark dwelt the fair,
well known to fame,
For matchless beauties crown’d the charming name.
Now in her spring of life she grew apace,
Spreading to bloom, and crowned with every grace.
The syrens with persuasive eloquence,
Charmed from her lips and beautified her sense,
While piety adds lustre to her name.
Wallace beheld and owned the pleasing flame :
The print of love new stamp'd his ductile breast,
And with soft characters his soul imprest.”
By this marriage it is
said that one daughter was born before the lady fell a prey to the fury
of Hazilrig, and that from her descended the Baillies of Lamington.
There is a descent from Wallace, but it does not appear to have been
from so honourable a source. And yet there is no evidence forthcoming to
stamp the connection as illegitimate. It is perfectly true that Sir
William Baillie of Hoprig did marry a daughter of Wallace. The
difficulty is not as to her father, but, strange to say, as to who the
mother of this lady was. On that point there has as yet been no
genealogical testimony forthcoming. Wallace’s daughter bore her husband
a son, William, who married the daughter of Sir William Seton. The three
succeeding possessors of Lamington were Sir William Baillies, and
Sibylla was the daughter of the third. It is consequently perfectly
clear that the Edmonstones have flowing in their veins the blood of the
great Scottish patriot. Sir William fell on Flodden field, the 9th
September, 1513,—adfidem regis in campo bellico nuper in Northumbria.
When the fifth Sir
William Edmonstone succeeded to Duntreath lands, and the Stewardship and
Chamberlain-ship of Menteith, he fell under the displeasure of Queen
Margaret, the wife of James IV., for holding Doune Castle against her
wishes, and for refusing to account for his intromissions with the rents
of the Stewartry, which belonged to her. After a strong resistance, the
offices were taken from him, and given to Sir James Stewart. This
gentleman held the appointments till the death of James V., on the 14th
December, 1542. Mary of Guise, the widow of the King, then coming into
possession of the Stewartry, reinstated Sir William Edmonstone in his
old places. Sir James Stewart, however, as Sir William had done before
him, refused to yield up his places and emoluments. Losing all patience
with him, Sir William, with his brothers Archibald and James, laid wait
for the chamberlain at a Spot between Doune and Dunblane, on.
Whitsunday, 1543, and foully murdered him, and also certain that were
with him. If Sir William Edmonstone did not lose his life for this
violent conduct, he was still severely punished. He had for a time to go
into hiding, and his appointment as Steward of Menteith was annulled. In
1547, there was an Act passed under the Great Seal granting him
remission for the part he had taken in the murder. He was a strong
Presbyterian, and was a member of the General Assembly of 1567, when he
signed the Church’s Testimony against Popery. He died some time before
the middle of the year 1578.
Sir William was twice
married, first to a daughter of the house of Lennox, by whom he had one
son, of unsound mind, who was passed over in the succession, and
secondly to Margaret, daughter of Sir James Campbell of Lawers, who bore
him seven of a family. The eldest was Sir James Edmonstone, sixth of
Duntreath. Being a man of considerable acumen, be was employed in
various legal affairs. He formed one of the court of six jurors who
found relevant the indictment against the Earl of Gowrie for the part he
had taken in the famous Raid of Ruthven. Strange to say, it was in the
mesh of circumstances which followed the trial and execution of Gowrie
that Sir James Edmonstone got himself inextricably involved.
After the flight of the
“Banished Lords”—Angus, Mar, and others—into England, Arran determined
to make the severest example of some of their friends. One Robert
Hamilton of Inchmanchan having pretended that he had discovered a
conspiracy against the King, Arran, then master in Scotland, took the
fullest advantage of his position. He apprehended Sir James Edmonstone,
John Cunningham of Easter Mugdock, and Malcolm Douglas of Harlehame, all
of the parish of Strathblane, and clapped them in Edinburgh prison on
the charge of plotting against the King's life. It is extraordinary that
we should so soon have found one of the judges of the Gowrie trial
placed at the bar charged with a like crime. The charge against the
Strathblane proprietors was that they had entered into a scheme for
taking possession of the King’s person whilst he was hunting, detaining
him in one of the “Illis of Lochlowmunt in the Leuuenax,” till the
return of the “Banished Lords,” when he should be handed over to their
tender mercies.
Cunningham and Douglas
were as ignorant of the crime as the babe unborn. Instead of plotting
against the King, they were the victims of a plot which Arran had
concocted for their destruction. Sir James Edmonstone was charged along
with Cunningham and Douglas, because he was known to be the intimate
friend of both, and because Arran, having negotiated with him to confess
his guilt, had arranged that when at the trial this confession was made,
he would be immediately pardoned. When the trial came on, Sir James
Edmonstone, according to the stipulation with Arran, made no defence, he
confessed his part in the conspiracy, and threw himself on the clemency
of the King. Cunningham and Douglas resolutely protested their
participation in, and ignorance of, so base a plot, but were found
guilty, and hung. But how came it about that Sir James Edmonstone had
lent himself as so debased and unworthy a tool to the furtherance of
this foul conspiracy of Arran? After the fall of the treacherous earl,
Sir James made show of making a clean breast of it. He swore on soul and
conscience that his only reason for confessing his guilt, and
inculpating the “Banished Lords” and his neighbour proprietors, was
because Arran had threatened to take his life if he did not accede to
his wishes. The reason may or may not be true. Granting it is true, it
is no vindication whatsoever of his action. Sir James was a blackguard.
When the truth came to be known, the fury of the people of Killearn and
Strathblane knew no bounds. The Earl of Montrose had to become caution
to the extent of £1000, that a large number of men of these parishes
would do no injury to Sir James Edmonstone. On one occasion, Sir James
came to Duntreath when his daughter-in-law was there alone, and stole a
large sum of his son’s money, which was then in the house. It is evident
the Edmonstones are no exception to the rule laid down by Sir George
Mackenzie, that it is the sign of an ancient and considerable kindred to
have had a criminal or two in the family! Sir James injured his estate
by mortgages. On the 17th February, 1614, he entered into a contract of
wadsett with his son-in-law, Sir William Graham. On the 14th October of
the same year, Sir William Graham transferred the whole lands of
Duntreath to Sir William Livingston of Kilsyth, the lands being
redeemable at a fixed sum. Sir James’ first wife was Helen, daughter of
Sir James Stirling of Keir, by whom he had one son, William, and three
daughters. His second wife was Margaret, daughter of Sir John Colquhoun
of Luss, by whom he had one son and four daughters.
Having mortgaged his
estates, lost his public appointments, and become an object of odium in
the neighbourhood where he lived, we can easily understand that when the
scheme was matured for the “plantation of Ulster,” Sir James very gladly
availed himself of the inducements then held out to Scotsmen of moderate
means to settle in that part of Ireland. In 1609, the estate of
Broadisland, in the county of Antrim was obtained on the usual terms by
Sir James in name of his eldest son, William. This William was the
seventh of Duntreath, and strongly attached to the Presbyterian cause.
On his new estate he built a mansion house, erected a church and
provided it with a Presbyterian minister. Having married Isobel,
daughter of John Haldane of Gleneagles, he settled down on his property,
made Ireland his home, and died about 1629.
Archibald Edmonstone,
eighth of Duntreath, was entirely destitute of his father’s love for
Ireland. On his succession he made the redemption of Duntreath his first
concern. After two years negotiation, on the 28th July, 1632, King
Charles I. granted a charter in his favour of the lands of Duntreath,
upon the resignation by William Livingston of all his interest in them.
He was a member of Parliament for the county of Stirling in 1633, an
ardent Presbyterian, and deeply interested in the exciting questions
pertaining to Church and State then current. His wife was Jean, daughter
of the staunch Presbyterian family of Halcraig, in Lanarkshire. This
lady bore him two sons and two daughters. Dying in 1637, he did not long
enjoy the ancient possessions of his fathers.
William, the eldest of
Sir Archibald’s two sons, was born deaf and dumb. His brother Archibald
consequently became the ninth of Duntreath. If the “Dumb Laird" had his
failings, he was not without his accomplishments, and various incidents
have been brought forward to establish his claim to the second sight, or
to more than common shrewdness of observation. The career of Sir
Archibald was brief and brilliant. He continued the strong Presbyterian
traditions of his ancestors, and by holding conventicles, shared the
troubles of those who patronised those illegal assemblies. Into the
Irish Rebellion of 1688, he threw himself with ardour, raising a
regiment and stoutly defending the Protestant cause. While gallantly
defending a position near Coleraine, he suffered from the effects of the
cold and exposure, and died in 1689. By his request, he was buried in
Strathblane Church, in the same grave with the Princess Mary. His son
Archibald, tenth of Duntreath, resided for the most part in Ireland, and
was for many years a member of the Irish Parliament. Duntreath Castle
having fallen into a ruinous state, he was living at Auchentorlie, in
Dumbartonshire, when his son Archibald was born on the 10th October,
1717. The mother of this son was his second wife, Anne, daughter of John
Campbell of Mamore, second son of the ninth Earl of Argyll. Sir
Archibald Edmonstone, the eleventh of Duntreath, abandoned the family
connection with Ireland and the Whig principles which had hitherto held
sway in his family. He cast himself with energy into Scottish political
life, and sat for many years as Tory member for Dumbartonshire, and also
for some time as member for the Ayr burghs. He did a profitable stroke
of business when, in 1783, he parted with his Irish possessions, and
bought with the money the estate of Kilsyth. From that time to the
restoration of Duntreath, Colzium House became the chief residence of
the Edmonstones. In recognition of his public services, on the 3rd May,
1774, Archibald Edmonstone was created a baronet. His first wife was
Susanna Mary Harenc, a French lady of noble family. She bore him five
sons and four daughters. A man of great energy and foresight, his
country, his family, and his tenantry and estates were all benefited by
his labours. He died in July, 1807, at the long age of 89 years.
Sir Charles Edmonstone,
the twelfth of Duntreath, and second baronet, was born at Greenwich, 9th
October, 1764. Studying at Eton and Oxford with distinction, he was
called to the English Bar. Being eager to run the race his father ran in
1806, he successfully contested Dumbartonshire. His first political
triumph was shortlived. In the following year he was beaten by Henry
Glassford. In 1812, he was elected for Stirlingshire, and this seat he
held till his death at Brighton, 1st April, 1821.
By his first wife, Emma,
daughter of Richard Wilbraham Booth of Rode Hall, Cheshire, he had a
son, Archibald, and a daughter. Sir Archibald Edmonstone, the third
baronet, was born in 1795. At his father’s death he contested
Stirlingshire. He was unsuccessful. His opponent was Henry Home Drummond
of Blairdrummond. There voted for Mr. Drummond 47, for Sir A. Edmonstone
42, majority for Drummond 5. These five votes cost the county the
representation of a man of the rarest talents and personal worth.
Defeated in his first effort he never again sought Parliamentary honours.
He devoted his life to theology and poetry, to travel and beneficence.
In Kilsyth there never has been a proprietor so greatly beloved. He
married, in 1830, his cousin, Emma Wilbraham of Rode Hall. This lady
bore him three daughters, who all died in infancy. In looking over his
manuscript verse, I have noticed two poems and a sonnet addressed “To E.
W.,” and in the whole large collection of his poetry these are the only
occasions on which he tunes the erotic lyre. He died on the 13th March,
1871.
Sir William Edmonstone,
the fourteenth of Duntreath, and the fourth baronet, succeeded his
brother. He was born 29th January, 1810. At an early age he entered the
navy. Whilst serving as a midshipman on board the Sybette frigate, in a
brush with the pirates of Candia he was wounded in the face by a sabre
stroke, which carried away part of his lower jaw. Every inch a sailor,
and on constant duty, he was created by the Queen a Companion of the
Bath and Naval Aide-de-Camp. Afterwards he became Superintendent of
Devonport and Woolwich dockyards. In 1869 he became rear-admiral, and at
his death he was admiral on the retired list. He was the last living man
who had seen the dead body of Lord Byron. When on a cruise in Grecian
waters, his vessel anchored off Missolonghi. Bearing a letter of
introduction to Lord Byron, he went ashore and called for him. Byron,
having received an appointment to lead the Grecian expedition against
Lepanto, was in great spirits. For nearly a whole day he entertained Sir
William with his vivacious company and conversation. When they parted,
the poet pledged the young sailor to visit him on his return cruise.
This Sir William very gladly consented to. In little more than a
fortnight his ship again cast anchor at Missolonghi. The young sailor
was at once put ashore, and made all haste for Lord Byron’s villa. The
butler answered his call. "He had come to see Lord Byron,” he said. “His
lordship had died the day previously,” replied the butler. The young
midshipman was thunderstruck, but having always a ready way with him, he
at once observed: “Then I must see the body.” The butler remembered him
having been with Byron so recently, and conducted him to the room where
the remains were lying. He stood and gazed a long time on the dead face
of the great poet. The touch of death had not yet stained it. The
features were singularly clear and distinct. The face was beautiful, and
of a marblelike purity and whiteness. Many years afterwards, when he had
occasion to inspect a London lunatic asylum, Sir William thought he
recognised a face that he knew, in one of the patients confined in a
padded room, and in the last degree of madness. On inquiry, he found the
patient was Captain Wild, who was staying with Lord Byron at the time he
spent the happy day with him at Missolonghi. This story I had from Sir
William’s own lips on one occasion as I sat next him at dinner.
Sir William married, in
1841, Mary, eldest daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel Parsons, C.M.G. By
this lady he had eleven of a family—two sons, Archibald William, born
and died in 1865; Archibald, the present baronet, born 30th May, 1867 ;
and nine daughters, all of whom are now married. |