SELKIRK, earl of,
a title in the peerage of Scotland, conferred in 1646, on Lord William
Douglas, eldest son of the first marquis of Douglas, by his 2d wife.
Born Dec. 24, 1634, he was created earl of Selkirk, Lord Daer and
Shortcleugh, by patent dated Aug. 4, 1646, to him and his heirs male
whatsoever. He married Anne, duchess of Hamilton, in her won right, and,
on a petition from her grace, was created duke of Hamilton for life,
12th October 1660. He had seven sons and four daughters, who all took
the name of Hamilton. Having resigned the earldom of Selkirk, he
obtained from James VII. a new patent, dated 6th October 1688,
conferring it, with the original precedence, upon his third son, Lord
Charles Hamilton. This nobleman was baptized at Hamilton, 5th February
1664, and was appointed colonel of the first regiment of horse, 20th
November 1688, in room of his eldest brother, the earl of Arran,
afterwards fourth duke of Hamilton and first duke of Brandon. The earl
of Selkirk entered early into the Revolution, and by King William, whom
he attended in most of his campaigns, was appointed one of the lords of
the bedchamber. He held the same office under Queen Anne and Kings
George I. and II. In 1696 he was appointed lord-clerk-register of
Scotland, and held that office till the death of King William, but in
1733 was restored to it by George II. He strenuously opposed the Union.
At the general election of 1713, chosen one of the sixteen
representatives of the Scottish peerage, he was afterwards three times
rechosen. He was sheriff principal of Lanarkshire, and, dying,
unmarried, at London, 13th March 1739, was succeeded by his brother,
Lord John Hamilton, earl of Ruglen, who was thenceforth styled earl of
Selkirk and Ruglen. (See RUGLEN, earl of.) The latter died without male
issue, 3d December, 1744, when the titles of earl of Selkirk, Lord Daer
and Shortcleugh, with the estates of Crawford-Douglas and Crawford-john,
devolved upon his nearest male heir, his grand-nephew, Dunbar Hamilton,
grandson of his brother, Lord Basil, sixth son of William and Anne, duke
and duchess of Hamilton.
Of Lord Basil Hamilton an
account is given in Douglas’ Peerage (Wood’s edition, vol. ii. p. 488),
where he is described as a young man of distinguished abilities, great
spirit, and an amiable disposition. Several of his letters to his father
are printed in Dalrymple’s Memoirs of Scotland. In consequence of King
William having withheld his protection from the Scotch settlers at the
isthmus of Darien, the ruin of the colony followed, and many of the
colonists were thrown into prison by the Spaniards. In behalf of these
unfortunate persons, Lord Basil Hamilton was, in November 1699, deputed
by the Darien company to present an address at London to the king. His
majesty desired the Scottish secretaries to intimate to the Company that
he would attend to their request, and would endeavour to promote the
trade of Scotland, but refused to see Lord Basil Hamilton, because he
had not appeared at court when last in London. Thereupon the directors
of the Company requested the lord-chancellor of Scotland, then in
London, to urge his majesty to receive his lordship. An audience was
accordingly fixed to be in the council chamber, after a council meeting.
The king forgot the appointment, and was passing into another room, when
Lord Basil placed himself in the passage, and said that he was
commissioned by a great body of his subjects to lay their misfortunes at
his feet – that he had a right to be heard, and would be heard. The king
returned to the council room, listened with patience, gave instant order
to apply to Spain for redress, then turning to those near him, said,
“This young man is too bold, if any man can be too bold in his country’s
cause.” In the autumn on 1701, his lordship, then in his 30th year, was
drowned in the Minnock, a small river in Dumfries-shire, then swelled by
a sudden rain, in sight of his brother, the earl of Selkirk, and several
gentlemen, who could render him no assistance. His servant had ridden
forward, in order to try the ford, and was dismounted in it. Lord Basin
rushed in, and caught the man, but his horse falling at that moment,
they were both carried down by the torrent. His untimely death was
deplored as a national loss. He married Mary, grand-daughter and heiress
of Sir David Dunbar of Baldoon, Wigtonshire, baronet, and had two sons,
who both inherited Baldoon, and two daughters, Mrs. Murray of
Philiphaugh, and the countess of Dundonald. Basil Hamilton, the second
son, succeeded his brother in Baldoon in 1803. He engaged in the
rebellion of 1715; had the command of a troop of horse under Viscount
Kenmure, and was among the number of those who surrendered at Preston,
where he had displayed great courage. When the prisoners were marched
into London, his youth, interesting figure, and unconcerned demeanour,
attracted the attention and commiseration of the spectators. He was
tried the 31st May 1716, found guilty, and sentenced to be executed,
13th July, but reprieved and pardoned. In 1732, an act of parliament was
passed for restoring Basil Hamilton in blood. At the general election
1741 he was elected M.P. for the stewartry of Kirkcudbright, and died in
November 1742. An epitaph was written upon him by Hamilton of Bangour.
By his wife, Isabella, daughter of the Hon. Colonel Alexander Mackenzie,
M.P., second son of the fourth earl of Seaforth, he had Dunbar, fourth
earl of Selkirk, another son, and two daughters.
Dunbar Hamilton of
Baldoon, succeeded the earl of Selkirk and Ruglen, in 1744, as fourth
earl of Selkirk, on which occasion he resumed the paternal name of
Douglas. He studied at the university of Glasgow, and on the breaking
out of the rebellion of 1745, exerted himself strenuously and
successfully in support of the government. In 1787, and again in 1793,
he was chosen one of the sixteen Scottish representative peers. He died
at Edinburgh, 24th May 1799, in his 77th year. By his countess, Helen,
fifth daughter of the Hon. John Hamilton, second son of Thomas, sixth
earl of Haddington, he had, with six daughters, seven sons, who all
predeceased him except the youngest, Thomas, who became fifth earl of
Selkirk.
The second son, Basil
William, Lord Daer, born 16th March 1763, early displayed great
abilities and uncommon activity of mind. On the completion of his
education he traveled on the continent for a short time in 1783. Three
years afterwards his father transferred to him the management of all his
landed property in the stewartry of Kirkcudbright and county of Wigton.
During the meeting of the constituent assembly in 1789, he went to
Paris. Being a warm admirer of the Revolution, he lived much in the
society of some of the first distinguished actors in it, particularly
the duc de la Rochefoucauld, the marquis de Condorcet, and M. Lavoisier.
On his return to Scotland, he became a member of the Society of the
Friends of the People, and was a zealous advocate for parliamentary
reform. Conceiving that the article in the treaty of Union on which was
founded the exclusion of the elder sons of Scottish peers from being
members of parliament, and from possessing the elective franchise, was
erroneously interpreted, his lordship, with a view of trying the
question, claimed to be put on the roll of freeholders for the stewartry
of Kirkcudbright. His claim was sustained by a majority of the
freeholders, but some of the minority brought the claim before the court
of session. A decision was given against his lordship in 1792. Supported
by a number of Scottish peers, he appealed to the house of lords, but
the judgment of the court of session was affirmed (Douglas’ Peerage).
The elder sons of Scottish peers have, however, long been eligible both
for parliament and the franchise. He died of consumption 5th November
1794, unmarried, at the age of thirty. It was this Lord Daer who invited
Burns the poet to dinner, as commemorated in his “Lines on an Interview
with Lord Daer.”
Thomas, fifth earl of
Selkirk, the only surviving son of the fourth earl, was born in 1771,
and when the Hon. Thomas Douglas, was an associate of Sir Walter Scott,
and a member of “the Club,” mentioned in Lockhart’s Life of Scott. In
1797, on the death of his brother, formerly the Hon. John Douglas,
advocate, he became Lord Daer, and in May 1799 succeeded his father in
his title and estates. This nobleman visited America in 1803, and
settled a British colony on Prince Edward’s Island. On his return in
1805, he published ‘Observations on the present State of the Highlands
of Scotland, with a View of the causes and probably consequences of
Emigration,’ London, 1805, 8vo, in which he advocates liberal views in
regard to emigration, and gives an interesting account of the settlement
formed by him on Prince Edward’s Island. At the general election in
1806, he was chosen one of the sixteen representative peers, and
rechosen the following year. On 28th March 1807, he was appointed
lord-lieutenant of the stewartry of Kirkcudbright, and in July 1808 was
admitted a fellow of the Royal Society. In the previous year he
addressed ‘Al Letter to the Scots Peers,’ in which he proposed that
their sixteen representatives should be chosen for life, and in case of
death, their places should be filled up by the election of a new peer.
He also thought that Scots peers should be eligible to become members of
the house of commons, and, in short, should enjoy the same rights,
privileges, and functions, as the peers of Ireland. In 1808 his lordship
published a pamphlet entitled ‘The Necessity of a more effectual System
of National Defence, and the means of establishing the permanent
security of the Kingdom,’ and in 1809, ‘A Letter to John Cartwright,
Esq.’ (generally known as Major Cartwright), on parliamentary reform, in
which he retracted some of the opinions which he had previously
entertained on that subject. He died, 8th April 1820, at Pau, in the
south of France, whither he had gone for the recovery of his health. By
his countess, Jean, only daughter of James Wedderburn-Colville, Esq. of
Ochiltree, he had 1 son, Dunbar-James, 6th earl, and 2 daughters.
Dunbar-James, 6th earl of
Selkirk, born at London, April 22, 1809, graduated at Christ church,
Oxford, where he was first class in mathematics, B.A. 1830. In 1831 he
was elected one of the 16 representative peers, in 1845 appointed
lord-lieutenant of the stewartry of Kirkcudbright; keeper of the great
seal of Scotland from August to December 1852, and reappointed in
February 1858; unmarried.
SELKIRK, or SELCRAIG, ALEXANDER, a sailor, who passed some years
alone on the island of Juan Fernandez, was the seventh son of a
shoemaker and tanner in good circumstances, at Largo, in Fifeshire,
where he was born in 1676. In his youth he displayed a restless and
quarrelsome disposition. From the session books of his native parish it
appears that on August 25, 1695, “Alex. Selchraig, son to John Selchraig,
elder, in Nether Largo, was dilated for his undecent beaiviar in ye
church,” and the church officer was ordered to summon him for the 27th.
On the session meeting that day he was “called, but did not compeer,
being gone away to the seas.” He went to sea about his twentieth year.
In November 1701, when at home, he was again cited before the kirk
session, for committing an assault on his brother, Andrew. The latter,
having brought into the house a canfull of salt water, Alexander “did
take a drink through mistake, and he laughing at him for it, his
brother, Alexander, came and beat him, upon which he ran out of the
house, and called his brother,” ‘John Selchraig, younger.’” The session
books contain the examinations of the two Johns, father and son, as well
as that of Margaret Bell, the wife of the latter, and of Andrew the
other brother. The father being asked “what made him to sit on the floor
with his back at the door, he said it was to keep down his son,
Alexander, who was seeking to go up to get his pystole.” Margaret Bell
deponed that when she came to the house she found Alexander “gripping
both her father and her husband, and she labouring to loose Alexander’s
hands from her husband’s head and breast, her husband fled out of
doors.” The culprit himself ‘compeared’ on the 29th, and “confest that
he did beat his brother twice with a staff; he confest also that he had
spoken very ill words concerning his brothers, and particularly he
challenged his eldest brother John, to a combat, as he called it, of
neiffels;” and the next day, according to the session’s appointment,
“Alex. Selcraige compeared before the pulpit, and made acknowledgment of
his sin in disagreeing with his brothers, and was rebuked in face of the
congregation for it, and promised amendment in the strength of the Lord,
and so was dismissed.”
He seems to have early
engaged in the buccaneer expeditions to the South Seas; and in 1703 he
joined the Cinque Ports galley, in the capacity of sailing master. While
lying off the coast of Brazil, Selkirk had a remarkable dream, in which
he was forewarned of the total failure of the expedition, and the wreck
of his ship; and having soon after had a quarrel with his commander,
Captain Stradling, he was, in October 1704, with his own consent, put
ashore on the uninhabited island of Juan Fernandez, with his sea chest,
a few books, including his Bible, his nautical instruments, some
tobacco, a gun, with a pound of gunpowder, and some balls, a knife, a
kettle, an axe, a flip-can, &c. Before the boat quitted the beach he
changed his mind, but the captain would not allow him to return on
board, and after four years and four months’ solitary residence, he was
discovered and taken off the island by Captain Woodes Rogers, in January
1709. Rogers made him his mate, and a few weeks thereafter appointed him
to the command of a prize, which was fitted out as a privateer, in which
situation he conducted himself with great vigour, steadiness, and
prudence. After going on a privateering expedition across the Pacific,
in October 1711, they returned to England, from which Selkirk had been
absent upwards of eight years. Of the sum of £107,000 which Rogers had
realized by plundering the enemy, Selkirk seems to have shared to the
amount of about £800.
In the spring of 1712 he
once more set foot in Largo, bringing home with him his gun, sea chest,
and drinking cup, which he had with him on the island. They were long
preserved, in t he house in which he was born, by the descendant of one
of his brothers, but in 1862 they were sold. Having formed an attachment
to a country girl, named Sophia Bruce, whom he met in his solitary
walks, he eloped with her, and never returned. He went to sea again in
1717, and died in the situation of lieutenant on board his majesty’s
ship Weymouth, in 1723. His widow, a second wife, named Frances Candis,
claimed and received his property in his native village. His history is
supposed to have suggested to Defoe the groundwork of his matchless
narrative of Robinson Crusoe. Selkirk’s Life and Adventures, written by
John Howell, author of an ‘Essay on the War Galleys of the Ancients,’
was published by Oliver and Boyd, Edinburgh, in 1829. |