SETON, a surname
derived from Say-tun, the dwelling of Say. Anciently there were in
England two families names Say, of Norman descent. The first of the race
who came into Scotland was Secher or Saiker de Say, who obtained from
David I. lands in Haddingtonshire, and was the ancestor of the noble
family of Seton, earls of Winton. He was the son of Dugal de Say, by his
wife, a daughter of De Quincy, earl of Winchester, constable of
Scotland. Alexander de Seton, son of Secher, witnessed a charter of
David I., to William de Riddell of the lands of Riddell in
Roxburghshire. He was proprietor of Seton and Winton in East Lothian,
and Winchburgh in Linlithgowshire, and his son, Philip de Seton, got a
charter of these lands from William the Lion, to be held in capite of
the crown. Philip’s eldest son, Sir Alexander de Seton, witnessed many
charters of Alexander II., and also a donation of Sayer de Quincy, earl
of Winchester, to the abbacy of Dunfermline, before 1233. His son, Serlo
or Secher de Seton, had two sons and a daughter, Sir Alexander, Sir
John, and Barbara, the wife of Sir William Keith, great marischal of
Scotland. Among those who swore fealty to Edward I. in 1296 was
Alisaundre de Seton, valet, Richard de Seton, del counte de Dunfres, and
John de Seton of the same county. Sir Alexander, the elder son, was
father of Sir Christopher Seton, who married Lady Christian Bruce, third
daughter of Robert earl of Carrick, sister of King Robert I., widow of
Gratney, earl of Mar. He was one of the principal supporters of his
brother-in-law, and was present at his coronation at Scone 27th March
1306. At the disastrous battle of Methven, 13th June following, he
rescued Bruce when he was unhorsed by Philip de Mowbray. He afterwards
shut himself up in Lochdoon castle in Ayrshire, and on its surrender to
the English, Sir Christopher Seton was, by order of Edward I., executed
at Dumfries. He appears to have been succeeded by his brother Sir
Alexander Seton, who signed, with other patriotic nobles, the famous
letter to the Pope in 1320, asserting the independence of Scotland. He
had grants from King Robert I. of various lands, as well as of the manor
of Tranent and other extensive possessions previously belonging to the
noble family of De Quincy, attainted for their espousal of the cause of
Edward. He also got the lands of Falside or Fawside, forfeited by
Alexander de Such, who married one of the daughters and heiresses of
Roger de Quincy, earl of Winchester. Falside castle, situated near the
boundary with Inveresk, was one of the ancient strong fortalices of the
Setons. A younger branch of the family styled themselves the Setons of
Falside. Their principal castle was Niddry in Linlithgowshire, the ruins
of which still remain. Sir Alexander de Seton had a safe-conduct into
England 7th January 1320, and Robert I. applied for another, 21st March
1327, for him to treat with the English. He was governor of the town of
Berwick when it was besieged by the English in 1333. His son Thomas was
given as a hostage to King Edward III., that that place would be
surrendered on a certain day if not relieved before then. Sir William
Keith having arrived with succours, assumed the governorship, and
refused to deliver up the town. Edward ordered Thomas Seton, and, some
accounts say, two sons of Keith, who had fallen into his hands, to be
executed in sight of the besieged. The day after the defeat of the Scots
army at Halidon-hill, 19th July 1333, Berwick surrendered to the
English. Sir Alexander Seton was present in Edward Baliol’s parliament,
10th February following, when he witnessed the concession of Berwick to
the English. He had a safe-conduct to go to England, 15th October 1337,
and in August 1340, he was one of the hostages for John, earl of Moray,
when he was liberated for a time. He appears to have entered into a
religious order in his old age, as “Frater Alexander de Seton miles,
hospitalis sancti Johannis Jerusalem in Scotia” had a safe-conduct into
England on the affairs of David II., 12th August 1348. By his wife,
Christian, daughter of Cheyne of Straloch, he had three sons and a
daughter, namely, Alexander, killed in opposing the landing of Edward
Baliol near Kinghorn, 6th August 1332; Thomas, already mentioned; and
William, drowned in an attack on the English fleet at Berwick, in sight
of his father, in July 1333. The daughter, Margaret, became heiress of
Seton. She married Alan de Wyntoun, supposed to have been a cadet of the
Seton family. This marriage, we are told, produced a feud in East
Lothian, and occasioned more than a hundred ploughs to be laid aside
from labour. His children took the name of Seton. He died in the Holy
Land, leaving a son, Sir William Seton, and a daughter, Christian or
Margaret, countess of Dunbar and March.
The only son, Sir William
Seton of Seton, visited Jerusalem. He lived previously to 1366, and it
is recorded of him that he “was the first creatit and maid lord in the
parliament, and he and his posteritie to have ane voit yairin and be
callit Lords.” Accordingly, in the Records of the Scottish parliament,
held at Scone 26th March 1371, at the coronation of Robert II., William
de Seton is named among the “Nobiles Barones,” as “Dominus de Seton.” He
married Catherine, daughter of Sir William Sinclair of Hermandston, and
had, with four daughters, two sons, Sir John and Sir Alexander. The
latter married Elizabeth de Gordon, and was ancestor of the marquises of
Huntly; the Setons of Touch, who held the office of hereditary
armour-bearers to the king; the Setons of Meldrum, &c. Sir John Seton of
Seton, the elder son, was taken at the battle of Homildon in 1402. He
was one of the hostages for the release of James I. by the treaty of 4th
December 1423, his annual revenue being estimated at 600 marks. He had a
safe-conduct to meet the king, 13th of the same month, and was one of
the guarantees of the treaty for his majesty’s release, 28th March 1424.
He died in 1441. By his first wife, Lady Janet Dunbar, daughter of the
tenth earl of Dunbar and March, he had a son, Sir William Seton, and two
daughters.
Sir William Seton, the
only son, accompanied the Scots auxiliaries to the assistance of Charles
the dauphin in France, and was killed at the battle of Verneuil in
Normandy, in the lifetime of his father, 17th August, 1424.
His son, George,
accompanied the chancellor Crichton in his embassy to France and
Burgundy, and had a safe-conduct to pass through England, April 23,
1448. He was soon afterwards created a peer of parliament, by the title
of Baron Seton, (Douglas’ Peerage, Wood’s ed., vol. ii. p. 642), and
1448 is the date usually assigned as that of the creation of the peerage
of Seton. He was one of the ambassadors to England to whom a
safe-conduct was granted March 16, 1472. He died in 1478. By his first
wife, Lady Margaret Stewart, only daughter and heiress of John, earl of
Buchan, constable of France, killed at Verneuil in 1424, he had a son,
John, who predeceased him, leaving a son, George, second Lord Seton. By
a second wife, Christian Murray, of the house of Tullibardine, he had a
daughter, Christian.
George, second Lord
Seton, succeeded his grandfather. By the treaty of Nottingham, 22d
September 1484, he was appointed one of the commissioners for settling
border differences. He erected the church of Seton into a collegiate
establishment for a provost, six prebendaries, two singing boys and a
clerk, 20th June 1493, assigning for their support the tithes of the
church and various chaplainries which had been established in it by his
ancestors. He was one of the conservators of treaties with the English
30th September 1497, and 12th July 1499, and he witnessed the
assignation of the dower of Margaret, queen of Scotland, 24th May 1503.
He died in 1507. He is described as “meikle given to leichery, and was
cunning in divers sciences, as in music, theology, and astrology. He was
so given to learning that after he was married he went to St. Andrews
and studied there long, and then went to Paris for the same purpose. He
was, on a voyage to France, taken by some Dunkirkers, and plundered. To
be revenged of them he bought a great ship called the Eagle, and
harassed the Flemings. The keeping of that ship was so expensive that he
was compelled to wadset (mortgage) and dispose of several lands.”
(Douglas’ Peerage, Wood’s edition, vol. ii. p. 643.) He married Lady
Margaret Campbell, eldest daughter of the first earl of Argyle, and with
one daughter, Martha, the wife of Sir William Mailtland of Lethington,
had two sons, George, third Lord Seton, and John, ancestor of the Setons
of Northrig.
George, third Lord Seton,
was a favourite of James IV., and fell with him at Flodden, 13th
September 1513. He married Lady Janet Hepburn, eldest daughter of the
first earl of Bothwell, and had one son, George, fourth Lord Seton, and
one daughter, Mariot, countess of Eglinton.
George, fourth Lord
Seton, was in 1526 appointed a member of the parliamentary committee pro
judicibus, and admitted one of the extraordinary lords of session, 5th
March, 1542. In March of the following year, Cardinal Bethune was placed
in his custody in Blackness castle, but he permitted him to escape,
being, according to the writers of the time, bribed for the purpose. It
seems certain, however, that the cardinal was set at liberty with the
consent of the governor, Arran. In May 1544, the English army, under the
earl of Hertford, then in Lothian, “came and lay at Seton, burnt and
destroyed the castle thereof, spoyled the kirk, tuk away the bellis and
organis and other tursable (portable) thingis, and pat thame in thair
schippis, and brint the tymber wark within the said kirk,” In November
of the same year, he was employed by parliament as one of the
negotiators between the governor of the kingdom Arran, and the
queen-dowager, afterwards regent. He died in July 1545. At his request,
Sir Richard Maitland compiled the History of the house of Seton. The
following is the character he gives of him: “He was ane wise and
vertewes nobleman; a man well experienced in all games, and took
pleasure in halking, and was holden to be the best falconer in his
days.” He was twice married, first to Elizabeth, daughter of John, Lord
Hay of Yester, by whom he had, with four daughters, three sons, namely,
1, George, fifth Lord Seton. 2. John, ancestor of the Setons of
Carriston, Fifeshire. 3. James. Secondly, to Mary Pyeres or Peris, a
French lady, who came to Scotland with Mary of Lorraine, and by her had
one son, Robert.
George, fifth Lord Seton,
was the chivalrous and devoted adherent of Mary, queen of Scots, and
with two of his children, figures conspicuously in Sir Walter Scott’s
tale of ‘The Abbot.’ He was one of the commissioners appointed by the
parliament of Scotland, 17th December 1557, to be present at Mary’s
nuptials with the dauphin of France. In 1558, when several of the
nobility went to secret to hear the reformed preacher, John Willock,
expound from his sickbed the doctrines of the Gospel, Lord Seton was one
of them, but afterwards he was the first to fall back into popery. The
following year he was provost of Edinburgh, and joined the party of the
queen-dowager against the lords of the Congregation. Calderwood (Hist.
of the Kirk of Scotland, vol. i. p. 474) says, “The erle of Argile and
Lord James (afterwards the regent Moray) entered in Edinburgh the 29th
June 1559. The Lord Seton, provost, a man without God, without honestie,
and often times without reason, had diverse times before troubled the
brethrein. He had takin upon him the protection of the Blacke and Gray
friers, and for that purpose lay himself in one of them everie night,
and also constrained the honest burgesses of the toun to watch and
guarde these monsters, to their great greefe. When he heard of the
suddane coming of the lords, he abandoned his charge.” In autumn of the
same year he was sent by the queen-dowager, with the earl of Huntly, to
solicit the brethren assembled in St. Giles’, Edinburgh, to allow mass
to be said either before or after sermon, but of course they could get
no other answer than that they were in possession of the church and
would not suffer idolatry to be erected there again. About the same
time, suspecting one Alexander Whitelaw to be John Knox, he pursued him
as he came from Preston, accompanied with William Knox, towards
Edinburgh, and did not give up the chase till he came to Ormiston. On
Queen Mary’s return from France in 1561, he was sworn a privy councilor,
and appointed master of the household to her majesty. The night after
the murder of Rizzio, Lord Seton, with 200 horse, attended the queen
first to Seton and then to Dunbar, Darnley being compelled by threats to
go with her. On Darnley’s assassination, the queen and Bothwell, it is
well known, went to Seton, where they remained for some days, and there
the marriage contract between them was signed. Lord Seton was one of her
chief supporters at Carberry Hill, and when she made her escape from
Lochleven castle in the beginning of May 1568, he was lying secretly
among the hills on the other side, and immediately joining her,
conducted her first to his castle of Niddry, in Linlithgowshire, and
then to Hamilton. He was present at the battle of Langside, and on the
defeat of the queen’s forces there, retired to ‘Flanders. He remained
two years in exile, and for his living was compelled to become a
waggoner. A painting of him driving a wagon with four horses was in the
north end of the long gallery of Seton. He was in Scotland in the spring
of 1570 actively employed on behalf of Queen Mary. He was one of the
nobles of her faction who signed the letter to Queen Elizabeth, dated in
March of that year. On the report that the lords of the king’s party
were to come to Edinburgh on the first of May, some of the queen’s lords
left the town, but “Lord Seton assembled his forces at the palace of
Holyrood-house, and bragged that he would enter in the town, and cause
beat a drum, in despite of all the caries. He had in company with him
the Lady Northumberland.” This lady was in Scotland on the captive
queen’s behalf, and the same year she was sent with Lord Seton to the
Low Countries to solicit the assistance of the duke of Alva for the
friends of Mary’s cause in Scotland. On the downfall of the Regent
Morton in 1581, he was committed to the charge of Lord Seton and sundry
other noblemen, to be conveyed to Dumbarton castle. In January of the
same year he was one of the lords of the king’s household, who
subscribed the Second Confession of Faith, commonly called the King’s
Confession. He was one of the jury on Morton’s trial, and with the laird
of Wauchton was objected to by him, as known to be his enemies. At his
execution, “Lord Seton and his two sons stood in a stair, south-east
from the cross.” He was one of the noblemen who conveyed the duke of
Lennox on his way to England in December 1582, when ordered out of
Scotland. The following year he was complained upon by the synodal
assembly of Lothian for entertaining of ‘Seminary priests.” In January
1584, he was sent by King James VI. ambassador to France, He died soon
after his return, on 8th January 1585, aged about 55, and was buried in
the family vault at Seton, where there is a monument to his memory. By
his wife, Isabel, daughter of Sir William Hamilton of Sanquhar,
high-treasurer of Scotland, he had five sons and one daughter, Margaret,
married to Lord Claud Hamilton. The sons were, 1. George, master of
Seton, who predeceased his father in March 1562. 2. Robert, sixth Lord
Seton. 3. Sir John Seton, Lord Barns, of whom afterwards. 4. Alexander
Seton of Pluscardine, first earl of Dunfermline. 5. Sir William Seton of
Kyllismore, sheriff of Mid Lothian and postmaster of Scotland. It is
related that George, fifth Lord Seton, declined the dignity of earldom,
being unwilling to forgo what he considered a great distinction, and
that his accomplished sovereign commemorated the fact in the following
lines:
“Sunt Comites, Ducesque
alii, sunt denique Reges,
Setoni Dominium, sit satis esse mihi.”
An engraving of the Seton
family from a painting by Sir Antonio More, consisting of Lord Seton and
five youngest children, is given in Pinkerton’s Scottish Gallery. The
following is a woodcut of it:
[woodcut of Lord Seton and family]
Robert, the second son,
sixth Lord Seton, was created earl of Winton, 16th November 1600. (see
WINTON, Earl of.)
Of his next brother, Sir
John Seton, Lord Barns, the following particulars are given in Haig and
Brunton’s Senators of the College of Justice: According to a historical
account of the family written by Alexander, Lord Kingston, he “was a
brave young man, and went to Spaine to King Philip II., his court, by
whom he was made knight of the royal order of St. Jago, att that tyme
the only order of knighthood in that kingdome of greatest esteem, in
memory whereof, he and his heirs hes a sword in the coat of armes, being
the badge of that order. King Philip also preferred him to be a
gentleman of his chamber and cavalier de la Boca (master of the
household). He also carried the golden key at his side in a blew
ribbing, all which were the greatest honours King Philip of Spaine could
give to any of his subjects, except to be made a grandee of Spaine. He
had a pension granted to him and his heirs of two thousand crowns
yearly.” (Melville’s Memoirs, p. 365.) He was recalled to Scotland by
James VI., who appointed him treasurer of his household. He was
constituted master of the horse, and in 1581, sent ambassador to Queen
Elizabeth, to complain of the conduct of her ambassador in interfering
on behalf of the Regent Morton, after his downfall, but was not allowed
to enter England. He was appointed one of the extraordinary lords of
session, as Lord Barns, in room of his brother, Alexander, admitted an
ordinary lord, 17th February 1587. He was a favourite of the king, as
well as of the duke of Lennox, who quarreled with the profligate earl of
Arran (Captain Stewart) on account of an indignity offered to Sir John,
by the latter. He was afterwards appointed comptroller, and died 25th
May, 1594.
From the earliest period,
the family of Seton filled a prominent place in the annals of Scotland.
They were surpassed by none in loyalty to the throne and firm attachment
to the dynasty of the Stuarts. Their military ardour, and dauntless and
patriotic bearing appear from their ancient war-cry of “Set-on,” and
their earliest motto of “Hazard, yet forward.” It was in consequence of
so many other noble families having sprung from them that the Lords
Seton were styled “Magnae Nobilitatis Domini.” Owing to their
inter-marriages, upon four different occasions, with the royal family,
their shield obtained the addition of the royal or double tressure.
Their unshaken loyalty is marked by another of their mottoes,
“Intaminatis fulget honoribus,” and it was this heroic spirit that led
to the last earl of Winton, the descendant and representative of the
Setons, joining in the rebellion of 1715, for which his titles and
estates were forfeited. (See WINTON, Earl of.) The lands which the
family held were very extensive, and their chief seat was recognized in
the royal charters ad the palace of Seton, in consequence of having
often been the place of royal entertainment, as for ages it had been the
scene of great magnificence and splendid hospitality. The representation
of the noble family of Seton is claimed both by the earl of Eglinton and
George Seton, Esq.
_____
John Seton, the first of
the Setons of Carriston, younger son of George, sixth Lord Seton, and
Elizabeth, daughter of John, Lord Yester, progenitor of the marquis of
Tweeddale, obtained that estate by his marriage with Isabel, the
daughter and heiress of Balfour of Carriston, Fifeshire. His
grandmother, Lady Janet Hepburn, acquired for him the lands of
Foulstruther in East Lothian. During the exile in Flanders of his
brother George, fifth (sometimes called seventh) Lord Seton, a report
having been spread of his death, John was put in possession of his whole
estate, as appears by a charter under the great seal, dated in 1545. He
also assumed the title of Lord Seton, and sat in parliament as a peer.
On his brother’s return, he was obliged to relinquish both estate and
title. Their temporary possession, however, proved very unfortunate to
him and his descendants, as, to enable him to clear off the
extraordinary expenses incurred thereby, he was compelled to sell his
lands in East Lothian, as well as a portion of his estate in Fifeshire.
He got a charter under the great seal from Queen Mary of the barony of
Carriston, &c., dated in 1553. He had two sons, George Seton of
Carriston, and Sir John Seton, knight, a captain in the Scots guards in
France. The latter married a daughter of the count de Bourbon, and had a
daughter, who married Adinston of that ilk, East Lothian, of whom was
lineally descended Christian, fourth countess of Winton. The family of
Adinston was, from the time of Robert the Bruce, the hereditary
standard-bearers of the house of Seton. The estate of Carriston
continued in the family of Seton in a direct male line till George
eighth and last proprietor, who died, unmarried, in 1789. The
representation of the family then devolved on his brother, Christopher,
who died in 1819. His sister, Margaret, married Henry, grandson of David
Seton of Blackhall, Fifeshire, fourth son of the fourth laird of
Carriston, which estate had come into possession of the said David Seton
by his marriage with Marjory, daughter and heiress of Alexander of
Blackhall. Margaret had, with two daughters, two sons, David, a captain
in the army, who died, without issue, in 1826, and George Seton of
Bombay, who died in 1825, leaving one son, George Seton, B.A. of Oxford,
born 25th June 1822, and two daughters, one of them the wife of Edward
James Jenkins, Esq., and the other married to John Buchanan Hamilton,
Esq. of Leny and Bardowie, chief of the clan Buchanan.
Besides the Setons of
Carriston, already mentioned, there were several families of the name in
Fifeshire, such as the Setons of Lathrisk, the Setons of Kirkforther,
and the Setons of Drumaird. The lands of Lathrisk, in the parish of
Kettle, were acquired by John Seton, descended from Seton of Parbroath,
on his marriage with Janet Lathrisk of that ilk. About the middle of the
last century, Lathrisk became the property of a family of the name of
Johnston.
_____
The Setons of Pitmedden
are descended from William Seton, second son of Sir Alexander Seton who,
in 1408, married Elizabeth de Gordon, heiress of Gordon, Huntly, and
Strathbogie. He married Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of William de
Meldrum of Meldrum, and got with her that barony and other estates. He
was killed, fighting under his brother, the earl of Huntly, at the
battle of Brechin, in May 1452. His only son, Alexander Seton, was
served heir to his mother, Elizabeth de Meldrum, in 1456. His son,
William Seton of Meldrum, was put in possession of the estates in the
lifetime of his father. Alexander Seton of Meldrum, the son of William,
was served heir to his grandfather in 1512. He was murdered about the
year 1536, by the master of Forbes. His eldest son, William Seton of
Meldrum, was served heir to his father in 1553. He was twice married,
and had five sons, one of whom, George Seton of Barras, was chancellor
of Aberdeen.
James, the youngest son,
was the first of Pitmedden. He was first styled of Bourtie,
Aberdeenshire. He afterwards acquired the lands of Pitmedden, in the
same county, as appears by a charter under the great seal from King
James VI., dated 25th March 1619. His only son, Alexander Seton of
Pitmedden, had three charters under the great seal, one dated 19th
November 1622, another, 20th July 1626, and the third, 10th July 1630.
His son, John Seton of
Pitmedden, accompanied the earl of Errol, lord-high-constable of
Scotland, at the coronation of Charles I. in 1633. He was a steady
loyalist, and in May 1638, the marquis of Huntly having been appointed
the king’s lieutenant in the north, is said to have sent the following
letter to him: “Right special cousin. Being resolved, upon a special
commission from the king, to be present at Dalkeith, 6th June, for
attending his majesty’s service there, and being desirous of both the
company and advice of my best friends, as occasion may offer, I heartily
entreat you, as one in whom I confide, to meet me at Fettercairn upon
Friday 1 June at night, for accompanying me in that journey; and it
shall oblige me at other times to acquit myself in your occasions, as
one who is your assured cousin, Huntly.” This letter, quoted from
Douglas’ Baronage, is dated “Aberdeen, 21st May 1638,” but Huntly was at
that date a prisoner in Edinburgh castle. The date probably should be
March. On the marquis’s second son, the Viscount Aboyne, arriving at
Aberdeen in June, as commander of the king’s forces in the north, Seton
joined his standard. He commanded a detachment of loyalist troops at the
battle of the Bridge of Dee, and while riding along the river side with
Lord Aboyne, he was shot through the heart by a cannon-ball, being then
only in his 29th year. In consequence, his descendants have a heart,
with drops of blood issuing from it, in the centre of their coat of
arms. He had two sons, James and Alexander, both infants at their
father’s death. With their mother they were driven from their house,
which was plundered, and the whole rents of their estates seized by the
Covenanters. In 1640, they were placed by the king under the
guardianship of their kinsman, George, earl of Winton. Their mother
married the earl of Hartfell, and on her death, Winton took them into
his own family. In 1649, he sent them to the university of Aberdeen.
After completing their education, James, the elder son, proprietor of
Pitmedden, went upon the continent, and visited most of the courts of
Europe. He returned home at the Restoration, and became an officer in
the English fleet under the duke of York. He was present in the
desperate engagement near Harwich, where the English obtained a signal
victory over the Dutch, 3d June 1665. In the attack of the Dutch on the
English fleet at Chatham, in 1667, he was severely wounded, and died of
his wounds at London soon after, without issue.
His brother, Sir
Alexander, succeeded him. He passed advocate at the Scottish bar 10th
December 1661, and was knighted by Charles II., in 1664. He was
appointed an ordinary lord of session 31st October 1677, when he assumed
the title of Lord Pitmedden, and a lord of justiciary 5th July 1682. He
was created a baronet of Nova Scotia by royal patent, 15th January 1684.
He represented the county of Aberdeen in the Scots parliament, and for
his boldness and independence in opposing the measures of James VII., he
was deprived by that monarch of his seat on the bench. At the Revolution
he was offered to be restored as a lord of session and justiciary, but
he declined, as inconsistent with the oaths he had previously taken. He
died, at an advanced age, in 1719. According to Wodrow, he possessed a
vast and curious library. He published an edition of Sir George
Mackenzie’s ‘Law of Scotland in matters Criminal,’ with a treatise on
Mutilation and Demembration, annexed. He had, with five daughters, five
sons. Of these may be mentioned Sir William, second baronet; George,
ancestor of the Setons of Mounie; and Alexander, a physician, who served
under the duke of Marlborough.
Sir William, second
baronet, was, in his father’s lifetime, M.P. for the county of Aberdeen,
from 1702 to 1706. He was one of the commissioners to treat of the
Union, and afterwards one of the commissioners of equivalent. With four
daughters, he had five sons, and died in 1744.
His eldest son, Sir
Alexander, third baronet, was an officer in the guards. Dying without
issue, his next brother, Sir William, became fourth baronet. He also
died without issue, and was succeeded by his next brother, Sir Archibald
Seton, R.N. On his decease, without issue, the title devolved on his
nephew, Sir William, sixth baronet, the son of a younger brother,
Charles. Sir William died in 1819. He had 3 sons and 2 daughters.
Charles, the eldest son, died young. James. The 2d son, major 99th
Highlanders, was killed in the Peninsular war in 1814.
His only son, Sir William
Coote Seton, succeeded his grandfather as 7th baronet. Born Dec. 19,
1808, he passed advocate in 1831. He married Eliza-Henrietta, 2d
daughter of Henry Lumsden, Esq. of Cushnie, Aberdeenshire, and widow of
Captain Wilson, East India Company’s service; issue, 5 sons and 3
daughters. The eldest son, James Lumsden, lieutenant, 1st Madras
fusiliers, was born in 1835.
_____
The Setons of Abercorn,
Linlithgowshire, are descended from Sir Alexander Seton, eldest son of
Alexander Seton, earl of Huntly, by his second wife. He inherited the
lands of Touch and Tullibody, and was appointed heritable armour-bearer
and squire of the body to James III. From his son, Sir Alexander Seton
of Touch, came in a direct line, Sir William Seton of Abercorn, created
a baronet of Nova Scotia in 1663, with remainder to his heirs male
whatsoever. His eldest son, Sir Walter, advocate and commissary-clerk of
Edinburgh, 2d baronet, was succeeded by his son, Sir Henry, 3d baronet.
On the death, without issue, of the last James Seton of Touch, he became
undoubted male heir of Sir Alexander Seton, eldest son of 1st earl of
Huntly. Sir Henry died in 1751. His son, Sir Henry Seton of Culbeg,
baronet, was father of Sir Alexander, 5th bart., who died in India in
1810. He married in 1795, Lydia, 5th daughter of Sir Charles William
Blunt, baronet, and had 5 sons and 1 daughter.
The eldest son, Sir Henry
John Seton, born April 4, 1796, 5th baronet of Abercorn, and one of the
grooms in waiting to her majesty, Queen Victoria, served in the
Peninsular war. He claims to be direct male heir of Sir Alexander Seton,
1st Lord Gordon. His next brother, Charles Hay, born in 1797, married in
1829, Caroline, daughter of W.P. Hodges, Esq.; issue, a son.
Of the family of Touch
was Sir Alexander Seton (knighted by Charles I. in 1633), 2d son of
James Seton of Touch, 7th generation from Alexander Seton, Lord Gordon,
in a direct male line. Appointed an ordinary lord of session, as Lord
Kilcreuch, Feb. 14, 1626, he resigned his seat June 6, 1637. His
grandson, Sir Walter Seton of Culbeg, was created a baronet of Nova
Scotia in 1633, to him and his heirs male whatsoever. The Setons of
Touch are represented by the family of Seton-Steuart, baronet. (see
STEUART.)
_____
The Setons of Mounie,
Aberdeenshire, are a branch of the Setons of Pitmedden. George Seton of
Mounie, the first of the family, was second son of Sir Alexander Seton,
Lord Pitmedden. His son, William Seton of Mounie, died unmarried, when
the estate devolved on his eldest sister, Margaret, married to James
Anderson of Cobenshaw, (of the Andersons of Broughton, Northumberland,
from when the earls of Yarborough in England are descended), who assumed
the name of Seton. They had, with other issue, a son, Alexander Seton,
Esq. of Mounie, who in 1810 married his cousin, Janet, daughter of the
Rev. Skene Ogilvy, D.D., Aberdeen, whose wife was Isabella Seton,
Margaret’s younger sister, and who was the lineal descendant and male
representative of Francis, sixth son of John, sixth Lord Ogilvy of
Airlie.
Memoir of Alexander
Seton, Earl of Dunfermline
By George Seton |