THE founder of the
Drummond family was long believed to have been ‘a Hungarian
gentleman,’ named MAURICE, who was said by Lord Strathallan, in
his history of the family, to have piloted the vessel in which
Edgar Atheling and his two sisters embarked for Hungary in 1066.
They were driven, however, by a storm to land upon the north side
of the Firth of Forth, near Queensferry, and took refuge at the
Court of Malcolm Canmore, which was then held at Dunfermline.
After the marriage of the Scottish king to the Princess Margaret,
the Hungarian, as a reward for his skilful management of the
vessel in the dangerous sea voyage, was rewarded by Malcolm with
lands, offices, and a coat-of-arms; and called Drummond; ‘and so
it seems,’ says Lord Strathallan, ‘this Hungarian gentleman got
his name, either from the office as being captaine, director, or
admiral to Prince Edgar and his company—for Dromont or Dromend in
divers nations was the name of a ship of a swift course, and the
captaine thereof was called Droment or Dromerer—or otherwise the
occasion of the name was from the tempest they endured at sea;’
for Drummond, his lordship thinks, might be made up of the Greek
word for water, and meant a hill, ‘signifying high hills of
waters; or Drummond, from drum, which in our ancient language is a
height.’ The myth was enlarged with additional and minute
particulars by succeeding historians of the family. Mr. Malcolm
exalts the Hungarian gentleman to the position of a royal prince
of Hungary, and affirms that he was the son of George, a younger
son of Andrew, King of Hungary. The late Mr. Henry Drummond, the
banker, and M.P. for West Surrey, in his splendid work, entitled,
‘Noble British Families,’ adopts and improves upon the statements
of the previous writers, and gives the Hungarian prince a royal
pedigree in Hungary for many generations anterior to his coming to
Scotland in 1066. All three agree in stating that the first lands
given to that Hungarian by Malcolm Canmore lay in Dumbartonshire,
and included the parish of Drummond in Lennox.
Mr. Fraser, in his
elaborate and most interesting work, entitled, ‘The Red Book of
Menteith,’ has proved, by conclusive evidence, that these
statements respecting the origin of the Drummond family are purely
apocryphal. The word Drummond, Drymen, or Drummin, is used as a
local name in several counties of Scotland, and is derived from
the Celtic word druim, a ridge or knoll. The first person
who can be proved to have borne the name was one Malcolm of
Drummond, who, along with his brother, named Gilbert, witnessed
the charters of Maldouen, third Earl of Lennox, from 1225
to 1270. But this Malcolm was simply a chamberlain to the Earl.
Mr. Drummond states that he was made hereditary thane or seneschal
of Lennox, which is quite unsupported by evidence; and he asserts
that Malcolm’s estates reached from the shores of the Gareloch, in
Argyllshire, across the counties of Dumbarton and Stirling into
Perthshire, which Mr. Fraser has shown to be an entire mistake.
Instead of the Barony of Drymen, or Drummond, having been granted
to a Prince Maurice by Malcolm Canmore in 1070, the lands belonged
to the Crown previous to the year 1489, when for the first time
they were let on lease to John, first Lord Drummond, and
afterwards granted to him as feu-farm. The earliest charter to the
family of any lands having a similar name was granted in 1362, by
Robert Stewart of Scotland, Earl of Strathern, to Maurice of
Drummond, of the dominical lands, or mains of Drommand and
Tulychravin, in the earldom of Strathern. It is doubtful if he
ever entered into possession of these lands; but it is clear that,
whether he did so or not, they did not belong to the Drummond
family previous to the grant of 1362, but were part of the
estates of the Earl of Strathern, and that they are wholly
distinct from the lands and lordship of Drummond afterwards
acquired by John Drummond, who sat in Parliament 6th May, 1471,
under the designation of Dominus de Stobhall, and, sixteen years
later, was created a peer of Parliament by James III.
James IV., after
his accession to the throne, granted a lease for five years, on
6th June, 1489, in favour of John, Lord Drummond, of the Crown
lands of Drummond, in the shire of Stirling. On the expiry of the
lease, the King made a perpetual grant of the lands to him by a
charter under the Great Seal, dated 31st January, 1495, bearing
that the grant was made for the good and faithful services
rendered by Lord Drummond, and for the love and favour which the
King had for him. After the death of James IV., Lord Drummond
exerted all his influence to promote the marriage between his
grandson, the Earl of Angus, and the widowed Queen Margaret. ‘This
marriage begot such jealousy,’ says Lord Strathallan, ‘in the
rulers of the State, that the Earl of Angus was cited to appear
before the Council, and Sir William Cummin of Inneralochy, Knight,
Lyon King-at-Armes, appeared to deliver the charge; in doing
whereof he seemed to the Lord Drummond to have approached the Earl
with more boldness than discretion, for which he gave the Lyon a
box on the ear; whereof he complained to John, Duke of Albany,
then newly made Governor to King James V.; and the Governor, to
give ane example of his justice at his first entry to his new
office, caused imprison the Lord Drummond’s person in the Castle
of Blackness, and forfault his estate to the Crown for his
rashness. But the Duke, considering, after information, what a
fyne man the lord was, and how strongly allyed with most of the
great families of the nation, was well pleased that the
Queen-mother and Three Estates of Parliament should interceed for
him, as he was soone restored to his libertie and fortune.’ It
would have been well for Lord Drummond if he had remembered, on
this occasion, the motto of his family, ’Gang warily,’ and his own
maxim, in his paper of ‘Constituted Advice,’ ‘In all our doings
discretion is to be observed, otherwise nothing can be done
aright.’
On the 5th of
January, 1535, King James V. entered into an obligation to infeft
DAVID, second Lord Drummond, in all the lands which had belonged
to his great-grandfather, John, the first lord, and which were in
the King’s hands by reason of escheat and forfeiture, through the
accusation brought against John, Lord Drummond, for the
treasonable and violent putting of hands on the King’s officer
then called Lyon King-of-Arms. Certain specified lands, however,
were excepted—viz., Innerpeffrey, Foirdow, Aucterarder,
Dalquhenzie and Glencoyth, with the patronage of the provostry and
chaplaincy of Innerpeffrey, which were to be given by the King to
John Drummond of Innerpeffrey, and to the King’s sister, Margaret,
Lady Gordon, his spouse. It was stipulated in the obligation that
David, Lord Drummond, was to marry Margaret Stewart, daughter of
Margaret, Lady Gordon. The instrument of
infeftment, dated 1st and 2nd
November, 1542, affords the most positive proof of the distinction
between the old and new possessions of Drummond in Stirlingshire
and Drommane in Strathern, and the two were for the first time, by
a charter dated 25th October, 1542, ‘united, erected, and
incorporated into a free barony, to be called in all tymes to cum
the Barony of Drummen.’ It is evident, then, that ‘whatever lands
in the Lennox the earlier members of the house of Drummond might
have held, such certainly did not comprehend the lands bearing
their own name.’ The lands of Drummond were sold by the Earl of
Perth, in 1631, to William, Earl of Strathern and Menteith. The
eighth and last Earl entailed them upon James, Marquis of
Montrose, and they have ever since formed part of the Montrose
estates.
The lands of
Roseneath, in Dumbartonshire, were also said by Mr. Henry Drummond
to have been granted by Malcolm Canmure to the alleged Hungarian
prince, but these lands were in reality acquired by the Drummonds
in 1372, by a grant from Mary, Countess of Menteith, and were soon
restored. The bars wavy, the armorial bearings of the Drummonds,
were alleged to have been taken from the tempestuous waves of the
sea, when Maurice the Hungarian piloted the vessel which carried
Edgar Atheling and his sisters. The late Mr. John Riddell affirms
that this supposed origin of the Drummond arms is too absurd and
fabulous to claim a moment’s attention. Mr. Fraser has shown that
the bars wavy were the proper arms of the Menteith earldom, and
that the Drummonds, as feudal vassals of the Earls of Menteith,
according to a very common practice in other earldoms, adopted
similar arms.
It thus appears
that the founder of the Drummond family was not a Hungarian
prince, or even gentleman, but Malcolm Beg, chamberlain to the
Earl of Lennox. When the War of Independence broke out the
Drummonds embraced the patriotic side. JOHN OF DRUMMOND was taken
prisoner at the battle of Dunbar, and was imprisoned in the castle
of Wisbeach; but he was set at liberty in August, 1297, on Sir
Edmund Hastings, proprietor of part of Menteith in right of his
wife, Lady Isabella Comyn, offering himself as security, and on
the condition that he would accompany King Edward to France. His
eldest son, SIR MALCOLM DRUMMOND, was a zealous supporter of the
claims of Robert Bruce to the Scottish throne, and like his father
fell into the hands of the English, having been taken prisoner by
Sir John Segrave. On hearing this ‘good news,’ King Edward, on the
20th of August, 1301, offered oblations at the shrine of St. Mungo,
in the cathedral of Glasgow. After the independence of the country
was secured by the crowning victory of Bannockburn, MALCOLM was
rewarded for his services by King Robert Bruce with lands in
Perth-shire. Sir Robert Douglas, the eminent genealogist,
conjectures that the caltrops, or four-spiked pieces of iron, with
the motto ‘Gang warily,’ in the armorial bearings of the
Drummonds, were bestowed as an acknowledgment of Sir Malcolm’s
active efforts in the use of these formidable weapons at the
battle of Bannockburn. His grandson, JOHN DRUMMOND, married the
eldest daughter and co-heiress of Sir John Montefex, [It has
hitherto been supposed that the estates of Stobhall and Cargill,
on the Tay, which still belong to the family, came into the
possession of the Drummonds by marriage with this heiress, but
they were in reality bestowed by David II. on Queen Margaret, and
were given by her to Malcolm of Drummond, her nephew.] the first
of the numerous fortunate marriages made by the Drummonds.
Maurice, another grandson, married the heiress of Concraig and of
the Stewardship of Strathearn. A second son, SIR MALCOLM, whom
Wyntoun terms ‘a manfull knycht, baith wise and wary,’ fought at
the battle of Otterburn in 1388, in which his brother-in-law,
James, second Earl of Douglas and Mar, was killed, and succeeded
him in the latter earldom, in right of his wife, Lady Isabel
Douglas, only daughter of William, first Earl of Douglas. He seems
to have had some share in the capture at that battle of Ralph
Percy, brother of the famous Hotspur, as he received from Robert
III. a pension of £20, in satisfaction of the third part of
Percy’s ransom, which exceeded £600. He died of his ‘hard
captivity’ which he endured at the hands of a band of ruffians by
whom he was seized and imprisoned. His widow, the heiress of the
ancient family of Mar, was forcibly married by Alexander Stewart,
a natural son of ‘the Wolf of Badenoch.’ [See EARLDOM OF MAR.]
SIR WALTER
DRUMMOND, who was
knighted by James II., was the ancestor of the Drummonds of Blair
Drummond, Gairdrum, Newton, and other branches of the main stock.
SIR JOHN DRUMMOND, the head of the family in the reign of James
IV., held the great office of Justiciar of Scotland, was Constable
of the castle of Stirling, took a prominent part in public
affairs, and was created a peer 29th January, 1487-8, by the title
of LORD DRUMMOND. Although this honour, as we have seen, was
conferred upon him by James III., Lord Drummond joined the party
of the disaffected nobles, who took up arms against their
sovereign, with the Prince at their head, and was rewarded for his
services after the death of the King at Sauchieburn
by a lease, subsequently converted
into a grant, of the Crown lands of Drummond in the county of
Stirling.
The Drummonds were
not only a brave and energetic race, but they were conspicuous for
their handsome persons and gallant bearing. Good looks ran in
their blood, and the ladies of the family were famous for their
personal beauty, which no doubt led to the great marriages made by
them, generation after generation, with the Douglases, Gordons,
Grahams, Crawfords, Kers, and other powerful families, which
greatly increased the influence and possessions of their house.
Margaret, daughter of Malcolm, Lord Drummond, and widow of Sir
John Logie, became the second wife of David II., who seems to have
been familiar with her during her husband’s lifetime. The
Drummonds gave a second queen to Scotland in the person of
Annabella, the saintly wife of Robert IlI., and mother of the
unfortunate David, Duke of Rothesay, and of James I., whose ‘depth
of sagacity and firmness of mind’ contributed not a little to the
good government of the kingdom. They had nearly given another
royal consort to share the throne of James IV., who was devotedly
attached to Margaret, eldest daughter of the first Lord Drummond,
a lady of great beauty. [The entries in the Lord High Treasurer’s
accounts respecting the frequent rich presents lavished on a
certain Lady Margaret, which have been adduced as proofs of the
relation in which Lady Margaret Drummond stood to James, have been
proved to refer to Lady Margaret Stewart, the King’s aunt. James,
indeed, was a mere boy when those sums were paid; his connection
with Margaret Drummond did not
commence until the summer of 1496.] But that king’s purpose to
marry her was frustrated by her death, in consequence of poison
administered by some of the nobles, who were envious of the honour
which was a third time about to be conferred on her family. Her
two younger sisters, who accidentally partook of the poisoned
dish, shared her fate. The historian of the Drummonds states that
James was ‘affianced to Lady Margaret, and meant to make her his
queen without consulting his council. He was opposed by those
nobles who wished him to wed Margaret Tudor. His clergy likewise
protested against his marriage as within the prohibited degrees.
Before the King could receive the dispensation, his wife (the Lady
Margaret) was poisoned at breakfast at Drummond Castle, with her
two sisters. Suspicion fell on the Kennedys—a rival house, a
member of which, Lady Janet Kennedy, daughter of John, Lord
Kennedy, had borne a son to the King.’ A slightly different
account is given in ‘Morreri’s Dictionary,’ on the authority of a
manuscript history of the family of Drummond, composed in 1689. It
is there stated that Lady Margaret, daughter of the first Lord
Drummond, 'was so much beloved by James IV. that he wished to
marry her, but as they were connected by blood, and a dispensation
from the Pope was required, the impatient monarch concluded a
private marriage, from which clandestine union sprang a daughter,
who became the wife of the Earl of Huntly. The dispensation having
arrived, the King determined to celebrate his nuptials publicly;
but the jealousy of some of the nobles against the house of
Drummond suggested to them the cruel project of taking off
Margaret by poison, in order that her family might not enjoy the
glory of giving two queens to Scotland.’ The three young ladies
thus ‘foully done to death’ were buried in a vault, covered with
three blue marble stones, in the choir of the cathedral of
Dunblane.
John, first Lord
Drummond, died in 1519, upwards of eighty years of age. His eldest
son predeceased him, and William, Master of Drummond, his second
son, was unfortunately implicated in a tragic affair which brought
him to the scaffold. There was a feud of long standing between the
Drummonds and the Murrays, and in 1490 the Master of Drummond,
having learned that a party of Murrays were levying teinds on his
father’s estates for George Murray, Abbot of Inchaffray, hastened
to oppose them at the head of a large body of followers,
accompanied by Campbell of Dunstaffnage. The Murrays took refuge
in the church of Monievaird, and the Master and his party were
retiring, when a shot from the church killed one of the
Dunstaffnage men. The Highlanders, in revenge for this murder, set
fire to the church, and nineteen of the Murrays were burnt to
death. James determined to punish the ringleaders in this shocking
outrage with death, and the Master of Drummond was apprehended,
tried, convicted, and executed, in spite of the earnest entreaties
of his mother and sister in his behalf.
He left a son, who
predeceased his grandfather, and in consequence the first Lord
Drummond was succeeded by his great-grandson DAVID, who became
second Lord Drummond. He was a zealous adherent of Queen Mary. His
second son, James, Lord Maderty, was ancestor of the Viscounts
Strathallan. He married Margaret, daughter of Alexander, Duke of
Albany, and grand - daughter of James II. His elder son, PATRICK,
third Lord Drummond, embraced the Protestant religion. The great
beauty, ability, and virtues of his daughter, the Countess of
Roxburgh, were celebrated in glowing strains by the poet Daniel,
and she was held in such high estimation by James VI. that he made
choice of her to be the governess of his daughters. The Drummonds
were a courtly family, and throughout their whole career were
conspicuous for their attachment to the throne. They fought
gallantly on the royal side, under Montrose, in the Great Civil
War, and suffered severely for their loyalty. More fortunate,
however, than most of the Royalist nobles, they were liberally
rewarded at the Restoration for their fidelity to the Crown.
JAMES,
fourth Lord Drummond, was created EARL
OF PERTH in 1605. His brother, the second Earl, was a staunch
Royalist, and was fined £5,000 by Cromwell for his adherence to
the cause of Charles I. His grandson JAMES, fourth Earl, after
holding the offices of Lord Justice-General and of an
Extraordinary Lord of Session, was in 1684 appointed Lord
Chancellor of Scotland. He was a special favourite of James VII.,
whose good will he and his younger brother had gained by
renouncing the Protestant religion, and embracing the tenets of
Romanism. ‘With a certain audacious baseness,’ says Lord Macaulay,
‘which characterised Scottish public men in that bad age, the
brothers declared that the papers found in the strong box of
Charles II. had converted them both to the true faith, and they
began to confess and to hear mass. How little conscience had to do
with Perth’s change of religion he amply proved by taking to wife
a few weeks later, in direct defiance of the laws of the Church
which he had just joined, a lady who was his cousin-german,
without waiting for a dispensation. When the good Pope learned
this he said, with scorn and indignation which well became him,
that this was a strange sort of conversion.’
Apostasy from the
Episcopal Church to Romanism, and especially apostasy such as
this, was a sure passport to the confidence and liberality of
James, and Perth speedily became the chief Scottish favourite of
that weak and tyrannical monarch. He obtained a gift of the
forfeited estates of Lord Melville, and was entrusted with the
whole management of affairs in Scotland. He readily lent himself
to carry out the arbitrary and unconstitutional schemes of his
master, and took a prominent part in the cruel persecution of the
Covenanters. Burnet ascribes to him the invention of a little
steel thumbscrew, which inflicted such intolerable pain that it
wrung confessions out of men on whom his Majesty’s favourite boot
had been tried in vain. Perth’s younger brother was created EARL
OF MELFORT in 1686, received a grant of a portion of the forfeited
estates of the Earl of Argyll, and was appointed Secretary of
State for Scotland. The unprincipled conduct of these two chief
ministers of affairs rendered them very obnoxious to the
people, and especially to the citizens of Edinburgh. A cargo of
images, beads, crosses, and censers was sent from the Continent to
Lord Perth, in direct violation of the law which forbade the
importation of such articles. A Roman Catholic chapel was fitted
up in the Chancellor’s house, in which mass was regularly
performed. A riot in consequence took place. The iron bars which
protected the windows were wrenched off and the inmates were
pelted with mud. The troops were called out to quell the
disturbance, the mob assailed them with stones; in return, the
troops were ordered to fire, and several citizens were killed. Two
or three of the ringleaders of the riot were hanged, amid
expressions of strong sympathy for the sufferers, and of
abhorrence of the Chancellor, on whom the whole blame was laid.
Perth and his
brother were poor creatures both, and seem to have been destitute
even of the physical courage of their house. When the Revolution
took place and his royal master fled to France, the Chancellor,
whose ‘nerves were weak and his spirit abject,’ took refuge at
Castle Drummond, his country seat, near Crieff, under the escort
of a strong guard, and there experienced ‘an agony as bitter as
that into which the merciless tyrant had often thrown better men.’
He confessed that ‘the strong terrors of death were upon him,’ and
vainly ‘tried to find consolation in the rites of his new Church.’
Believing that he was not safe even among his own domestics and
tenantry, he quitted Drummond Castle in disguise, and, crossing by
unfrequented paths the Ochil Hills, then deep in snow, he
succeeded in getting on board a collier vessel which lay off
Kirkcaldy. But his flight was discovered. It was rumoured that he
had carried off with him a large amount of gold, and a skiff,
commanded by an old buccaneer, pursued and overtook the flying
vessel near the Bass, at the mouth of the Firth. The Chancellor
was dragged from the hold where he had concealed himself disguised
in woman’s clothes, was hurried on shore begging for life with
unmanly cries, like his brother chancellor, Jeffries, and was
consigned to the common jail of Kirkcaldy. He was afterwards
transferred, amidst the execrations and screams of hatred of a
crowd of spectators, to the castle of Stirling, where he was kept
a close prisoner for four years. On regaining his liberty, in
1693, the ex-Chancellor went to Rome, where he resided for two
years. King James then sent for him to St. Germains, appointed him
First Lord of the Bedchamber, Chamberlain to the Queen, and
governor to their son, the titular Prince of Wales, who, on his
father’s death, raised the Earl to the rank of Duke—a title which
was, of course, not recognised by the British Government. He was
deeply engaged in all the intrigues and plots of the mimic court
of the exiled monarch until his death in
1716.
His eldest son,
JAMES, Lord Drummond, accompanied King James in his expedition to
Ireland, took a prominent part in the rebellion of 1715, and was,
in consequence, attainted by the British Parliament. But two years
before this unsuccessful attempt to restore the Stewart family to
the throne, he executed a disposition of his estates in favour of
his son, which was sustained by the Court of Session, and affirmed
by the House of Lords. Destiny, however, had set her hand on the
ill-fated house, and its doom was only postponed, not averted. The
heir of the family, JAMES, third titulal Duke of Perth, true to
the principles of his family, joined Prince Charles Stewart in the
rebellion of 1745, at the head of his tenantry, and shared in all
the perils and privations of that unfortunate adventurer. He was a
young man of an amiable disposition and dauntless courage, but his
abilities were very moderate, his constitution was weak, and he
was quite inexperienced both in politics and in war. ‘In spite of
a very delicate constitution,’ says Douglas, ‘he underwent the
greatest fatigues, and was the first on every occasion of duty
where his head or his hands could be of use.’ He commanded the
right wing of the Highlanders at the battle of Prestonpans,
directed the siege of Carlisle, and of the castle of Stirling, and
was at the head of the left wing at the final conflict of
Culloden. After that disastrous battle, though tracked and pursued
by the English troops, he made his escape to Moidart, and embarked
in a French vessel lying off that coast. But his constitution was
quite worn out by the privations he had undergone, and he died on
his passage to France, 11th May, 1746, at the age of thirty-three.
His brother and heir, Lord John Drummond, a colonel in the French
service, commanded the left wing of the Highlanders at the battle
of Falkirk. On the suppression of the rebellion, he made his
escape to France, served with distinction in Flanders under
Marshal Saxe, and attained the rank of major-general shortly
before his death, in 1747. Previous to his death, the Duke of
Perth had been attainted by the British Parliament, and his
estates were forfeited to the Crown. His two uncles successively
assumed the title of Duke of Perth, and on the death of Lord
Edward Drummond, the younger of the two, at Paris, in 1760, the
main line of the family became extinct.
The succession fell
to the descendants of the Earl of Melfort, younger brother of the
Chancellor, and Secretary of State for Scotland under James VII.
He too, as we have seen, became a pervert to the Romish Church,
and in his zeal for his new faith obtained from the King the
exclusion of his family by his first wife from the right to
inherit his estates and titles, because their mother’s relations
had frustrated his attempts to convert them to Romanism. At the
Revolution he fled to France, and was attainted by Act of
Parliament in 1695. He was created Duke de Melfort in 1701,
and for a number of years had the chief administration of the
affairs of the exiled monarch. He died in 1714. His second wife,
daughter of Sir Thomas Wallace of Craigie, lived to be above
ninety years of age, and in her latter years supported herself by
keeping a faro-table. His descendants remained in their adopted
country, and identified themselves with its faith, its interests,
and its manners. Most of them embraced the military profession and
attained high rank in the French, German, and Polish services.
Some of them entered the Church, and one was elevated to the rank
of cardinal. GEORGE, Sixth Duke of Melfort, renounced the Romish
faith, conformed to the Protestant Church, entered the British
army, and became a captain in the 98th Highlanders. Having
petitioned the Queen for the restoration of the Scottish attainted
honours, he proved his descent, in 1848, before the Committee for
Privileges of the House of Lords, was restored in blood by an Act
of Parliament in 1853, and was reinstated in the earldom of Perth
and the other Scottish honours of his illustrious house.
Meanwhile, the
Drummond estates, which had been forfeited to the Crown in 1746,
remained for nearly forty years under the charge of Commissioners.
In 1784, however, they were conferred by George III., under the
authority of an Act of Parliament, on a Captain JAMES DRUMMOND,
who claimed to be heir male of Lord John Drummond, brother of the
duke who fought at Culloden. The fortunate recipient of these fine
estates was, in addition, created a British peer by the title of
Baron Perth. At his death, in the year 1800, his landed property
descended to his daughter, Clementina Drummond, who married the
twelfth Lord Willoughby de Eresby. At her death the Drummond
estates devolved upon her eldest daughter, Lady Aviland.
Repeated but
unsuccessful efforts have been made by the Earl of Perth to obtain
the restitution of the hereditary possessions of the family. He
pleaded that he is now the nearest lawful heir male of James,
third Duke of Perth, and that he is the first of his house who
could sue for the family inheritance, as his predecessors were all
French subjects and Papists, and incapable of taking up any
heritable estate in Scotland. He also alleged that when the
forfeited possessions of the Drummond family were restored, they
ought legally to have been conferred on the nearest heir in the
direct line of the entail of 1713. An adverse decision, however,
was given both by the Court of Session and the House of Lords,
mainly on the ground that the attainder vested the estates
absolutely in the Crown, that they might, therefore, be conferred
at will by the sovereign or Parliament, and that their gift to
Captain Drummond cannot be reduced.
The interests at
stake in this suit were very valuable. Though Drymen, the original
seat of the Drummond family, and their other Dumbartonshire
property, passed into the hands of the Grahams centuries ago, and
the whole of their Stirlingshire estates, along with Auchterarder
and other ancient possessions of the family in Perth-shire, have
also passed away from them, there yet remain the antique castle of
Drummond with its quaint and beautiful gardens, Stobhall and
Cargill, which four hundred years ago were bestowed upon Malcolm
Drummond by Queen Margaret, his aunt, and the Trossachs, Loch
Katrine, and Glenartney, immortalised by Sir Walter Scott,
yielding in all nearly £30,000 a year.
There can be no
doubt that both on political and social grounds, it would have
been better that these fine estates should have devolved on a
resident proprietor, the representative of their ancient owners,
than that they should be held by a non-resident family already
possessed of vast estates in another part of the island, strangers
to the country and to the tenantry, and who never see or are seen
by them, except during a few weeks in autumn.
As showing the
grandeur of the Drummond family, Mr. Henry Drummond says that they
have furnished Dukes of Roxburgh, Perth, and Melfort; a Marquis of
Forth; Earls of Mar, Perth, and Ker; Viscounts Strathallan ;
Barons Drummond, Inchaffray, Madderty, Cromlix, and Stobhall;
Knights of the Garter, St. Louis, Golden Fleece, and Thistle;
Ambassadors, Queens of Scotland, Duchesses of Albany and Athole;
Countesses of Monteith, Montrose, Eglinton, Mar, Rothes,
Tullibardine, Dunfermline, Roxburgh, Winton, Sutherland, Balcarres,
Crawford, Arran, Errol, Marischal, Kinnoul, Hyndford, Effingham;
Macquary in France, and Castle Blanche in Spain; Baronesses
Fleming, Elphinstone, Livingstone, Willoughby, Hervey, Oliphant,
Rollo, and Kinclaven.
‘To this long list
of distinguished names,’ says Mr. Fraser, ‘the author might have
added Margaret Drummond, sometime Logie, the second queen of King
David Bruce.’
Mr. Henry Drummond
might also have mentioned the various minor branches of the
family, such as the Drummonds of Carnock; of Hawthornden, to whom
William Drummond, the celebrated poet, belonged; of Logie Almond,
who produced the distinguished scholar and antiquary, Sir William
Drummond; the Drummonds of Blair Drummond, whose heiress married
Henry Home, the celebrated Lord Kames, lawyer, judge, and
philosopher; and others.
The present Earl of
Perth, who was born in 1807, had an only son, Malcolm, Viscount
Forth, who died in 1861, in very melancholy circumstances. He left
a son, George Essex Montifex, born in 1856. It is stated in
Debrett’s Peerage that in 1874 the young lord married a
daughter of the late Mr. Harrison, lead merchant, of London.
According to the Quebec Mercury the youth, who was only
eighteen years of age, immediately after his marriage, which
displeased his family, emigrated with his wife to the United
States. He landed at New York without means, and engaged himself
as a shipping clerk to a firm in that town. He somehow lost his
situation, however, and left New York and settled at Brookhaven, a
fishing village on the south shore of Long Island. He lived there
for several years in a picturesque old farmhouse, supporting
himself and his wife very comfortably by fishing and shooting. In
appearance, dress, manners, and language, he differed little from
the fishermen of the, village, who knew him only as George. Last
year he quitted Brookhaven, and bringing his wife and one child—a
son—to New York, he became a porter to a dry goods firm. When he
was a shipping clerk he was visited by Lord Walter Campbell, who
unsuccessfully tried to persuade the runaway to return home. He
has now, however, gone back to his native country, and it is
understood that a reconciliation has been effected between him and
the old Earl, his grandfather. |