THE Homes are among the
oldest and most celebrated of the historical families of Scotland.
Their founder was
descended from the Earls of Dunbar and March, who sprung from the
Saxon kings of England and the princes of Northumberland. After
the conquest of that country by William of Normandy, Cospatrick,
the great Earl of Northumberland, and several other Saxon nobles
connected with the northern counties, fled into Scotland in the
year 1066, carrying with them Edgar Atheling, the heir of the
Saxon line, and his two sisters, Margaret and Christina. Malcolm
Canmore, who married the Princess Margaret, bestowed on the
expatriated noble the manor of Dunbar, and broad lands in the
Merse and the Lothians. Patrick, the second son of the third Earl
of Dunbar, inherited from his father the manor of Greenlaw, and
having married his cousin Ada, daughter of the fifth Earl by his
wife, a natural daughter of William the Lion, obtained with her
the lands of Home (pronounced Hume), in Berwickshire, from which
the designation of the family was taken. The armorial bearings of
his ancestors, the Earls of Dunbar, which were a white lion on a
red field, were assumed by him on a green field for a difference,
referring to his paternal estate of Greenlaw.
Under the
protection of their potent kinsman, the De Homes flourished and
extended their possessions, and kept vigilant ‘watch and ward’ on
the Eastern Marches against the incursions of the Northumbrian
freebooters. One of their chiefs, a Sir John de Home, was so
conspicuous for his successful forays across the Border, always
fighting in a white jacket, that he obtained from the English the
sobriquet of ‘Willie with the White Doublet.’ The son of
this redoubtable Border chief acquired the estate of Dunglass
(from which the second title of the family is taken) by his
marriage to the heiress of Nicholas Pepdie, in the reign of Robert
III. The second son of this couple was the founder of the warlike
family of Wedderburn, from which the Earls of Marchmont are
descended.
Hitherto the De
Homes had acknowledged as their feudal lords the Earls of Dunbar
and March, the heads of the great house from which they sprung,
who, from their vast possessions and their strong castle of
Dunbar, on the eastern Border, having the keys of the kingdom at
their girdle, as they boasted, were among the most powerful nobles
in the kingdom. Partly from ambition, partly, it would appear,
from a hereditary fickleness of character, these barons were noted
for the frequency with which they changed sides in the wars
between England and Scotland. The eleventh Earl was in the end
unfairly deprived of his earldom, castles, and estates by James
I., towards the middle of the fifteenth century, in pursuance of
his policy to break down the power of the great nobles. As some
compensation for this treatment, the King conferred upon him the
title of Earl of Buchan, but he indignantly refused to accept of
the honour, and sought an asylum in England, from which he never
afterwards returned. His father, the tenth Earl of Dunbar and
March, who was one of the heroes of Otterburn, in consequence of
the manner in which the contract of marriage between his daughter
and the Duke of Rothesay was broken off (see THE
DOUGLASES), renounced his allegiance for a time to his sovereign;
the De Homes, his kinsmen, abandoned his banner, and fought
against him and Harry Percy at the sanguinary battle of Homildon,
where their chief, SIR ALEXANDER HOME, was taken prisoner. On
regaining his liberty he accompanied the Earl of Douglas
(Shakespeare’s Earl, nicknamed Tineman) to France, shared
in his triumphs and disasters, and fell along with him at the
battle of Verneuil, in 1424, where the Scottish auxiliaries were
almost annihilated. Sir Alexander’s second son, THOMAS, was the
ancestor of the Homes of Tyningham and the Humes of Ninewells, the
family of which David Hume, the philosopher and historian, was
a member.
After the final
overthrow of the Earls of Dunbar and March, in January, 1436, the
Homes succeeded to a portion of their vast estates, and to a great
deal of their power on the Borders as Wardens of the Eastern
Marches. SIR ALEXANDER HOME, the head of the family, was created a
peer by the title of LORD HOME, 2nd August, 1473, and seems
to have possessed considerable
diplomatic ability, as he was frequently employed by James Ill, in
carrying out important negotiations with the English Court. His
father and his uncle had held in succession the office of bailie
of the lands belonging to the monastery of Coldingham, and he
induced the prior and chapter to make the office hereditary in his
family. He exerted all his influence in that situation to obtain
possession of the large conventual property, and indeed seized and
appropriated it to his own use. He was, therefore, greatly
irritated by the attempt of King James, with the consent of the
Pope, to attach the revenues of the priory to the Chapel Royal at
Stirling, and joined the disaffected nobles in their conspiracy
against that ill-fated sovereign. His Border spearmen contributed
not a little to the defeat and death of James at Sauchie. The
Homes obtained a liberal share of the fruits of the victory gained
by the rebellious barons. The revenues of Coldingham, the prize
for which Lord Home had rebelled and fought against his sovereign,
were allowed to remain in his possession, and ALEXANDER HOME,
second baron, his grandson and heir, was appointed immediately
after the murder of James to the office of Steward of Dunbar, and
obtained besides a large share of the administration of the
Lothians and Berwickshire. He was also sworn a Privy Councillor in
1488, and was appointed for life to the important office of Great
Chamberlain of Scotland. In 1489 he was nominated Warden of the
East Marches for seven years, and at the same time was made
captain of the castle of Stirling, and governor of the young King.
The tuition of John, Earl of Mar, the brother of James IV., was
likewise committed to this potent noble. He obtained also a
charter of the bailiery of Ettrick Forest, and in the following
year was appointed by the Estates to collect the royal rents and
dues within the earldom of March and barony of Dunbar. In 1497
Lord Home repaired to the royal standard with his retainers when
James IV. invaded England in support of the pretensions of Perkin
Warbeck. In retaliation for his ravages in Northumberland and
Durham, an English army, under the Earl of Surrey, laid waste the
estates of the Homes, and ‘demolished old Ayton Castle, the
strongest of their forts,’ as Ford terms it, in his dramatic
chronicle of ‘Perkin Warbeck.’
The Homes had now gained a
position in the foremost rank of the great nobles of Scotland, and
ALEXANDER, the third lord, who succeeded to the vast estates of
the family in 1506, elevated them to the highest summit of rank
and power ever attained by their house. In 1507 he was appointed
to the office of Lord Chamberlain, which had been held by his
father, and succeeded him also in the wardenship of the Eastern
Marches.
When war was about to break
out between James IV. and his brother-in-law, Henry VIII., Lord
Home, at the head of three or four thousand men, made a foray into
England and pillaged and burned several villages or hamlets on the
Borders. On their return home laden with booty, and marching
carelessly and without order, the invaders fell into an ambush
laid for them by Sir William Bulmer among the tall broom on
Millfield Plain, near Woler, and were surprised and defeated with
great slaughter. According to the English chronicler, Holinshead,
five or six hundred were slain in the conflict, and four hundred
were taken prisoners, among whom was Sir George Home, the brother
of Lord Home. Buchanan, however, estimates the number of prisoners
at two hundred, and says that it was the rear only which fell into
the ambuscade, while the other portion of the force with their
plunder arrived safely in Scotland.
This mortifying reverse
deeply incensed the Scottish king, and made him doubly impatient
to commence hostilities in order to avenge the defeat sustained by
his Warden.
When James took the field
shortly after, Lord Home brought a powerful array of his followers
to the royal banner, in that campaign which terminated in the
fatal battle of Flodden. The Homes and the Gordons, under Lord
Huntly, formed the vanguard of the Scottish army in that
engagement, and commenced the battle by a furious charge on the
English right wing, under Sir Edmund Howard, which they threw into
confusion and totally routed. Sir Edmund’s banner was taken, he
himself was beaten down and placed in imminent danger, and with
difficulty escaped to the division commanded by his brother, the
Admiral. The old English ballad on ‘Flodden Field’ thus describes
Home’s attack on the English vanguard :—
‘With whom encountered a
strong Scot,
Which was the King’s chief Chamberlain,
Lord Home by name, of courage hot,
Who manfully marched them again.
‘Ten thousand Scots, well
tried and told
Under his standard stout he led;
When the Englishmen did them behold
For fear at first they would have fled.’
Lord Dacre, who commanded
the English reserve, however, advanced to Sir Edmund’s support,
and kept the victorious Homes and Gordons in check. He states, in
a letter to the English Council, dated May 17th, 1514, that on the
field of Brankston he and his friends encountered the Earl of
Huntly and the Chamberlain; that Sir John Home, Cuthbert Home of
Fast Castle, the son and heir of Sir John Home, Sir William
Cockburn of Langton, and his son, the son and heir of Sir David
Home [of Wedderburn], the laird of Blacater, and many other of
Lord Home’s kinsmen and friends, were slain; and that on the other
hand Philip Dacre, brother of Lord Dacre, was taken prisoner by
the Scots, and many other of his kinsfolk, servants, and tenants,
were either taken or slain in the struggle. Sir David Home of
Wedderburn had seven sons in the battle, who were called ‘The
Seven Spears of Wedderburn.’ Sir David himself and his eldest son,
George, fell in the conflict with Lord Dacre. These facts
completely disprove the charge made against the chief of the Homes
that he remained inactive after defeating the division under Sir
Edmund Howard. It is alleged, however, by Pitscottie, that when
the Earl of Huntly urged Lord Home to go to the assistance of the
King, he replied, ‘He does well that does well for himself; we
have fought our vanguard and won the same, therefore let the lave
[rest] do their part as well as we.’ This statement, however, is
in the highest degree improbable, and is directly at variance with
the account which Lord Dacre gives of his conflict with the Homes,
after they had defeated Sir Edmund Howard’s division. It seems to
have been invented by the enemies of Home, who, though he fought
with conspicuous courage in the battle, incurred great odium in
consequence of his having returned unhurt and loaded with spoil [The
baggage.waggons were drawn up behind Edmund Howard’s division—a
fact which may account for the Borderers having secured so much
spoil.] from this fatal conflict. It was
even alleged that he had carried off the King from the battlefield
and afterwards put him to death. A preposterous story passed
current among the credulous of that day that in the twilight, when
the battle was nearly ended, four horsemen mounted the King on a
dun hackney and conveyed him across the Tweed with them at
nightfall. From that time he was never seen or heard of, but it
was asserted that he was murdered either in Home Castle or near
Kelso by the vassals of Lord Home. This absurd tale was revived
about fifty or sixty years ago by a popular writer, who gave
credit to a groundless rumour that a skeleton wrapped in a bull’s
hide and surrounded with an iron chain had been found in the well
of Home Castle. Sir Walter Scott says he could never find any
better authority for the story than the sexton of the parish
having said that if the well were cleaned out he would not be
surprised at such a discovery. Lord Home had no motive to commit
such a crime. He was the chamberlain of the King, and his chief
favourite; and, as it has been justly remarked, he had much to
lose (in fact, did lose all) in consequence of James’s death, and
had nothing earthly to gain by that event.
Six months after the battle
of Flodden, Lord Home was nominated one of the standing
councillors of Queen Margaret, who had been chosen Regent, and was
also appointed Chief Justice of all the country south of the
Forth. He was deeply implicated in all the intrigues of that
turbulent and factious period of Scottish history, and was
alternately on the side of the Queen Dowager and of Albany, who
succeeded her as Regent after her marriage to the Earl of Angus.
He protected Margaret in her flight into England in
1516, and
concocted with Lord Dacre measures to overthrow the Government of
the Regent. In revenge for these proceedings Albany marched into
the Merse at the head of a powerful army, overran and ravaged
Home’s estates, captured Home Castle, his principal stronghold,
and razed Fast Castle, another of his fortalices, to the ground.
Under pretence of granting him an amnesty and a pardon, Albany
induced Home to meet him at Dunglass, where he was treacherously
arrested and committed a prisoner to the castle of Edinburgh, then
under the charge of the Earl of Arran, his brother-in-law. He
contrived, however, to prevail on Arran, not only to let him
escape from prison, but to accompany him in his flight into
England. A few months later Home made his peace with the Regent
and was restored to his estates on condition that if ever he
rebelled again he should be brought to trial for his old offences.
But, unmindful of the warning he had received, and disregarding
his promise, he speedily renewed his treasonable intrigues with
Lord Dacre, the English Warden, who hired Home’s retainers to
plunder and lay waste the country, so that, as Dacre himself
admits, the Eastern Marches were a prey to constant robberies,
fire-raisings, and murders. Incensed at this behaviour, Albany
resolved that he would no longer show forbearance to this factious
and turbulent baron, and having by fair promises induced him and
his brother William to visit Holyrood, in September, 1516, he
caused them both to be arrested, by the advice of the Council,
tried on an accusation of treason, condemned and executed. Their
heads were exposed above the Tolbooth and their estates
confiscated. Buchanan mentions that one of the charges brought
against the Chamberlain was that he was accessory to the defeat at
Flodden and the death of the King, which shows at what an early
period this unfounded report was prevalent. The historian adds
that the accusation, though strongly expressed, being feebly
supported by proof, was withdrawn. Another brother, David Home,
Prior of Coldingham, was shortly after assassinated by the
Hepburns. The execution of Lord Home was keenly resented by his
vassals and retainers. Among the fierce Border race the exaction
of blood for blood was regarded as a sacred duty. Albany himself
retired to France and thus escaped their vengeance, but they
determined to revenge the death of their chief by slaying the
Regent’s friend, the Sieur de la Bastie, a gallant and
accomplished French knight, whom he had appointed Warden of the
Eastern Marches in the room of Lord Home. For this purpose, David
Home of Wedderburn and some other friends of the late noble
pretended to lay siege to the tower of Langton, in the Merse of
Berwickshire, which belonged to their allies and accomplices, the
Cockburns. On receiving intelligence of this outrage, the Warden,
who was residing at Dunbar, hastened to the spot accompanied by a
slender train (19th September, 1517). He was immediately
surrounded and assailed by the Homes, and, perceiving that his
life was menaced, he attempted to save himself by flight. His
ignorance of the country, however, unfortunately led him into a
morass near the town of Dunse, where he was overtaken and cruelly
butchered by John and Patrick Home, younger brothers of the laird
of Wedderburn. That ferocious chief himself cut off the head of
the Warden, knitted it in savage triumph to his saddle-bow by its
long flowing locks, which are said to be still preserved in the
charter-chest of the family, and galloping into Dunse, he affixed
the ghastly trophy of his vengeance to the market cross. The
Parliament, which assembled at Edinburgh on the 19th of February,
1518, passed sentence of forfeiture against David Home of
Wedderburn, his three brothers, and their accomplices in this
murder. The Earl of Arran, a member of the Council of Regency,
assembled a powerful army and marched towards the Borders for the
purpose of enforcing the sentence. The Homes, finding resistance
hopeless, submitted to his authority. The keys of Home Castle were
delivered to Arran, and the Border towers of Wedderburn and
Langton were also surrendered to him. The actual perpetrators of
the murder, however, made their escape into England, and it is a
striking proof of the weakness and remissness of the Government at
that time that none of them were ever brought to trial or
punishment for their foul crime.
[David Home, the leader in
the plot for the murder of De Ia Bastie, was one of the ‘Seven
Spears of Wedderburn,’ who fought at Flodden, where his father and
eldest brother were killed. He seems to have been as noted for his
ferocity and blood-thirstiness as for his bravery. He was so
powerful in the Merse that it was said ‘none almost pretended to
go to Edinburgh, or anywhere else out of the country, without
first both asking and obtaining his leave.’ Blackadder, Prior of
Coldingham, however, refused to submit to his arbitrary control
and claims; and Home, meeting him one day while he was following
the sports of the chase, assassinated him and six of his
attendants. His brother, the Dean of Dunblane, shared the same
fate. The object which the Homes had in view was to obtain
possession of the estate of Blackadder, that had belonged to
Andrew Black-adder, who fell at Flodden, leaving a widow and two
daughters, at that time mere children. The Homes attacked the
castle of Blackadder, where the widow and her daughters resided.
The garrison made a brave resistance, but were ultimately obliged
to surrender. The widow was compelled to marry Sir David Home, and
her two daughters were contracted to his younger brothers, John
and Robert (the former one of the murderers of De la Bastie), and
were closely confined in the castle until they came of age. The
estate was entailed in the male line, and should have passed to
Sir John Blackadder of Tulliallan, but he was waylaid and
assassinated by the Homes in 1526, and they ultimately succeeded
in retaining possession of the estate by force.]
The forfeited title and
estates of Lord Home, who left no male issue, were restored, in
1522, to his brother GEORGE, who became fourth Lord. Like
his predecessors, be appears to have possessed the fickleness and
instability of character which the family probably inherited from
their versatile ancestors, the Earls of March. He deserted the
party of the Earl of Angus—Queen Margaret’s second husband—whom
the Homes had hitherto supported, and became for a time a
strenuous partisan of Albany, probably in return for the
restitution of the family estates and honours. But two or three
years later he was found fighting on the side of Angus at the
battle of Melrose, where Sir Walter Scott of Buccleuch made an
unsuccessful attempt to rescue the young King, James V., from the
hands of the Douglases. Shortly after he assisted the Earl of
Argyll in driving Angus across the Border and compelling him to
take refuge in England. It is due to Lord Home, however, to state
that, though thus inconstant in his adherence to the cause of his
brother nobles, the remark which Sir James Melvil made respecting
his son is equally applicable to him, that ‘he was so true a
Scotsman that he was unwinnable to England to do any thing
prejudicial to his country.’ There were very few Scottish nobles
of that day of whom this could with truth be said. In August,
1542, Lord Home, along with the Earl of Huntly, defeated, at
Haddon-Rig, a few miles to the east of Kelso, a body of three
thousand horsemen, who were laying waste the country under the
command of Sir Robert Bowes, the English Warden, the banished Earl
of Angus, and Sir George Douglas. The encounter was fierce and
protracted and was decided in favour of the Scots by the timely
arrival of Lord Home with four hundred lances. The English were
completely defeated, and left six hundred prisoners in the hands
of the victors, among whom were the Warden himself, his brother,
and other persons of note. A few months later, in conjunction with
Huntly and Seton, Home did good service by harassing a formidable
army which invaded Scotland under the Duke of Norfolk, and
compelling him in little more than a week to retire to Berwick and
disband his forces. In a skirmish with the English horsemen, on
the 9th of September, 1547, the day before the battle of Pinkie,
Lord Home, who commanded the Scottish cavalry, was thrown from his
horse and severely injured, and his son, the Master of Home, was
taken prisoner. His lordship was carried to the castle of
Edinburgh, where he died. His wife, a co-heiress of the old family
of the Halyburtons of Dirleton, stoutly defended Home Castle
against the Protector Somerset, but was ultimately obliged to
surrender, and it was garrisoned by a detachment of English
troops. Lord Home left two sons and a daughter.
ALEXANDER, his elder son,
fifth Baron, was a true representative of his family both in its
strength and its weakness. He was personally brave, and fought
with great distinction against the English invaders in the
campaign of 1548 and 1549. Unlike a large body of the nobles, he
steadfastly supported the independence of the country, and was
proof against the bribes and threats of the Protector Somerset and
his agents. He recovered Home Castle from the enemy in a very
daring manner. A small band of his retainers, who were on the
watch for an opportunity of surprising it, perceiving on a certain
night that the guards had relaxed their vigilance, boldly scaled
the precipitous rock on which the fortress was built, and, killing
the sentinel, obtained possession of the castle without
difficulty. Fast Castle, another fortalice of the family, was
retaken in a manner equally adventurous. A number of armed men
concealed themselves in the waggons which were bringing a supply
of provisions for the garrison. Suddenly starting out of their
hiding-place, the Scots seized the castle gates and admitted a
strong body of their countrymen, who were waiting their signal in
the immediate vicinity of the fort. The garrison being taken
unawares, were easily overpowered, and the place secured. Lord
Home was appointed to the office of Warden of the Eastern Marches,
so often held by his ancestors, and was one of the commissioners
who negotiated the treaty between England and Scotland at Norham
in 1559. He supported the Reformation, and sat in the Parliament
which abolished Popery and established the Protestant Church in
1560; but in 1565 he attached himself to the party of Mary and
Darnley, who in the following year, with a splendid retinue,
visited the family castles of Home, Wedderburn, and Langton. He
seemed to stand so high in the favour of the Queen at this time
that it was expected that the ancient title of Earl of March would
be revived in his favour. He was one of the nobles who signed the
discreditable bond in favour of the Queen’s marriage to Bothwell,
but only a few weeks later he joined the association for the
defence of the infant King, her son, and along with the Earls of
Morton, Mar, Glencairn, and Athole, Lords Lindsay, Ruthven,
Graham, and Ochiltree, he subscribed the order for Mary’s
imprisonment in Lochleven Castle. After the Queen’s escape from
that fortalice, Home brought a body of six hundred spearmen to the
assistance of the Regent Moray at the battle of Langside, where he
was wounded both in the face and the leg; but the fierce charge of
the Border spearmen contributed not a little to the defeat of the
Queen’s army. In 1569, however, he once more changed sides, and
joined Queen Mary’s party. He assisted Kirkaldy of Grange and
Maitland of Lethington in holding out the castle of Edinburgh to
the last against Regent Morton; but on its surrender in May, 1573,
he was more fortunate than his associates, for though he was
brought to trial before the Parliament and convicted of treason,
he was pardoned, and obtained the restoration of his estates. He
died 11th August, 1575.
ALEXANDER, sixth Lord Home,
stood high in the favour of King James VI., by whom he was created
Earl of Home and Baron Douglas, 4th March, 1605.
In the Parliament held in
1578 Lord Home obtained the reversal of the forfeiture passed
against his father for his adherence to the party of Queen Mary.
David Home of Godscroft represents this as having been mainly
brought about by the intervention of his brother, Sir George Home
of Wedderburn, with the Earl of Morton; and, according to
Godscroft, it was against the will and judgment of the Regent that
Wedderburn’s mediation was effectual. The affair affords a
striking illustration of the influence of the feeling of clan-ship
and fidelity to the chief overpowering even the dictates of
self-interest. Morton frankly informed Sir George Home that ‘he
thought it not his best course.’ ‘For,’ he said, ‘you will never
get any good out of that house, and if it were once taken out of
the way you are next; and it may be you will get small thanks for
your pains.’ Sir George answered that ‘the Lord Home was his
chief, and he could not see his house ruined. If they were unkind,
that would be their own fault. This he thought himself bound to
do. And for his own part, whatsoever their carriage were to him,
he would do his duty to them. If his chief should turn him out at
the fore-door, he would come in again at the back-door.’ ‘Well,’
said Morton, ‘if you be so minded it shall be so. I can do no more
but tell you my opinion.’ And so he consented. [History
of the House of Douglas, ii. p.
260.]
The Earl appears, however,
to have been largely imbued with the ferocity of the Borderers. It
is mentioned by Patrick Anderson that in May, 1593, Lord Home came
to Lauder, and asked for William Lauder, bailie of that burgh,
commonly called William at the West Fort, being the man who
hurt John Cranston (nicknamed John with the Gilt Sword).
Lauder fled to the Tolbooth, as being the strongest and surest
house for his relief; but the Lord Home caused put fire to the
house, and burnt it all. The gentleman remained therein till the
roof-tree fell. In the end he came desperately out amongst them,
and hazarded a shot of a pistol at John Cranston, and hurt him;
but it being impossible to escape with life, they most cruelly,
without mercy, hacked him with swords and whingers all in pieces.’
Lady Marischal, sister of
Lord Home, ‘hearing the certainty of the cruel murder of William
Lauder, did mightily rejoice thereat, and writ it for good news to
sundry of her friends in the country. But within less than
twenty-four hours after, the lady took a swelling in her throat,
both without and within, after a great laughter, and could not be
cured till death seized upon her with great repentance.’
A remission for this
barbarous slaughter was granted by the King in 1606 to the Earl of
Home, Hume of Hutton Hall, Thomas Tyrie, tutor of Drunkilbo, John
Hume in Kells, and other persons. [Domestic Annals of Scotland,
i. pp. 299, 300; Pitcairn’s Criminal Trials, pp.
ixi-16.]
A conspiracy of Bothwell and
certain discontented nobles, in 1593-4, for the seizure of the
King’s person, was directed also against Home and other Popish
leaders, who were to have been put to death; but it was
fortunately detected in time, and Home was ordered by the King to
encounter Bothwell when he was advancing to attack the capital.
Home’s forces were put to the rout, but Bothwell, who had been
thrown from his horse, was so severely injured that he made no
attempt to follow up his success. When the Popish lords were
excommunicated by the Assembly, Home escaped that sentence by
making professions of penitence, and promising to sign the
Confession of Faith, to attend public worship in the Reformed
Church, and to abstain from all intercourse with Jesuits and
seminary priests. The Assembly, on this, ordained that he should
be formally released by the Moderator from the spiritual burden
under which, according to his own profession, he was suffering so
much distress of mind. The Earl died in April, 1619. His only son,
JAMES, second Earl, was twice married, but died without issue.
The family titles devolved
on the heir male, SIR JAMES HOME of Cowdenknowes, a descendant of
the second son of the first Lord Home, who obtained from Charles
I. a ratification of all the honours, privileges, and precedencies
enjoyed by the two previous Earls. But the greater part of the
extensive estates of the family were divided between the two
sisters of the late Earl, one of whom was Countess of Moray, the
other the Duchess of Lauderdale, the first wife of the notorious
persecutor of the Covenanters.
The political power of the
Homes was now at an end. The successive heads of this ancient, and
at one time great house, were in no way distinguished for their
abilities or activity, and shorn as they were of their territorial
influence, they sank into obscurity. They were so unfortunate also
as to espouse the losing side in the Great Civil War, and they
suffered severely by pecuniary penalties for their loyalty. It
would appear, however, that the Earl had at last become hopeless
or lukewarm in the cause. He and the Earl of Roxburgh invited the
Marquis of Montrose to the Borders after the battle of Kilsyth,
but they were surprised by a party of Leslie’s men, and carried
prisoners to Berwick. Montrose evidently suspected that there had
been collusion between them and the Covenanting general, for in a
letter which Sir Robert Spottiswood, who was with the Marquis,
wrote to Lord Digby from Kelso, he says, ‘He [Montrose] was
invited hereunto by the Earls of Roxburgh and Home, who, when he
was within a dozen miles of them, have rendered themselves and
their houses to David Leslie, and are carried in as prisoners to
Berwick.’ The Earl was colonel of the Berwickshire regiment in the
army of the ‘Engagement,’ levied in 1648 for the rescue of Charles
I. As a ‘Malignant,’ he was of course excluded from the
Covenanting forces which, under General David Leslie, were raised
in behalf of Charles II. But after the battle of Dunbar and the
capture of Edinburgh Castle in 1650, Cromwell, to whom the Earl
seems to have been peculiarly obnoxious, despatched Colonel
Fenwick to reduce Home Castle. Whitelock gives a somewhat amusing
account of the reduction of this stronghold. ‘February 3rd, 1656.
Letters that Colonel Fenwick summoned Home Castle to be
surrendered to General Cromwell. The governor [whose name was
Cockburn] answered, "I know not Cromwell; and as for my castle, it
is built on a rock." Whereupon Colonel Fenwick played upon him a
little with the great guns. But the governor still would not
yield; nay, sent a letter couched in these singular terms:-
"I, William of the Wastle,
Am now in my castle,
And a’ the dogs in the toun
Shanna gar me gang doun."’
So that there remained
nothing but opening the mortars upon this William of the Wastle,
which did ‘gar him gang doun,’ and allow the castle to be
garrisoned by English soldiers. These doggrel rhymes are familiar
in the mouths of Scottish children down to the present day.
At the Restoration, Earl
James was reinstated in his property; but that was only a mere
fragment of the ancient patrimony of the family. He died in 1666.
His eldest son ALEXANDER, fourth Earl, and his second son JAMES,
fifth Earl, both died without issue. [It was Earl James who, when
the Covenanters held a Communion in the open air at East Nisbet,
on the banks of the Whitadder, was said to have ‘intended to
assault the meeting with his men and militia, and profanely
threatened to make their horses drink the Communion wine, and
trample the sacred elements under foot.’ To protect the assembled
multitude, amounting to at least four thousand persons, from
molestation, pickets were appointed to reconnoitre the places from
which danger was apprehended and a body of horse was drawn round
the place of meeting, but no attempt was made to disturb them. ]
CHARLES, sixth Earl, his youngest son, did not concur in the
Revolution of 1668, and took a leading part in the opposition to
the union with England; consequently his fortunes were not
improved by the favour of the Court or of the Government. He died
in 1706, while the Treaty of Union was pending. James Home, the
second of his three sons, took part in the rebellion of
1715, and
his estate was in consequence forfeited. The rental was at that
time £323 10s. 5d., while that of Wedderburn, which was
also forfeited, was only £213 0s. 10d. The Earl’s eldest son,
ALEXANDER, was so strongly suspected of disaffection to the
Government that on the breaking out of the rebellion in
1715 he was
committed a prisoner to the castle of Edinburgh. The eldest of his
six sons predeceased him; but WILLIAM, the second son and eighth
Earl, wiser in his generation than his father and grandfather,
supported the Government in the rebellion of 1745, displayed the
hereditary valour of his house at the luckless battle of
Prestonpans, where he strove, but in vain, to rally the
panic-stricken dragoons, and was appointed Governor of Gibraltar,
where he died in 1761, with the rank of Lieutenant-General in the
British army. His three successors—one of whom, ALEXANDER, ninth
Earl, was a clergyman of the Church of England—were obscure and
uninfluential persons.
There was one of the chiefs
of this fierce race, Sir David Home, whose character, as drawn by
his son, the author of the ‘History of the House of Douglas,’
presents a pleasing contrast to that of his sanguinary
predecessors. He was the first of his family who died a natural
death, all the rest having lost their lives in defence of their
country.
‘He was,’ says Godscroft, ‘a
man remarkable for piety and probity, ingenuity [candour], and
integrity; neither was he altogether illiterate, being well versed
in the Latin tongue. He had the Psalms, and particularly some
short sentences of them, always in his mouth, such as, "It is
better to trust in the Lord than in the princes of the earth,"
"Our hope ought to be placed in God alone." He particularly
delighted in the 146th Psalm, and sung it whilst he played on the
harp with the most sincere and unaffected devotion. He was
strictly just, utterly detesting all manner of fraud. I remember
when a conversation happened among some friends about prudence and
fraud, his son George happened to say that it was not unlawful to
do a good action and for a good end, although it might be brought
about by indirect methods, and that this was sometimes necessary.
"What," says he, "George, do you call an indirect way? It is but
fraud and deceit covered under a specious name, and never to be
admitted by a good man." He himself always acted on this
principle, and was so strictly just and so little desirous of what
was his neighbour’s, that in the time of the Civil Wars, when
Alexander, his chief, was forfeit for his defection from the
Queen’s party, he might have had his whole patrimony and also the
abbacy of Coldingham, but refused both the one and the other. When
Patrick Lindsay desired that he would ask something from the
Governor [Morton], as he was sure whatever he asked would be
granted, he refused to ask anything, saying that he was content
with his own. Lindsay still insisted, and told him, "If you do not
get a share of our enemies’ estates, our party will never put
sufficient trust in you." To this David answered, "If I never can
give proofs of my fidelity otherwise than in that manner, I will
never give any, let him doubt of it who may. I have hitherto lived
content with my own, and will live so, nor do I want any more."
Being educated in affluence, he delighted in fencing, hunting,
riding, throwing the javelin, managing horses, and likewise in
cards and dice; yet he was sufficiently careful of his affairs
without doors. Those of a more domestic nature he committed to the
care of his wife, and when he had none, to his servants; so that
he neither increased nor diminished his patrimony. Godscroft, in
the true spirit of his age, cites his father’s love to the house
of Home as ‘not the least of his virtues.’ The chief was
prejudiced against him, but ‘he bore it patiently, and never
failed giving him all due honour.’ Ultimately Lord Home came to
understand his real character, and to place in him that confidence
which he so well merited.
Sir George Home, the son and
successor of this worthy old laird, seems to have been a kindred
spirit, and to have possessed accomplishments of no common order.
His brother, David of Godscroft, mentions that he had been trained
to pious habits by his parents, and completed his education at the
Regent’s Court in company with the young Earl of Angus. He knew
Latin and French, and acquired such an extensive knowledge of
geography that though he had never been out of his own country, he
could dispute with any one who had travelled in France or
elsewhere. He learned the use of the triangle in measuring heights
without any teaching, or ever having read of it; so that he may be
said to have invented it.
‘He was diligent in reading
the Sacred Scriptures, and not to little purpose. He was assiduous
in settling controverted points, and, at table or over a bottle,
he either asked other people’s opinions or freely gave his own. He
had read a great deal when his public and private business allowed
him. He likewise wrote meditations upon the Revelations, the soul,
love of God, &c. He also gave some application to law, and even to
physic. He was polite and unaffected in his manners. He sang after
the manner of the Court. He likewise sang psaltery to his own
playing on the harp. He also sometimes danced. He was very keen
for hare-hunting, and delighted much in hawks. He rode skilfully,
and sometimes applied himself to the breaking of the fiercest
horses. He was skilful in the bow beyond most men of his time. He
was able to endure cold, hunger, thirst, fatigue, and watching...
He was moderate both in his eating and drinking, which was in
those days scarce any praise, temperance being then frequent,
though it is now very rare.’ [History
of the House of Douglas.]
Meanwhile a junior branch of
the family, the Humes of Polwarth, had risen to distinction and
influence. Sir Patrick Hume, the head of the house during the
latter part of the seventeenth century, was elevated to the
earldom of Marchmont, and appointed Lord Chancellor of Scotland at
the Revolution of 1688, as a reward for his sufferings in the
cause of Presbyterianism and religious liberty under Charles II.
and James VII. He acquired a considerable portion of the estates
of the main line of the family, including Home Castle, the cradle
of the race, and completely overshadowed them by his combined
official and patrimonial influence.
The estates of the main
stock of the family—which at one time extended from the Tweed to
the German Ocean, and included a very extensive tract of the most
fertile and highly cultivated land in Scotland—had by this time
dwindled down to an inheritance of only two thousand acres, which
at the commencement of the present century was rented at about
£2,000 a year, and even at the present day yields a rental of only
£5,000 per annum, while the moderate abilities of the owners did
not counterbalance the insignificance of their patrimony. But the
fortunate marriage of Cospatrick, eleventh Earl, to the heiress of
the Douglas estates, has revived the decayed fortunes of this
ancient house. His lordship was created a British peer in 1875 by
the title of Baron Douglas. [See THE DOUGLASES.] The
contrast between the fortunes of the two families is very
striking. The estates of the Homes, as we have seen, have almost
entirely passed into other hands, while the family itself is
numerous and flourishing. The late Countess, who was the eldest
daughter of the second Baron Montague, was the mother of five sons
and four daughters. The main line of the house of Douglas has long
been extinct, while their extensive possessions, in spite of their
frequent rebellions against the royal authority and the consequent
forfeitures and vicissitudes which they have undergone, for the
most part remain unimpaired. It is to be hoped that the Homes, now
restored to their former position in the foremost rank of our
historical magnates, will long continue, as they well deserve, to
flourish in Douglasdale. The present representative of the family
is Charles Alexander Douglas-Home, twelfth Earl of Home and second
Baron Douglas of the new creation.
Of the numerous branches of
the Home family, the earliest, as well as the most powerful and
prolific, were the Homes of Wedderburn, whose courage and savage
cruelty have already been noticed. Their founder was Sir Thomas
Home of Thurston, second son of Sir Thomas Home of Home, who
obtained, in 1413, from Archibald, Earl of Douglas, a grant of the
barony of Wedderburn, and became the ancestor of the Homes of
Polwarth, Kimmerghame, Manderston, Renton, Blackadder, and
Broomhouse. David Hume of Godscroft, author of a ‘History of the
House and Race of Douglas and Angus,’ was a cadet of this line.
The Homes of Blackadder, as we have seen, were descended from John
Home, one of the ‘Seven Spears of Wedderburn,’ who married the
heiress of the estate. His grandson, John Home, was created a
baronet of Nova Scotia in 1671. His younger son, Sir David Home of
Crossrig, was one of the first judges in the Court of Session
nominated by King William at the Revolution. From Lord Crossrig’s
eldest surviving son descended the Homes of Cowdenknowes, one of
whom was the author of several valuable medical works. Henry Home,
Lord Kames, the well-known judge and philosopher, belonged to the
Homes of Renton, whose ancestor was the second son of Sir
Alexander Home of Manderston. Sir Everard Home, Bart., the eminent
surgeon, was descended from the Homes of Greenlaw Castle. His
sister was the wife of John Hunter, the celebrated anatomist.
The Homes of Manderston were
a branch of the Wedderburn family, and seem to have possessed the
characteristics of that race. One of them, David Home, was
commonly termed ‘Davie the Devil,’ and his deeds of darkness well
merited that sobriquet
GEORGE HOME, the third son
of Alexander Home of Manderston, was a special favourite of James
VI., and held various offices about the Court. In 1601 he was
appointed High Treasurer of Scotland. He attended the King to
London on his accession to the English throne in 1603, and in the
following year he was created an English peer by the title of
Baron Home of Berwick. In 1605 he was made Earl of Dunbar in the
peerage of Scotland, and was subsequently appointed Chancellor of
the Exchequer in England. From this time forward he had the chief
management of Scottish affairs, and was the principal instrument
in establishing Episcopacy in Scotland. In 1609 the Earl was sent
down from London accompanied by two eminent English divines, Dr.
Abbot, subsequently Archbishop of Canterbury, and Dr. Higgins, for
the purpose of promoting this object, on which the King had set
his heart. On the approach of the Earl and his clerical
associates, Calderwood states that the noblemen, barons, and
councillors that were in Edinburgh went out to accompany him into
the town. So he entered in Edinburgh with a great train. The
Chancellor [the Earl of Dunfermline], the Provost, the Bailies,
and many of the citizens met him at the Nether Bow Port. It was
spoken broadly that no small sums of money were sent down with him
to be distributed among the ministers and sundry others. The
English doctors seemed to have no other direction but to persuade
the Scots that there was no substantial difference in religion
betwixt the two realms, but only in things indifferent concerning
government and ceremony.
The Earl had a different
service entrusted to him, and had recourse to very different means
to perform it, when, in 1603, he was appointed ‘his Majesty’s
Commissioner for ordering the Borders.’ Sir James Balfour says,
‘he took such a course with the broken men and somers that in two
justiciary courts holden by him he condemned and caused hang above
a hundred and forty of the nimblest and most powerful thieves in
all the Borders.’ The Chancellor informed the King that the
Borders were ‘now settled far by anything that ever has been done
there before.’ It was soon made manifest that the effect of these
severe proceedings was only temporary, for in 1609 it became
necessary for Lord Dunbar to go once more to Dumfries to hold a
justice court, and the King was informed by the Chancellor that
the Earl ‘has had special care to repress, baith in the in-country
and on the Borders, the insolence of all the proud bangsters,
oppressors, and Nembroths [Nimrods], but [without] regard or
respect to any of them; has purgit the Borders of all the chiefest
malefactors and brigands as were wont to reign and triumph there .
. . has rendered all those ways and passages betwixt your
Majesty’s kingdoms of Scotland and England as free and peaceable
as Phœbus in auld times made free and open the ways to his awn
oracle in Delphos, &c. These parts are now, I can assure your
Majesty, as lawful, as peaceable, and as quiet as any part in any
civil kingdom of Christianity.’
The chronic disorders and
outrages of the Border districts were not, however, to be so
easily remedied. Not long after a representation was made to the
King by the law-abiding inhabitants of the district, declaring
that ‘Lord Dunbar being now gone with his justice-courts, the
thieves are returned to their old evil courses.’
The Earl obtained the Order
of the Garter in 1609, and was installed at Berwick with
extraordinary pomp and magnificence. He is described by Archbishop
Spottiswood as a man of ‘deep wit, few words, and in his Majesty’s
service no less faithful than fortunate.’ Calderwood, who
naturally took a very different view of the Earl’s services,
narrates with evident satisfaction how in 1611 he was ‘by
death pulled down from the height of his honour, even when he was
about to solemnise magnificently his daughter’s marriage with the
Lord Walden (afterwards Earl of Suffolk). He purposed to celebrate
St. George’s day following in Berwick, where he had almost
finished a sumptuous and glorious palace. He was so busy and left
nothing undone to overthrow the discipline of our Church, and
specially at the Assembly holden last summer in Glasgow. But none
of his posterity enjoyeth a foot broad of land this day of his
conquest in Scotland.’ As the Earl left no male issue, his titles
expired at his death. The elder of his two daughters married Sir
James Home of Cowdenknowes, and was the mother of the third Earl
of Home.
Two incidents which occurred
at this time in connection with the family of Home cast a striking
light on the lawless state of the country even towards the close
of the seventeenth century. The only daughter of the late Laird of
Ayton, who was under age, was left in charge of the Countess of
Home. The father of the young girl had bequeathed to her his whole
estate, and when the time approached for her to choose her
curators, Home of Plendergast, the next heir male of the Ayton
family, presented, in December, 1677, a petition to the Privy
Council requesting that she should be brought as usual to their
bar to make that choice in the presence of her general kindred, no
doubt with a view to the young lady marrying a member of his
family. The Countess of Home, however, the young lady’s guardian,
and Charles Home, the brother of the Earl, with whom the heiress
of Ayton resided, had a different object in view. On the evening
of the day when the petition was presented to the Council, Charles
Home, accompanied by Alexander Home of Linthill, Sir Patrick Hume
of Polwarth (afterwards first Earl of Marchmont), John Home of
Ninewells (grandfather of the celebrated David Hume), Robert Home
of Kimmerghame, elder, and Joseph Johnston of Hilton proceeded to
the residence of the young lady, who was only twelve years of age,
and carried her off across the Border. ‘There they, in a most
undutiful and unchristian-like manner, carried the poor young
gentlewoman up and down like a prisoner and malefactor,
protracting time till they should know how to make the best
bargain in bestowing her, and who should offer most. They did at
last send John Home of Ninewells to Edinburgh and take a poor
young boy, George Home, son of Kimmerghame, out of his bed, and
marry him to the said Jean, the very day she should have been
presented to the Council.’ At the same time the Countess of Home
appeared before the Council, and apologised for the absence of her
ward ‘as being sickly and tender, and not able to travel, and not
fit for marriage for many years to come.’
The Council were justly
indignant at the manner in which the statutes had been violated
and their commands trifled with, and they inflicted heavy
penalties on all the offending parties. The boy-husband was fined
in £500 Scots, and was deprived of his interest jure mariti;
the young wife lost hers jure relictoe, and was fined
in a thousand marks for their clandestine marriage. Further, for
contempt of the Council, the lady was fined in a thousand marks,
to be paid to Home of Plendergast; Home of Ninewells was amerced
in a thousand marks to be paid to Plendergast; and a fine of two
thousand was imposed upon Johnston of Hilton. The young couple
were besides sentenced to three months imprisonment in the castle
of Edinburgh. [Privy Council
Records. Domestic Annals, ii. p.
390.]
The other incident, which
occurred a few years later at Hirsel, the seat of the Earl, was of
a much more tragical character. During the absence of Lord Home in
London, the Countess invited a party of the neighbouring gentlemen
to the house during the Christmas holidays. Amongst these were
Johnston of Hilton, Home of Ninewells, and the Hon. William Home,
brother of the Earl and the Sheriff of Berwickshire—three
gentlemen who, like the Countess, had all been connected with the
abduction of the young heiress of Ayton. They resorted to cards
and dice, at which Home lost a considerable sum of money. A
quarrel in consequence took place, and Johnston, who was of a
fiery temper, struck Home in the face. The affair, however, seems
to have been amicably settled, and all the company had gone to
bed, when William Home, who must have brooded over the affair,
rose and went to Johnston’s bedroom to call him to account for the
insult he had offered him. Nothing is known of what passed between
the two except that Home stabbed Johnston in his bed, inflicting
upon him no less than nine severe wounds. Home of Ninewells, who
slept in an adjoining chamber, came to see the cause of the
disturbance, and as he entered Johnston’s room, he received a
sword-thrust from the sheriff, who was now retiring, and who
immediately fled into England upon Johnston’s horse.
Ninewells recovered, but
Hilton died in a few days. The murderer, who was never caught, was
supposed to have entered some foreign service and to have died in
battle. But after the lapse of a good many years, he is said to
have returned to Scotland, and to have hazarded an experiment to
ascertain if he could be allowed to spend the remainder of his
days in his native country. A son of the murdered Johnston, while
at a public assembly, ‘was called out to speak with a person who
professed to have brought him some particular news from abroad.
The stranger met him at the head of the staircase, in a sort of
lobby which led into the apartment where the company were dancing.
He told young Johnston that the man who had slain his father was
on his death-bed, and had sent him to request his forgiveness
before he died. Before granting his request, Johnston asked the
stranger one or two questions, and observing that he faltered in
his answers, he suddenly exclaimed, "You yourself are my father’s
murderer!" and drew his sword to stab him. Home—for it was the
homicide himself—threw himself over the balustrade of the
staircase and made his escape.’ [Domestic
Annals, ii.
pp. 455,
456. Sir Walter Scott relates this anecdote on the authority
of Mrs. Murray Keith.—Notes to Fountainhall's Chron. p.
33.] |