Sir John de Preston
1342-
Prestons of Scotland - Craigmillar
The following account of Craigmillar Castle is from a
document by Denys Pringle, Principal Inspector of Ancient Monuments,
Historic Scotland, Edinburgh HMSO. (Picture
of Castle)
The castle of Craigmillar is
one of the most perfectly preserved examples of late medieval
castle-building in Scotland. Begun in the early 15th century by the Preston
family, who had acquired Craigmillar in 1374. The Prestons were lairds of
Craigmillar for almost 300 years.
The castle stands on a rocky
hilltop 3 miles (4.5 Km) south east of Edinburgh, within sight of Edinburgh
Castle, and commanding extensive views in all directions. A village already
existed at Craigmillar in the 12th century, when David I (1124-53) granted
Dunfermline Abbey some land and houses there. In 1253, the same abbey also
received from William, son of Henry, the laird of Craigmillar, a building
plot (or 'toft') and some arable land, meadow and pasture. There was no
evidence of any castle at this date.
Sir John Preston had received
the nearby barony of Gorton (or Gouerton) from David II. In February 1374,
Robert II granted to Sir John's son, Sir Simon Preston, the whole of
Craigmillar (or Cragmelor), which had been surrendered by its previous
tenant, William de Capella. Sir Simon was an important local figure, serving
at various times as sheriff of Edinburgh, or Midlothian. He was to hold
Craigmillar from the king as a hereditary fief in return for providing an
archer to serve in the king's army whenever so required.
It may have been Sir Simon
Preston's son, also named Simon, or perhaps his grandson Sir George, who
began to build the massive L-shaped tower around which the castle was later
to grow.
The lineage goes as follows:
Sir John de
Preston of Gorton b. ca.1280 d. by 1346 married and had 2 sons and a
daughter:
-
Sir Simon Preston (I) b.
ca.1310, Sheriff of Edinburgh/Lothian from 1360 and of Craigmillar 1374.
Sir Simon had two sons:
-
William Preston b.ca. 1312.
-
Margaret Preston b. ca.
1314.
Sir
Simon Preston II married and had three sons:
-
Sir George Preston (I) b.ca
1365 d.8-1424. Sir George had a son, his successor:
-
John Preston (I) b.
ca.1390 d.1425/6 married Christiana Cockburn d. c.1459. Sometime sheriff
of Edinburgh and Berwick, set his seal to a charter at Craigmillar in
October 1425, but it appears he died soon after, for in the following
year his son and heir William Preston, who was still a minor, was placed
in the care of his cousin Archibald until he should reach the age of 25.
-
John Preston b. ca.1372
d.xxxx
-
Sir Andrew Preston b.
ca.1374 d.xxxx. Sir Andrews descendant, Sir David Preston of Whitehill
will succeed to the barony in 1640.
Sir
William Preston b.<1417 d.7-1453, son of John Preston, succeeded his father
as laird of Gorton and Craigmillar in 1442. Sir William was one of the most
celebrated of the line, for it was he who presented to Edinburgh's high kirk
a reliquary containing the arm bone of the city's patron saint, St Giles,
which he had acquired during his travels in France. It may also have been
Sir William or perhaps his son who enlarged the castle by constructing the
quadrangular barmkin wall around three sides of the tower. This enclosed a
series of courtyard buildings and was strengthened at the corners with
circular towers, provided with gun-loops, from which a deadly fire could
have been directed at any attackers.
When Sir William died in July
1453, he was buried in the Lady Aisle, just south of the choir in St Giles'
Kirk. A chapel was to be built on the south side of the Lady Aisle, in which
a chaplain was to celebrate mass and offer prayers for his soul on each
anniversary of his death. This was later called Preston Aisle. The relic of
St Giles disappeared during the Reformation a century later, and there is no
trace of the memorial plaques or arms today. The Preston arms can still be
seen however, on the easternmost pillar of the south choir arcade,
immediately next to the bay where the high altar stood.
Sir
William Preston was succeeded in 1453 by his son, William Preston II who
died abt.1478.
Sir William Preston II b.xxxx
d. c.1478 was succeeded by his son Sir Simon Preston III. One of the first
duties of Sir Simon was to take custody of James III's younger brother,
John, Earl of Mar. Resentful of his two brothers' popularity and warned by a
witch, suitably prompted by the princes' political enemies, that he would
die by the hand of his nearest of kin, the king had already imprisoned the
elder of his brothers, Alexander, duke of Albany. Albany, however, had
escaped from the Edinburgh Castle and fled to the French court. Bishop John
Lesley's History next records that the king's second brother, the earl of
Mar, 'wes takin in the nicht in his awin house, had to Cragmillar, and
keipit thair at the Kingis commaund, and wes convict of ane conspiracie be
witchecrafte agains the King'. The unfortunate man was then brought to a
house in Canongate and while seated in a bath, 'they cuttit ane of his vanes
and causit him bleid to dead'.
In August 1511, James IV
erected the lands which Sir Simon Preston III was holding at Craigmillar,
including the 'castle, fortalice and mill', into a free barony, for which
the annual rent was to be a penny Scots at Whitsun.
Apparently, Sir William
Preston II also had a son Sir Thomas Preston who was the castle chaplain
from 1523.
Sir
Simon Preston III b.ca.1450 d.1519, married Unknown and had two sons,
William Preston and George Preston. His eldest son William Preston b.ca.1480
d.c.1519, married Elizabeth Hepburn and died before Sir Simon, therefore, in
1520, Sir Simon was succeeded by his son George Preston. It is believed that
much of the addition to the castle was done by Sir Simon Preston III because
the Preston Coat of Arms, accompanied by the Press-tun rebus, which now
surmounts the gate to the west garden, bears the date 15{1}0. (The Preston
rebus mentioned under the coat of arms consists of a press on the left and a
tun, or barrel, on the right. All carved in stone.) The new walls also
enclosed the eastern side of the family chapel which appears to have been
built around this time. The chapel is first recorded in a protocol of the
notary John Foular, dated 1 June 1523, by which the rents from two
properties in Edinburgh, amounting to 7 merks annually, were granted 'to a
discreet man, Sir Thomas Preston, chaplain in the chapel of Saint Thomas the
Martyr [ie Thomas Becket, archbishop of Canterbury, died 1170], situated
within the Castle of Cragmilour, and his successors, chaplains therein, for
celebrating [mass] now and in all time coming, for the soul of the late Sir
Symon Preston of that Ilk, and for the souls of his forebears and their
successors'.
Sir
George Preston b.ca. 1480 d.xxxx, second son of Sir Simon Preston III,
succeeded the barony in 1520. He married Isabella Pringle and they had a son
Simon Preston IV who succeeded to the barony of Craigmillar in 1543.
Sir
Simon Preston IV b.ca.1510 d. c.1575 married first Janet Beaton b.xxxx d. by
1549. Sir Simon married 2nd Elizabeth Menteith.
Sir Simon Preston IV was to
have a long and eventful career as laird of Craigmillar. His connections
with the city of Edinburgh were also close. In 1538-43 and 1544-45 he served
as provost, following a family precedent already established by his
forebears Sir Henry Preston in 1434-39 and James Preston in 1525. (First
mention of James Preston and he is not shown in the lineage chart.) In
addition to Craigmillar, Sir Simon also possessed a town house opposite the
town cross, on the site now occupied by the City Chambers (formerly the
Royal Exchange.)
The first major event to
affect Craigmillar under Sir Simon Preston IV was an English invasion of
Scotland. In May 1544, following the Scots' repudiation of an agreement made
earlier at Greenwich to form an alliance between Scotland and England by
marrying the young Queen Mary to Prince Edward, the son and heir of King
Henry VIII, the earl of Hertford landed with an army in Leith with a view to
persuading the Scots to change their minds. An anonymous history of the
period tells us that the army 'past to Craigmillar, quhilk was haistilie
gevin to thame, promesand to keip the samyne without skaith [damage]: quhilk
promes thai break, and brunt and destroyit the said hous'. A rather
different interpretation of the apparent ease with which the English took
the castle, however, is given by the Bishop John Lesley, who casts the
city's provost in the unflattering role of a collaborator. Lesley relates
that the merchants of Edinburgh had taken most of their valuables to
Craigmillar for safe keeping: but that this, 'not without froaud of the
keparis, as wes reported, wes betrayed to the Inglishmen for a parte of the
bowtaine [booty] and spoill thairof'. If the accusation was true, it could
have done Sir Simon little good, for he was himself taken prisoner and made
to walk as far as London before being released.
In 1549, Sir Simon Preston IV
was once more in Edinburgh, when he and his second wife Elizabeth Menteith,
were granted a charter for the barony of Preston. A stone panel bearing the
Preston coat-of-arms and the date 1549 which formerly surmounted the outer
main gate of Craigmillar indicates that Sir Simon did not delay in making
food the damage which the castle had suffered five years before. The
construction of this period seems to have included the rebuilding of the
east and south-east ranges around the inner court, and building (or
rebuilding) of a strong outer wall around the castle, defended by rounded
towers pierced by wide-mouthed gun-ports.
In the years following the
return of Mary Queen of Scots from France, in August 1561, Sir Simon Preston
IV was to show himself to be one of the queen's most loyal supporters. In
1562, he won Mary's gratitude when, as governor of Dunbar Castle, he failed
to carry out a sentence of execution passed on the rebel earl of Huntly. In
October of 1562, Mary nominated him once more for the position of provost of
Edinburgh, but it was not until August 1565 that the burgh council would
agree to accept him. He held the post until 1568, and between 1565 and 1567
also served as a privy councillor.
In September 1563, Mary spent
a week at Craigmillar Castle as a guest of Sir Simon Preston IV. While there
she received Thomas Randolph, the ambassador of Queen Elizabeth I, who
warned her that if she wished to remain on friendly terms with England she
should find herself an acceptable husband. Mary's eventual choice was the
Catholic, Henry, earl of Darnley, whom she married on 29 July 1565. Darnley
was not liked by Mary or her supporters and in December 1566, she spent some
time at Craigmillar and a group of her advisors also meeting at Craigmillar
made a fateful decision that would seal the fate of her unwanted husband.
The pact was subsequently known as the Craigmillar Bond. Conspirators
included the earls of Argyll, Huntly and Bothwell. Early in 1567 Darnley
returned to Edinburgh from Glasgow. Mary suggested they spend some time at
Craigmillar but he elected to stay at his own town house, Kirk o'Fields,
just next to the town wall. On the nite of Feb. 9/10, 1567, the house was
blown apart by an explosion. The next day when Darnleys body was found it
was discovered he had been strangled.
Sir Simon Preston IV died
sometime before 1575, but had already been succeeded as laird of Craigmillar
by his son David in June 1569.
Sir
David Preston (I) b.c.1530 d.1593, succeeded to the barony of Craigmillar in
1569, married Unknown and had 3 children:
-
Sir George Preston III
b.c.1560 d.1625.
-
Sir Robert Preston b.c1563
d.1639.
-
Richard Preston b.c.1565
d.1638/9.
In Feb. 1593, Sir David
Preston was succeeded by his son, Sir George Preston III.
May 18, 1625, George Preston
III was succeeded by his brother Sir Robert Preston. Sir Robert died without
issue in 1639. Craigmillar then passed to a distant relative.
In 1639, the estate passed to
Sir David Preston b. c.1600 of Whitehill, descended from the first Sir
Simon. Sir Simon Preston II had three sons, including a Sir Andrew Preston.
Sir David Preston was the descendent of Sir Andrew Preston. Sir David
Preston (II) married Susana Colville and had 3 children:
Sir George Preston IV
b.c1630 who later sold Craigmillar Castle to Sir John Gilmour in 1660.
John Preston b. c.1633
d.xxxx.
Agnes Preston b.c.1635
d.xxxx.
Thus ended the Prestons of
Craigmillar, 1374 to 1660. There has to be a lot of other Prestons descended
from these Prestons. Perhaps a John born 1726 (Walnut Grove Prestons) or
another John born about 1699 (Smithfield Prestons) or perhaps a Philip born
about 1715.....who knows.
The document goes on to talk
about Craigmillar under the Gilmours. Much of the above is quoted directly
from the document but I did not include everything. No estimate of dates of
birth were given, all such estimates were made by me. My parents had a
picture of the castle at Craigmillar for as long as I can remember. Not sure
where it came from. They always thought they descended from these Prestons.
Read more about the Prestons here! |