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below the strata of coal that abound in the fields, it
communicates through the coal-rooms that are
wrought with other shafts, which occasions a rumbling
noise, that does not precede, but accompanies,
a high wind.?
According to the old Valuation Roll, Monkton
was the property of Patrick Falconer between I 726
and 1738.
Stonyhill and Monkton, according to Inquisitiones
A)kciaZes, both belonged to John, Earl of Lauder-
NEW HAILES HOUSE.
of fit accompaniments of a very ancient and
stately house.
Colonel Francis Charteris was a cadet of an?
ancient and honourable Dumfriesshire family, the
Charteris of Amisfield, whose tall, old, stubborn-looking
fortalice stands between the two head streams
of the Lochar. After serving in the wars of Marlborough,
the year 1704 saw him figuring in E h -
burgh as a member of the beau msde, with rather
an awkward reputation of being a highly successful
dale, at one time. The gardens of both appear to
have been among the earliest in Britain; and entries
in the household books of Dalkeith Palace show
that fruit and vegetables (which, however, could
scarcely have been so excellent then as now),
came therefrom two centuries ago.
Stonyhill House, near New Hailes, the property
of the Earl of Wemyss, seeming, in its present form,
to be only the offices of an ancient mansion, was
the residence, firstly, of Sir William Sharp, son of
the ill-fated Archbishop Sharp, and his wife, Helen
Moncrieff, daughter of the Laird of Randerston ;
and secondly, of the inglorious, or ? wicked
Colonel Charteris?; and it has remnants in its
vicinity, especially a huge buttressed garden wall,
gambler. There is a story told of him that, being
at the Duke of Queensbeny?s house in the Canongate
one evening, and playing,with the duchess, he
was enabled, by means of a mirror, or, more probably,
a couple of mirrors that chanced to be
placed opposite each other, to see what cards were
in the hands of Her Grace-Mary Boyle, daughter
of Lord Clifford-through which means he won
from her no less a sum than three thousand pounds
sterling-a very great one at that time. (? Domestic
Annals of Scotland.?)
It is added that the duke was so provoked by
this incident, that he got a Bill passed by the
Parliament over which he presided as Lord High
Commissioner, to prohibit all gambling beyond a ... the strata of coal that abound in the fields, it communicates through the coal-rooms that are wrought with ...

Book 6  p. 366
(Score 0.96)

3?6 OLD AKD NEW EDINBURGH. me West Bow.
sorely. Keeping on the defensive, Westerhall
gave way step by step, seeking to gain the advantage
of the ascent, and thus supply the defect ?of
his stature, which Writes perceiving, he bore in
close upon him hand to hand. Thus they continued
in close and mortal combat for about a
quarter of an hour, ?clearing the causeway,? so
that none could venture near them, or leave the
conveyed to their lodgings. Their wounds were
slight, save that which Writes had just received on
his head, from which several pieces of bone came
away. After he was cured, and after the death of
Hugh Lord Somerville, Privy Councillor to James
VI. (an event which occurred in 1597), these combatants
were reconciled, and their feud committed
to oblivion.
ASSEMBLY ROOMS, WEST BOW, LOOKING TOWARDS THE LAWNYARKET.
(F~om a Drawing ay Yawzes Skcnr of RztbicZaw).
shop doors; neither dared any man attempt to
part them, for every thrust and stroke of their
swords threatened all who came near. . .
Westerhall eventually was driven down, fighting
every inch of the way to the foot of the Bow; and,
having on-for riding, probably-a pair of long
black boots drawn close up, was becoming quite
weary, and stepping within a shop door, stood
there on his defence; and then the last stroke
given by Hugh Somerville nearly broke his good
sword, as it struck the stone lintel of the door,
where the mark remained for years after.
?The tome being by this tyme all in an uproar,?
they were separated by a party of halberdiers, and
Eleven years after this, in the month of June,
1605, William Thomson, a dagger-maker in the
Bow, was slain by a neighbour of his own, named
John Waterstone, who, being taken red hand, was
next day beheaded on the Castle Hill. The Earl of
Dunfermline was at that time Provost.
The arched gate at the foot of the first bend in
the Bow is distinctly shown in Rothiemay?s map
(see j. I I 2). Within this and the old city wall, on
the west side, was an ancient timber-fionted tenement,
known as ?Lord Ruthven?s Land,? being the
residence of the gloomy and daring Patrick third
Lord Ruthven, whose son was the first Earl of
Gowrie-the same dark and terrible lord who rose ... OLD AKD NEW EDINBURGH. me West Bow. sorely. Keeping on the defensive, Westerhall gave way step by step, ...

Book 2  p. 316
(Score 0.96)

338 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [The Inch.
CHAPTER XL.
THE ENVIRONS OF EDINBURGH (continued).
The Inch Honse-The Winrams-Ednonstone and the Edmonstones of that Ilk-WitcheesW @Itnet-The StenhoustMoredun-The Stewarts of
Goodtree-The Ruckstane-Burdiehouse-Its Limekilns and Fossils
A LITTLE way eastward of Nether Liberton stands ~ to Sir Alexander Gilmour of Craigmillar, according
the quaint old Inch House, built in the year 1617, to the Valuation Roll for that year.
during the reign of James VI., upon land which, in
the preceding century, belonged to the monks of
Holyrood-a mansion long the residence of the
Little-Gilmours of Craigmillar, and of old the
patrimony of the Winrams of The Inch and
Liberton, a family, according to the ArchmZogia
.%QfiC@, descended from the Winrams of Wiston, in
Clydesdale.
In 1644 George Winram of Liberton was a
baron of Parliament. In the following year he
accused the Commissioner for Aberdeen, Patrick
Leslie, ? as one unworthy to sit in Parliament, being
a malignant, who drunk Montrose?s health ?-a
statement remitted to a committee of the House.
(Balfour?s ? Annales.?)
In 1649 he was made a Lord of Session, by the
title of Lord Liberton, and was one of the commissioners
sent to the young king in Holland, after
seeing whom, he, with the others, landed at Stonehaven,
and was with the Parliament at Perth in the
August of the same year.
In October he sailed from Leith to Gsit the
king again at Brussels on public business, obtaining
a passage in a States man-of-war, in company
with Thomas Eunningham, Conservator of Scottish
Privileges at Campvere. In November he was
again with the king at Jersey, with letters from the
Committee of Estates, and landed at Leith from
a Dutch war-ship, in February, 1650, charged with
letters from Charles 11. to the Parliament and
General Assembly, prior to the king?s coronation in
Scotland.
He.served in the Regiment of the College of
Justice, and being mortally wounded at the battle of
Dunbar,died eight days after the defeat in that town.
His son, colonel in the Scottish army, was
Lieutenant-Governor of Edinburgh Castle, under
the Duke of Gordon, during the protracted siege
thereof in 1688-9, and the latter was urged by
Dundee to repair to the Highlands, and leave the
defence of the fortress to Winram, who was deemed
a loyal and gallant officer.
After the capitulation, in violation of its terms, he
was made a prisoner in the fortress for some time,
and after that we hear no more of him in history.
In 1726 The Inch and Nether Liberton belonged
In the middle of the eighteenth century the
house was the residence of Patrick Grant, Lord
Elchies, a senator of the College of Justice. Born
in 1690, he was called to the bar in 1711, became
a judge of the Court of Session in 1732, andof the
Court of Justiciary three years subsequently. He
was an able lawyer and upright judge, and collected
various decisions, which were published in two
quarto volumes, and edited by W. M. Morrison,
advocate.
He died at the Inch House on 27th June, 1754,
in the sixty-fourth year of his age, leaving behind
him, as the papers of the time say, the character
of an honest man, a sincere friend, an able lawyer,
universally regretted by all those whose esteem,
whem alive, he would have wished to gain.?
Edmonstone House, which is the seat of Sir John
Don Wauchope, Bart., lies about a mile south of
Niddne, on high and commanding ground overlooking
the hollow where Little France and Kingston
Grange lie, and is an elegant mansion, surrounded
by fine plantations. It was named Edmonstown,
from Edmond, a Saxon follower of
Margaret, the Queen of Malcolm Canmore, said to
be a younger son of Count Egmont of Flanders,
and froni whom the Edmonstones of Duntreath
and Ednum (chief branch of the family, but lately
extinct) and all others of the name are descended.
A charter of the office of coroner for Edinburgh
was given to John of Edmonstone by King David
II.,pro toto tempore vita SUE, dated at Aberdeen in
the thirty-third year of his reign. The same, or
another having the same name, received from the
same king a grant of the thanage of Boyen, in
Banffshire. Sir John de Edmonstone, knight, was
one of three ambassadors sent by Robert 11. to
Charles V. of France in 1374, to solicit his interposition
with the Pope and Sacred College to
procure a favourable decree in the suit prosecuted
at the instance of Margaret Logie, Queen
Consort of Scodand.
He married Isabel, daughter of Robert II.,
relict of James, Earl of Douglas, who fell at Otterbourne
in 1388, and left two sons, one of whom was
Knight of Culloden and first of the House of
Duntreath. ... OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [The Inch. CHAPTER XL. THE ENVIRONS OF EDINBURGH (continued). The Inch Honse-The ...

Book 6  p. 338
(Score 0.96)

166 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [St. Andrew squan. I
CHAPTER XXII.
ST. ANDREW SQUARE.
St Andrew Square-List of Early Residents-Count Bomwlaski-Miss Gordon or Cluny-Scottish Widows? Fund-Dr. A. K. Johnston-
Scottish Provident Institution-House in which Lord Brougham was Born-Scottish Equitable Society-Chancrir of Amisfield-Douglas?s
Hotel-Sir Philip Ainslic-British Linen Company-National Bank-Royal Bank-The Melvillc and Hopctoun Monuments-Ambrosc?r
Tavern.
BEFORE its conversion iiito a place for public
offices, St. Andrew Square was the residence of
many families of the first rank and position. It
measures 510 feet by 520. Arnot speaks of it as
?the finest square we ever saw. Its dimensions,
indeed, are, small when compared with those in
London, but the houses are much of a size. They
are of a uniform height, and are all built of freestone?
The entire square, though most of the original
houses still exist, has undergone such changes that,
says Chambers, . ? the time is not far distant when
the whole of this district will meet with a fate
similar to that which we have to record respecting
the Cowgate and Canongate, and when the idea of
noblemen inhabiting St. Andrew Square will seem,
to modem conceptions, as strange as that of their
living in the,Mint Close.?
The following is a list of the first denizens of
the square, between its completion in 1778 and
1784.:-
I. Major-General Stewart.
2. The Earl of Aboyne. He died here in his sixty-eighth
year, in 1794. He was the eldest son of John, third Earl of
Aboyne, by Grace, daughter of Lockhart of Carnwath,
afterwards Countess of Murray.
3. Lord Ankerville (David Ross).
5. John, Viscount Arbuthnott, who died 1791.
6. Dr. Colin Drummond.
7. David Hume, afterwards Lord Dreghorn.
8. John Campbell of Errol. (The Earls of Em1 have
ceased since the middle of the seventeenth century to possess
any property in the part from whence they took their
ancient title.)
11. Mrs Campbell of Balmore.
13. Robert Boswell, W.S.
15. Mrs. Cullen of Parkhead.
16. Mrs. Scott of Horslie Hill.
18. Alexander Menzies, Clerk of Session.
19. Lady Betty Cunningham.
20. Mrs Boswell of Auchinleck
Boswell,? R. Chambers, 1824).
22. Jams Farquhar Gordon, Esq.
23. Mrs. Smith of Methven.
24 Sir John Whiteford. (25 in ? Williamson?s Directory.?)
25. William Fergusson pf Raith.
26. Gilbert Meason, Esq., and the Rev. Dr. Hunter.
27. Alexander Boswell, Esq.(aftemards Lord Auchinleck),
and Eneis Morrison, Esq.
28. Lord Methven
30. Hon. Mrs. Hope.
32. Patrick, Earl of Dumfries, who died in 1803.
(mother of ?Corsica
33. Sir John Colquhoun.
34. George, Earl of Dalhousie, Lord High Commissioner,
35. Hon. Mrs. Cordon.
38. Mrs. Campbell of Saddel, Cilbert Kerr of Stodrig,
and Sir William Ramsay, Bart., of Banff House, who died
in 1807.
By 1784, when Peter Williamson published his
tiny ? Directory,? many changes had taken place
among the occupants of the square. The Countess
of Errol and Lord Auchinleck were residents, and
Thomas, Earl of Selkirk, had a house there before
he went to America, to form that settlement in the
Gulf of St. Lawrence which involved him in so much
trouble, expense, and disappointment. No. I was
occupied by the Countess of Leven ; the Earl of
Northesk, KC.B., who distinguished himself afterwards
as third in command at Trafalgar, occupied
No. 2, now an hotel; and Lord Arbuthnott had
been suceeeded in the occupancy of No. 5 by
Patrick, Lord Elibank, who married the widow of
Lord North and Grey.
By 1788 an hotel had been started in the
square by a man named Dun. It was there that
the celebrated Polish dwarf, Joseph Borowlaski,
occasionally exhibited himself. In his memoirs,
written by himself, he tells that he was one of a
family of five sons and one daughter, ?,and by one
of those freaks of nature which it is impossible to
account for, or perhaps to find another instance of
in the annals of the human species, three of these
children were above the middle stature, whilst the
two others, like myself, reached only that of children
at the age of four or five years.?
Notwithstanding this pigmy stature, the count,
by his narrative, would seem to have married, performed
many wonderful voyages and travels, and
been involved in many romantic adventures. At
thirty years of age his stature was three feet three
inches. Being recommended by Sir Robert Murray
Keith, then Eritish Ambassador at Vienna, to visit
the shores of Britain, after being presented, with
his family, to- royalty in London, he duly came to
Edinburgh, where, according to Kay?s Editor, ?? he
was taken notice of by several gentlemen, among
others by Mr. Fergusson, who generously endeavoured
by their attentions to sweeten the bitter
cup of life to the unfortunate gentleman.?
1777-82 ... OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [St. Andrew squan. I CHAPTER XXII. ST. ANDREW SQUARE. St Andrew Square-List of Early ...

Book 3  p. 166
(Score 0.95)

Leith Walk.] GAYFIELD HOUSE. IGI
ceeded to the title, which is now extinct. The
latter?s sister, Maria Whiteford, afterwards Mrs.
Cranston, was the heroine of Bums?s song, ?The
Idass 0? Ballochmyle,? her father being one of the
poet?s earliest and warmest patrons.
The Gayfield quarter seems to have been rather
aristocratic in those days. In 1767, David, sixth
Earl of Leven, who had once been a captain in the
army, occupied Gayfield House, where in that year
his sister, Lady Betty, was married to John, Earl of
Walk is shown edificed from the corner of Picardy
Place to where we now find Gayfield Square,
which, when it was first erected, was called Gayfield
Place. West London Street was then called
Anglia Street, and its western continuation, in
which old Gayfield House is now included, was not
contemplated. North of this house is shown a
large area, ? Mrs. D. Hope?s feu ;? and between it
and the Walk was the old Botanical Garden.
In 1783 Sir John Whiteford, Bart., of that ilk,
Gordon, relict of Sir Alexander Gordon of Lesmoir,
Bart., died there.
Gayfield House is now a veterinary college.
In 1800 Sir John Wardlaw, Bart., of Pitreavie,
resided in Gayfield Square ; and there his wife, the
daughter of Mitchell of Pitteadie (a ruined castle
in Fifeshire), died in that year. He was a colonel
in the army, and died in 1823, a lieutenantcolonel
of the 4th West India Regiment.
No. I, Gayfield Place, was long the residence of
BOARD SCHOOL, LOVER?S LOAN.
a well-known citizen in his time, Patrick Crichton,
whose father was a coachbuilder in the Canongate,
and who, in 1805, was appointed lieutenantcolonel
commandant of the 2nd Regiment of Edinburgh
Local Militia. He had entered the army when
young, and attained the rank of captain in the
57th Regiment, with which he served during the
American war, distinguishing himself so much that
he received the public thanks of the comrnanderin-
chief. Among his friends and brother-oficers.
then was Andrew Watson, whose brother George
founded the Scottish Academy. When the war was
over he retired, and entered into partnership with
his father ; and on the first formation of the Volunteers,
in consequence of his great military e x p ... Walk.] GAYFIELD HOUSE. IGI ceeded to the title, which is now extinct. The latter?s sister, Maria Whiteford, ...

Book 5  p. 161
(Score 0.94)

THE OLD THEATRE ROYAL, IN PROCESS PP DEMOLITION.
CHAPTER XLV.
EAST SIDE OF THE NORTH BRIDGE (cotttinued).
Memorabilia of the General Post Office-First Postal System in Scotland-First Communication with Ireland-Sanctions given by the Scotti, I
Parliament-Expenses of the Establishment at various Periods-The Horse Posts-Violation of Letter Bags-Casualties of the Period-Tht
First Stage Coach-Peter Williamsop-The Various Post Office Buildings-The Waterloo Place Office-Royal Arms Removed-New Office
Built-S&C and Fiscal Details.
THE demolition of the old theatre was proceeded
with rapidly, and with it passed away Shakespeare
Square, on its southern and eastern sides, a semirectangle,
alike mean in architecture and disreputable
in character; and on the sites of both,
and of Dingwall?s ancient castle, was erected the
present General Post Office, a magnificent building,
prior to describing which we propose to give some
memorabilia of the development of that institution
in Edinburgh.
The year 1635 was the epoch of a regular postal
system in Scotland, under the Scottish ministry of
Charles I. This systeni was probably limited to
the road between Edinburgh and Berwick, the
main object being to establish a regular communication
with London. Mails were despatched once
and sometimes twice weekly, and the postage of a
single letter was 6d. From Rushworth?s ? Collec-
45
tions? it appears that in that year Thomas Wither
ings, his Majesty?s Postmasterof England and foreign
parts, was directed to adjust ?one running post
or two, to run day and night between Edinburgh
and London, to go thither and back again in six
days, and to take with them all such letters as shall
be directed to any post town on the said road.?
Three years after these posts became unsafe ; the
bearers were waylaid and robbed of their letters,
for political reasons.
In 1642, on the departure of the Scottish troops
to protect the Ulster colonists, and put down the
rebellion in Ireland, a line of posts was established
between Edinburgh and Port Patrick, where John
M?Caig, the postmaster, was allowed by the Privy
Council to have a ?post bark?; and in 1649 the
posts were improved by Cromwell, who removed
many, if not all the Scottish officials j and in 1654 ... OLD THEATRE ROYAL, IN PROCESS PP DEMOLITION. CHAPTER XLV. EAST SIDE OF THE NORTH BRIDGE ...

Book 2  p. 353
(Score 0.94)

avaliers were committed prisoners to his care, and
remained there till the pacification of Berwick.
On the 19th of November, King Charles?s birthday,
a great portion of the curtain-wall, which was
very old, fell with a crash over the rocks ; and the
insurgents rejoiced at this event as boding evil to
the royal cause. After the pacification, the Castle,
with thirty others, was restored to the king, who
placed therein a gamson, under Sir Patrick Ruth-
? made from the gate. Batteries were thrown up
at nearly the same places where they had been
formed in Kirkaldy?s time, Ruthven refused to
give the Estates the use of the regalia. Under
Colonel Hamilton, master of the ordnance, the
batteries opened with vigour, while select musketeers
were ?told ofT,? to aim at individuals on the
ramparts. Most bitter was the defence of Ruthven,
whose cannonade imperilled the whole city
THE REGENT MORTON. (Fmm an &ag?awing 6v Hoabmken.)
ven (previously Governor of Ulm under the great
Gustavus), who marched in, on the 25th February,
2640, with drums beating and matches lighted. As
the magistrates refused to supply him with provisions,
and raised 5bo men to keep a watch upon his
garrison, this testy veteran of the Swedish wars
fired a few heavy shot at random on the city,
and on the renewal of hostilities between Charles
and the Scots, Leslie was ordered by the Parliament,
on the 12th June, to reduce the fortress.
Xuthven?s reply to a summons, was to open fire
with guns and matchlocks in every direction, and
a sortie, under Scrimgeour, the constable, was
and the beautiful spire of St Giles?s ; while poor
people reaping in the fields at a distance were
sometimes killed by it.
The Covenanters sprung a mine, and blew up
the south-east angle of the Spur; but the rugged
aspect of the breach was such that few of their
officers seemed covetous of reading a forlorn hope,
especially as old Ruthven, in his rich armour and
plumed hat, appeared at the summit heading a
band of pikes. At last the Laird of Drum and a
Captain Weddal, at the head of 185 men, under a
murderous matchlock fire, made a headlong rush,
but ere they gained the gap, a cannon loaded ... were committed prisoners to his care, and remained there till the pacification of Berwick. On the 19th ...

Book 1  p. 52
(Score 0.94)

460 , MEMORIALS UP- EDINBURGH.
Balcarras, Lord, 208
Baldredus, Deacon of Lothian, 377
.Balfour, Sir James, 78
Baliol, 7
Ballantine, James, 253
Ballantyne, Abbot, 307, 313, 365, 406
Balmain, Miss, 123
Balmerinoch, Lord, 94,353
James, the Printer, 288
House of, Netherbow, 259
House of, Leith, 94, 161
Bane, Donald, 3
Bankton, Lord, 162
Bannatine, Thomai3, 256
Bannatyne, Sir William Macleod, 303 .
Sir Robert, 162
Barns, The, 136
Barrie, Thomas, 278
Barringer‘s Close, 254
Baseandyne, Thomas, the Printer, 258, 270
The House of, 270
Aleson, 258
Bassandyne’s Close, 271
Bath, Queen Mary’s, 76,308
Baxter’s Clmg, 165
Hall, 113
Beacon Fires, 51
Bearford‘s Parks, 191, 232
Beaton, Jamea, Archbishop, 37,40, 267,317
Cardinal, 45, 48, 49, 51, 56
Arms, 318
Portraits of Cardinal, 410
of Creich, 75 ‘
House of, 36, 317
House of, 266,317,452
Bedemen, 188, 394
Begbie’s Murder, 274
Belhaven, Lord, 316
Bell’s Millg Village of, 373
Bellenden, Lord, 303
Sir Lewia, 373
ESir William, 373
Bellevne, 274
House, 260
Bemard Street, Leith, 363, 367
Bernard’s Nook, 364, 368
Bertraham, William, Provost, 19
Berwick, 64
Beth’s or Bess Wynd, 84, 181, 182, 188, 233
Big Jack’s Close, Canongate, 290
Binnie’s Close, 363
Binning, Sir William, 208
Binny, Sir William, 352
Bishop’s Close, 253
Land, 253
Black, Dr, 323, 347
Turnpike, 79,246
Blackadder, Captain William, 81
Black Bull Inn, Old, 312
Blackfriars, Monastery of the, 31,37, 69,62, 63, 82,410
Wynd, 36, 40, 78, 101, 139,176, 191, 263-
Yards, 279
267, 317, 453
Blacklock, Dr, 165
Blair, Dr, 239
Hugh, 178
Street, 321
Blair’s Close, 138, 139
Blue Blanket, or Craftmen’e Banner, 1
402
Blue Gowns. 188
21, 79, 387,
Blyth’s Close, Castlehill, 77, 139, 146-167
Boisland, James, 136
Bombie, M‘Lellan of, 40, 130
Bore Stane, 124
Boreland, Thomas, 137
Borough Loch, 348
Borthwick, Lord, 266
Robert, 32
Castle, 176
Borthwick‘a Close, 243
Boswell, Dr, 140
Moor, 55, 86, 99,124, 165, 350
James, 241
his Residence, 160
is visited by Dr JohnBon, Id1
Mrs, 161
Boswell’s Court, 140
Bothwell, Patrick Hepburn, 1st Earl of, 26
Adam Hepbum, Earl of, 416
Patrick, 3d Earl of, 51
James, 4th Earl of, 73, 78,79, 226, 296, 341,
Francis Stewart, Earl of, 176, 222
Adam. See Orkney, Bishop of
Ann, daughter of the Bishop of Orkney, 227
Janet Kennedy, Lady, 321
375
433
Bowes, Marjorie, wife of John Knox, 257
Boyd’s Close, Canongate, 161, 312
Branding, the Punishment of, 454
Brechin, White Kirk of, 15
Breda, Town Clerk sent to Charles 11. at, 98
Brest, Queen Mary arrives safely at, 53
Bride’s Plenishing, Scottish, 213
Bristo Port, 331
British Linen Company, 274,296, 376
Broad Wynd, Leith, 363
Brodie, Deacon, 171, 237
Brodie’s Close, 169, 431
Broghall, Lord, 206
Brougham, Lord, the Birth-Place of, 329,’ 376
Broughton, Burgh of, 354, 372
Brown, A. of Greenbank, 140
Thomas, 144
Square, 145,331
Henry, 328
Brawn’s Close, Castlehill, 132, 138, 264
High Street, 225
Bruce, Robert the. See Rob& I.
Mr Fbbert, 87,203
of Binning, 231
Sir William, the Architect, 405, 408
Buccleuch, Laird of, 67,222, 230
Place, 348
Buchan, David Stuart, Earl of, 376 ... , MEMORIALS UP- EDINBURGH. Balcarras, Lord, 208 Baldredus, Deacon of Lothian, 377 .Balfour, Sir James, ...

Book 10  p. 499
(Score 0.93)

354 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [North Bridge.
the postage to England was lowered to 4d. ; and
to zd. for a single letter within eighty miles. On
the 16th of December, 1661, Charles 11. reappointed
Robert Muir ?sole keeper of the
letter-ofice in Edinburgh,? from which he had
been dismissed by Cromwell, and Azoo was given
him to build a packet-boat for the Irish mail.
In 1662 Sir Williani Seaton was succeeded as
Postmaster-General of Scotland by Patrick Grahame
of Inchbraikie, surnamed the BZac.4, who bore the
Garter at the funeral of Montrose, and who, according
to the Privy Seal Register, was to hold that office
for life, with a salary of A500 Scots yearly. In
1669 the Privy Council established a post between
Edinburgh and Aberdeen, twice weekly, ?? wind
and weather serving.?? A letter was conveyed forty
miles (about sixty English) for 2s. Scots ; and for
one an ounce weight the charge was 7s. 6d. Scots ;
for every single letter carried above eighty miles
within Scotland the rate was 4s. Scots; while for
one an ounce weight fos. Scots (it. rod. English)
was charged. In 1678 the coach with letters
between Edinburgh and Glasgow was drawn by six
horses, and performed the journey there and back
in six days !
In 1680 Robert Muir, the postmaster, was imprisoned
by the Council for publishing the Nms
Leiter, before it was revised by their clerk.
? What offended them was, that it bore that the
Duke of Lauderdale?s goods were shipping for
France, whither his Grace was shortly to follow,
which was a mistake.??
In r685 the intelligence of the death of Charles
XI., who died on the 7th of February, was received
at Edinburgh about one in the morning of the Ioth,
by express from London. In 1688 it occupied
three months to convey the tidings of the abdication
of James VII. to the Orkneys.
In 1689 the Post-office was put upon a new
footing, being sold by roup ?to John Blau, apothecary
in Edinburgh, he undertaking to carry on
the entire business on various rates of charge for
letters, and to pay the Government 5,100 nierks
(about A255 sterling) yearly for seven years.?
And in October that year William Mean of the
Letter Office was committed to the Tolbooth, for
retaining certain Irish letters until the payment
therefor was given him. In 1690 the Edinburgh
post-bag was robbed in the lonely road near Cockburnspath,
and that the mails frequently came in
with the seals broken was a source of indignation
to the Privy Council. In 1691, John Seton (brother
of Sir George Seton of Garlton) was committed
to the Castle for robbing the post-bag at Hedderwick
Muir of the mail with Government papers.
To improve the system of correspondence
throughout the kingdom, the Scottish Parliament,
in 1695, passed a new ?Act for establishing a
General Post-office in Edinburgh, under a Postmaster-
General, who was to have the exclusive
privilege of receiving and despatching letters, it
being only allowed that carriers should undertake
that business on lines where there was no regular
post until such should be established. The rates
were fixed at 2s. Scots for a single letter within
fifty Scottish miles, and for greater distances in
proportion. It was also ordained that there should
be a weekly post to Ireland, by means of a packet
at Port Patrick, the expense of which was to be
charged on the Scottish office. By the same law
the Postmaster and his deputies were to have
posts, and furnish post-horses along all the chief
roads to all persons ?at three shillings Scots for ilk
horse-hire for postage, for every Scottish mile,?
including the use of furniture and a guide. It
would appear that on this footing the Post-office in
Scotland was not a gainful concern, for in 1698
Sir Robert Sinclair of Stevenston had a grant of
the entire revenue with a pension of A300 sterling
per annum, under the obligation to keep up the
posts, and after a little while gave up the charge as
finding it disadvantageous. . . . Letters coming
from London for Glasgow arrived at Edinburgh in
the first place, and were thence dispatched westward
at such times as might be convenient.? *
The inviolability of letters at the Post-office was
not held in respect as a principle. In July, 1701,
two letters from Brussels, marked each with a
cross, were taken by the Postmaster to the Lord
Advocate, who deliberately opened them, and
finding them ?of no value, being only on private
business,? desired them to be delivered to those to
whom they were addressed ; and so lately as 1738,
the Earl of Islay, in writing to Sir Robert Walpole
from Edinburgh, said, ?? I am forced to send this
letter by a servant, twenty miles out of town, where
the Duke of Argyle?s attorney cannot handZe it;?
and in 1748 General Bland, commanding the forces
in Scotland, complained to the Secretary of State
?that his letters at the Edinburgh Post-office were
opened 6y order of a nobZe dufie,?
From 1704 till the year of the Union, George
Main, jeweller, in Edinburgh, accounted ?? for the
duties of the Post-ofice within Scotland, leased
him by the Lords of the Treasury and Exchequer
in Scotland? during the three years ending at
Whit Sunday, for the yearly rent of 11,500 merks
Scots, or A;r,~gq 8s. Iod. sterling, subject to de-
* ?Domestic Annals of Scotland,? VoL IIL ... OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [North Bridge. the postage to England was lowered to 4d. ; and to zd. for a single ...

Book 2  p. 354
(Score 0.92)

Craigcrook.] HISTORY OF CRAIGCROOK. 107
summer residence of Lord Jeffrey-deeply secluded
amid coppice.
The lands of Craigcrook appear to have belonged
in the fourteenth century to the noble family of
Graham. By a deed bearing date 9th April, 1362,
Patrick Graham, Lord of Kinpunt, and David
Graham, Lord of Dundaff, make them over to
John de Alyncrum, burgess of Edinburgh. He
in turn settled them on a chaplain officiating at
?Our Lady?s altar,? in the church of St. Giles,
and his successors to be nominated by the magistrates
of Edinburgh.
John de Alyncrum states his donation of those
lands of Craigcrook, was ? to be for the salvation
of the souls of the late king and queen (Robert
and Elizabeth), of the present King David, and of
all their predecessors and successors ; for the salvation
of the souls of all the burghers of Edinburgh,
their predecessors and successors ; of his own father
and mother, brothers, sisters, etc. ; then of himself
and of his wife; and, finally, of all faithful souls
deceased.?
The rental of Craigcrook in the year 1368 was
only A6 6s. 8d. Scots per annum; and in 1376 it
was let at that rate in feu farm, to Patrick and
John Lepars.
At an early period it became the property of
the Adamsons. William Adamson was bailie of
Edinburgh in 1513, and one of the guardians of
the city after the battle of Flodden, and Williim
Adamson of Craigcrook, burgess of Edinburgh
(and probably son of the preceding), was killed at
the battle of Pinkie, in 1547 ; and by him or his
immediate successors, most probably the present
castle was built-an edifice wbich Wood, in his
learned ?? History of Cramond Parish,? regards
as one of the most ancient in the parish.
In consequence of the approaching Reformation,
the proceeds of the lands were no longer required
for pious purposes, and the latter were made over by
Sir Simon Prestonof Craigmillar, when Provost, to Sir
Edward Marj oribanks, styled Prebend of Craigcrook.
They were next held for a year, by George Kirkaldy,
brother of Sir James Kirkaldy of Grange in
Fifeshire, Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, who
engaged to pay for them A27 6s. 8d. Scots.
In June, 1542, they reverted again to Sir Edward
Majoribanks, who assigned them in perpetual feufarm
to William Adamson before-named. This
wealthy burgess had acquired much property in
the vicinity, including Craigleith, Cammo, Groat
Hall, Clermiston, Southfield, and part of Cramond
Regis. After Pinkie he was succeeded by his son
William, and Craigcrook continued to pass through
several generations of his heirs, till it came into
~~
the hands of Robert Adamson, who, in 1656, sold
to different persons the whole of his property.
Craigcrook was purchased by John Muir, merchant
in Edinburgh, whose son sold it to Sir John
Hall, Lord Provost of the city in 1689-92. He was
created a baronet in 1687, and was ancestor of the
Halls of Dunglass, on the acquisition of which, in
East Lothian, he sold Craigcrook to Walter Pringle,
advocate, from whose son it was purchased by John
Strachan, clerk to the signet.
When the latter died in 1719, he left the whole
of his property, with North Clermiston and the
rest of his fortune, both in land and movables
(save some small sums to his relations) ?? mortified
for charitable purposes,?
The regulations were that the rents should be
given to poor old men and women and orphans ;
that the trustees should be ?two advocates, two
Writers to the Signet, and the Presbytery of Edinburgh,
at the sight of the Lords of Session, and any
two of these members,? for whose trouble one
hundred merks yearly is allowed.
There are also allowed to the advocates, poor
fifty merks Scots, and to those of the writers to the
signet one hundred merks ; also twenty pounds
annually for a Bible to one of the members of the
Presbytery, beginning with the moderator and
going through the rest in rotation.
This deed is dated the 24th September, 1712.
The persons constituted trustees by it held a meeting
and passed resolutions respecting several
points which had not been regulated in the will. A
clerk and factor, each with a yearly allowance of
twenty pounds, were appointed to receive the
money, pay it out, and keep the books.
They resolved that no old person should be
admitted under the age of sixty-five, nor any orphan
above the age of twelve; and that no annuity
should exceed five pounds.
Among the names in a charter by William
Forbes, Provost of the Collegiate Church of St.
Giles, granting to that church a part of the ground
lying contiguous to his manse for a burial-place,
dated at Edinburgh, 14th January, 1477-8, there
appears that of Ricardus Robed, jrebena?anks de
Cragmk mansepropie (? Burgh Charters.?)
Over the outer gate of the courtyard a shield
bore what was supposed to have been the arms of
the Adamsons, and the date 1626 ; but Craigcrook
has evidently been erected a century before that
period. At that time its occupant was Walter
Adamson, who succeeded his father Willian~
Adamson in 1621, and whose sister, Catharine,
married Robert Melville of Raith, according to
the Douglas Peerage. ... HISTORY OF CRAIGCROOK. 107 summer residence of Lord Jeffrey-deeply secluded amid coppice. The lands ...

Book 5  p. 107
(Score 0.92)

?NDEX. 467
Macbeth, 4
Macdonald, Andrew, 162
MacEwan, James, 199
Mackenzie, Sir Roderick, 169
Sir James. See Ruyton, Lord
Sir George, 178,210, 216, 261, 324
Hen y, l'h Man of Feeling, 328,332
Wise Ame, 169,247
Mackoull, James, 274
Kaclauchlane, William, 188, 210
Macleod, Mre, 192
Maclure, Mr Andrew, Writing Master, 182
Macmoran, Bailie, 168,453
Micquhen, Michael, 400, 401
M'Gill, Prebendary of Coretorphine, 327
M'Lehose, Mm See Clarinak
M'Lellan of Bombie, 130, 198
M'Naught, Robert, 156
M'Vicar, Rev. Neil, 111
Magdalene, Princess, 41, 42,152
Magistrates' Gowns, 90
Maiden, the, 86,100,175,203
Maison Dieu, 245, 400
Maitlaud, Robert, Dean of Aberdeen, 170
Malcolm II., 2
Iv., 3
Mre, the Black Princess, 292
Malloch, Robert, 250
Mandenton, Patrick, 144
Manzeville, Monsieur, 303
Mar, John, Earl of, 18
Cochrane, Earl of, 19
John, 6th Earl of, 83, 268, 273, 284
John, 7th Earl of, 90, 204
Patrick, Earl of, 5, 7
George, Earl of, 12
Mare, Wooden, 95, 247
Margaret, Queen. See St Muguret
of Denmark, 18
of England, 25, 26, 36, 405
Narch, Earl of, 245
Marischal, William, 4th Earl, 67
Marlin's Wynd, 69, 260
Martin, the Painter, 401
Mary, Queen, 4740,125, 130, 157, 185, 226,245,341,
ia entertained in Cardinal beat on'^ House,
375, 452
Cowgate, 452
of Gueldem. See cfueldera
of Guise. See ChLiie
Mary King's Close, 182,188, 233
Maries, The Queen's, 63, 141
Masterton, Allan, 181
Matildg Queen, 377
Yauchain, Alexander, 172,175
Mauchain's Close, 172
Made, Baron, 259 .
Maxwell, Lord, 176
May Games, 353
Meal Market,' 209
Medins, Sir John de, 411
Megginche, The Church of, 377
Melroee, Abbot of, 261
Melrose, Earl of. See Haaddington, Earl of
Melvil, Sir Jamea, 77, 78
Mr Andrew, 87, 403
Melville, Viscount, 242, 253
Merchant$ Court, 327, 331
Merchanta of Edinburgh, Address to the, 28
Merchiston Caatle, 348
I Mersington, Lord, 208
Middleton, Earl of, 99, 100
Miller, Sir Thomas.
Milne, Robert, 159, 210,260
See CJEenleC, Lord,
John, 159
Square, 242
Milne's Court, 159, 160
Miton, Lord, 297,312
House, 297
Mint, 88,135, 296,314,342
Close, 268, 314
Court, 314
Minto, Lord, 325
Mirror Club, 200
Mitchell, James, a Fanatic Preacher, 101,191
Modens, Duke of, 102
Moffat, Captain, 274
Moffet, Peter, the Reiver, 38
Monboddo, Lord, 288, 334
Monck, General, 96,98,131, 206,345
Monluc, Bishop of Valence, 67, 68
Mons Meg, 104,122,129-131 .
Monteith's Close, 264
Montgomery, Master of, 37
Montrose, Earl of, 174
Alexander, the Poet, 267
Marquis of, 94, 99, 187,215, 295
Aisle, 100, 386
Monuments, Ancient, St Giles's Church, 391
Moodie, Thomas, 105, 428,429
Countess of, 294
Bishop of, 27
House, Canongate, 95,108,294 ,
Xoray, Earl of, 7
More, Jacob, Landscape Painter, 237
Moro~co, Empemr of, 282
Morton, John, 2d Earl of, 26 '
Land, Canongate, 280
James, 4th Earl of, 76, 86, 187
Robert, 12th Earl of, 345
Jamea, 14th Earl of, 232
Countess of, 39
Mansion of the Earls of, 264
Moryson, Fynea, 221
Mound, The Earthen, 161
Moutray of Seafield, a70
Moutrie's Hill, 30, 150, 250, 370
Mowbray, Robert, of Castlewan, 140
Moyee, Dr, 252
Murray, Earl of, 38, 48
Regent, 73, 82, 243. See Stewurt, Lord
Tomb of, St Qies's Church, 389
J a m
Muschett, Nicol, the Murderer, 264
Myllar, Andrew, 30
Mylne, Barbam, a Witch, 305 ... 467 Macbeth, 4 Macdonald, Andrew, 162 MacEwan, James, 199 Mackenzie, Sir Roderick, 169 Sir James. See ...

Book 10  p. 506
(Score 0.91)

96 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [The Mound.
arts classes as well as those for theology; and
accordingly Mr. Patrick C. Macdougal was appointed,
in 1844, Professor of Moral Philosophy,
the Rev. John Millar was appointed Classical Tutor,
and in 1845 the Rev. Alexander C. Fraser was
appointed Professor of Logic. To give effect to the
view long cherished by the revered Dr. Chalmers,
that logic and ethics should follow the mathematical
and physical sciences in the order of study, the
usual order thereof was practically altered, though
not imperatively so.
procured in George Street, and there the business
of the college was conducted until 1850.
These class-rooms were near the house ot
Mr. Nasmyth, an eminent dentist, and as the
students were in the habit of noisily applauding
Dr. Chalmers, their clamour often startled the
patients under the care of Mr. Nasmyth, who by
letter requested the reverend principal to make the
students moderate their applause, or express it
some other way than beating on the floor with
their feet. On this, Dr. Chalmers promptly informed
THE BANK OF SCOTLAND, FROM PRINCES STREET GARDENS.
The provision thus made for arts classes was
greatly due to the circumstance that at that time
the tests imposed upon professors in the established
universities were of such a nature and mode of
application as to exclude from the professorial
chairs all members of the Free Church.
When these tests were abolished, and Professors
Fraser and Macdougal were elected to corresponding
chairs in the University of Edinburgh, in
1853 and 1857, this extended platform was renounced,
and the efforts of the Free Church of
Scotland were concentrated exclusively upon training
in theology.
Premises-however, inadequate for the full
development of the intended system-were at once
them of the dentist?s complaint, and begged that
they would comply with his request. ?I would
be sorry indeed if we were to give offence to any
neighbour,? said the principal j adding, with a touch
of that dry humour which was peculiar to him,
?but more especially Mr. Nasmyth, a gentleman
so very much in the mouths oi the public.?
Immediately after the Disruption, Dr. Chalmers
had taken active steps to secure for the Free
Church a proper system of theological training, in
full accordance with the principles he had
advocated so long, and subscription lists were at
once opened to procure a building suited to the
object. Each contributor gave Lz,ooo, and
Dr. Welsh succeeded in obtaining from twentp ... OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [The Mound. arts classes as well as those for theology; and accordingly Mr. Patrick C. ...

Book 3  p. 96
(Score 0.91)

The Old High School.] RECTORS AND TEACHERS, 291
, in use to teach in those mornings and forenoons.
And considering that the ordinary Latin rudiments
in use to be taught children at their beginning to
the Latin tongue is difficult and hard for beginners,
and that Wedderburn?s Rudiments are more plain
and easy, the Council ordain the said masters in
time coming, to teach and begin their scholars with
Wedderburn?s Rudiments in place of the Latin
Rudiments in use as taught formerly. Ro. CHIESLIE,
Provost.??
David Wedderburn, whose work is thus referred
to, was born about 1570, and was the accomplished
author of many learned works, and died, it is supposed,
about 1644, soon after the publication of
his ?? Centuria Tertia.?
In 1699 A40 Scots was voted by the magistrates
to procure books as a reward for the best scholars,
and when the century closed the institution was in
a most creditable condition, and they-as patrons
-declared that ?? not a few persons that are now
eminent for piety and learning, both in Church and
State, had been educated there.?
In the year I 7 I 6 there was an outbreak among
the scholars for some reason now unknown ; but
they seem to have conducted themselves in an outrageous
manner, demolishing every pane of glass
in the school, and also of Lady Yester?s church,
levelling to the earth even the solid stone wall
which enclosed the school-yard. About this time
the janitor of the institution was David Malloch, a
man distinguished in after life as author of the
beautiful ballad of ? William and Margaret,? a poet
and miscellaneous writer, and under-secretary to the
Prince of Wales in 1733; to please the English
ear, he changed his name to Mallet, and became
an avowed infidel, and a venal author of the worst
description. Dr. Steven refers to his receipt as
being extant, dated 2nd February, 1718, ?for
sixteen shillings and eight pence sterling, being his
full salary for the preceding half-year. That was
the exact period he held the office.?
In 1736 we again hear of the BZeis-siher, cca
profitable relic of popery, which it seemed difficult
to relinquish.? Heartburnings had arisen because
it had become doubtful in what way the Candlemas
offerings should be apportioned between the rector
and masters; thus, on the 28th January in that
year, the Council resolved that the rector himself,
and no other, shall collect, not only his own quarterly
fees, but also the fee of one shilling from
each scholar in the other classes. The Council
also transferred the right from the master of the
third, to the mzster of the first elementary class,
to demand a shilling quarterly from each pupil in
the rector?s class; and declared that the rector
and four masters should favourably receive from
the scholars themselves whatever benevolence or
Candlemas offerings might be presented.?
Thomas Ruddiman, the eminent grammarian and
scholar, who was born at Boyndie in 1674 and
who in 1724 began to vary his great literary
undertakings by printing the ancient Cdedonian
Mercqv, about I 737 established-together with
the rector, the masters, and thirty-one other persons-
a species of provident association for their
own benefit and that of their widows and children,
and adopting as the title of the society, ?The
Company of the Professors and Teachers of the
liberal arts and sciences, or any branch or part
thereof, in the City of Edinburgh and dependencies
thereof.?
The co-partners were all taxed equally; but
owing to inequalities in the yearly contributions, a
dissolution nearly took place after an existence of
fifty years; but the association rallied, and stcl
exists in a flourishing condition.
One of the most popular masters in the early
part of the eighteenth century was Mr. James
Barclay, who was appointed in June, 1742, and
whose experience as a teacher, attainments, and
character, caused him to be remembered by his
scholars long after his removal to Dalkeith, where
he died in 1765.
When Henry Mackenzie, author of the ?? Man of
Feeling,? was verging on his eightieth year, he
contributed to Dr. Steven?s CL History,? his reminiscences
of the school in his own early years,
between 1752 and 1757, which we are tempted to
quote at length :-
?Rector Lees, a very respectable, grave, and
gentlemanlike man, father or uncle, I am not sure
which, of Lees, the Secretary for Ireland. He
maintained great dignity, treating the other masters
somewhat de had a bar; severe, and rather too
intolerant of dulness, but kind to more promising
talents. It will not be thought vanity, I trust-for
I speak with the sincerity and correctness of a
third person-when I say that I was rather a
favourite with him, and used for several years after
he resigned his office to drink tea with him at his
house in a large land or building at the country
end of the suburb called Pleasance, built by one
Hunter, a tailor, whence it got the name of
? Hunter?s Folly,? or the Castle 0? Clouts.?
cc MAsrERs continued-Ersf, or youngest class,
when I was put to school, Farquhar, a native of
Banffshire, cousin-german of Farquhar, author of
admired-and indeed t h q may be called admirable-
sermons, and of Mr. Farquhar, the Vicar of
Hayes, a sort of Parson Adams,? a favourite ot ... Old High School.] RECTORS AND TEACHERS, 291 , in use to teach in those mornings and forenoons. And ...

Book 4  p. 291
(Score 0.91)

PI0 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [Melville Street
pr0mot.e the pleasant intercourse of. those who
practise art either professionally or privately ; to
increase facilities for the study and observation of
art, and to obtain more general attention to its
claims.
The association is composed of artists, professional
and amateur, and has exhibitions of paintings,
sculpture, and water-colour drawings, at intervals
during the year, without being antagonistic
in any way to the Royal Scottish Academy.
Lectures are here delivered on art, and the entire
institute is managed by a chairman and executive
council,
In No. 6 Shandwick Place Sir Walter Scott
resided from 1828 to 1830, when he relinquished
his office as clerk of session in the July of the
latter year. This was his Zasf permanent residence
in Edinburgh, where on two future occasions,
however, he resided temporarily. On the 31st of
January, 1831, he came to town from Abbotsford
for the purpose of executing his last will, and on
that occasion he took up his abode at the house of
his bookseller, in Athole Crescent, where he resided
for nine days. At that time No. 6 was the
residence of Mr. Jobson.
No. 11, now a hotel, was for about twenty years
the residence of Lieutenant-General Francis Dundas,
son of the second President Dundas, and
brother of the Lord Chief Baron Dundas. He was
long a colonel in the old Scots Brigade of immortal
memory, in the Dutch service, and which afterwards
came into the British in 1795, when his regiment was
numbered as the 94th of the line. In 1802-3 he was
Governor of the Cape of Good Hope. During the
brief peace of Amiens, in accordance with his instructions
to evacuate the colony, he embarked his
troops on board the British squadron, but on the
same evening, having fortunately received counter
orders, he re-landed the troops and re-captured the
colony, which has ever since belonged to Britain.
In I 809 he was colonel of the 7 I st Highlanders,
and ten years after was Governor of Dumbarton
Castle. He died at Shandwick Place on the 4th
of January, 1824 after a long and painful illness,
?which he supported With the patience of a Christian
and the fortitude of a soldier.?
. At the east end of Shandwick Place is St
George?s Free Church, a handsome and massive
Palladian edifice, built for the congregation of the
celebrated Dr. Candlish, after a design by David
Bryce, RSA, seated for about 1,250 persons, and
erected at a cost, including;t;13,600 for the site, 01
~31,000.
In No. 3 Walker Street, the short thoroughfare
between Coates Crescent and Melville Street, Su
.
Walter Scott resided with his daughter during the
winter of 1826-7, prior to his removal to Shandwick
Place.
Melville Street, which runs parallel with the
latter on the north, at about two hundred yards
distance, is a spacious thoroughfare symmetrically
and beautifully edificed; and is adorned in its
centre, at a rectangular expansion, with a pedestrian
bronze statute of the second Viscount Melville,
ably executed by Steel, on a stone pedestal ; it was
erected in 1557.
This street contains houses which were occupied
by two eminent divines, the Rev. David Welsh and
the Rev. Andrew Thomson, already referred to in
the account of St George?s parish church. In No.
36, Patrick Fraser Tytler, F.R.S.E., the eminent
Scottish historian, resided for many years, and
penned several of his works. He was the youngest
son of Alexander Fraser Tytler, Lord Woodhouselee,
and thus came of a race distinguished in Scottish
literature. Patrick was called to the bar in 1813,
and six years after published, at Edinburgh, a ?? Life
of the Admirable Crichton,? and in 1826, a ?Life
of WicliK? His able and laborious ? History of
Scotland? first appeared in 1828, and at once won
him fame, for its accuracy, brilliance, and purity
of style ; but his writings did not render him independent,
as he. died, when advanced in lie, in
receipt of an honorary pension from the Civil List.
In Manor Place, at the west end of Melville
Street, lived Mrs. Grant of Laggan, the well-known
authoress of ?? Letters from the Mountains,? and
whose house was, in her time, the resort of
select literav parties ; of whom Professor Wilson
was always one. She had for some time previous
resided in the Old Kirk Brae House. In 1825 an
application was made on her behalf to George IV.
for a pension, which was signed by Scott, Jeffrey,
Mackenzie-? The Man of Feeling ?-and other influential
persons in Edinburgh, and in consequence
she received an annual pension of LIOO from the
Civil Establishment of Scotland.
This, with the emoluments of her literary works,
and liberal bequests by deceased friends, made
easy and independent her latter days, and she died
in Manor Place, on the 7th of November, 1838,
aged 84.
It was not until 1868 that this street was edificed
on its west side partially, Westward and northward
of it a splendid new extension of the city spreads,
erected subsequently to that year, comprising property
now worth nearly&~,ooo,ooo.
This street is named from the adjacent mansion
house of the Walkers of Coates, and is on the property
of the latter name. Lyingimmediately west ... OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [Melville Street pr0mot.e the pleasant intercourse of. those who practise art either ...

Book 4  p. 210
(Score 0.91)

242 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [High Street.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
THE HIGH STREET-(continued).
?The Salamander Land ?-The Old Fishmarket Close-Heriot?s Mansion-The Deemster?s Hocse-Borthwick?s Close-Lord Durie?s House-
Old Assembly Rooms-Edinburgh As.emblies, 17zc-53-Mes Nicky Blurray-Formalities of the Balls-Ladies? Fashions-Assemblies
Removed to Hell?s Wpd-Hair Srreet and Hunter?s Square-Kennedy?s Close-George Buchanan?s Death-Niddry?r Wynd- Nicol
Edwards? House-A Case of Homicide in 1597-A Quack Doctor -Livingstone?s Liberty.
IN describing the closes and wynds which diverge
from the great central street of the old city on the
south we must resume at the point where the great
fire of 1824 ceased, a conflagration witnessed by
Sir Walter Scott, who says of it :-
?? I can conceive no sight more grand or terrible
than to see those lofty buildings on fire from top to
bottom, vomiting out flames like a volcano from
every aperture, and finally crashing down one after
another into a* abyss of fire, which resembled
nothing but hell ; for there were vaults of wine and
spirits, which sent up huge jets of flames wherever
they were called into activity by the fall of these
massive fragments.?
?( The Salamander Land,? an enormous black
tenement, so named from its having survived or
escaped the fires that raged eastward and westward
of it, and named also from that curious propensiv,
which is so peculiarly Scottish, for inventive
and appropriate sobriquets, was removed to
make way for the Police Chambers and the
Cournnt office, in the latter of which James Hannay,
the author of ?Satire and Satirists? and several
other works, and Joseph Robertson, the wellknown
Scottish antiquary, conducted the editorial
duties of that paper, the first editor of which
was Daniel Defoe. ?We have been told,? says
Wilson, writing of the old tenement in question,
?that this land was said to have been the residence
of Daniel Defoe while in Edinburgh ; the tradition,
however, is entirely unsupported by other testimony.?
Descending the street on the south, as we have
done on the north, we shall peep into each of the
picturesque alleys that remain, and recall those
.which are no more, with all the notables who once
.dwelt therein, and summon back the years, the
men, and the events that have passed away.
Through ?? the Salamander Land ? a spacious
archway led into the Old Fishmarket Close,
where, qrevious to the great fire, an enormous pile
of buildings reared their colossal front, with that
majestic effect produced now by the back of the
Royal Exchange and of James?s Court, and where
now the lofty tenements of the new police office
stand.
To this alley, wherein the cannon shot of Kirkaldy
fell with such dire effect during the great siege
of 1573, Moyse tells us the plague was brought, on
the 7th of May, 1588, by a servant woman from St.
Johnston.
Within the Fishmarket Close was the mansion of
George Heriot, the royal goldsmith, wherein more
recently resided President Dundas, ?? father of Lord,
Melville, a thorough bon vivant of the old claretdrinking
school of lawyers.?
Here, too, dwelt, we learn from Chambers?s
? Traditions,? the Deemster, a finisher of the law?s
last sentence, a grim official, who annually drew his
fee from the adjacent Royal Bank; and one of the
last of whom, when not officiating at the west end
of the Tolbooth or the east end of the Grassmarket,
eked out his subsistence by cobbling shoes,
Borthwick?s Close takes its name from the noble
and baronial hmily of Borthwick of that ilk, whose
castle, a few miles south from the city, is one of
the largest and grandest examples of the square
tower in Scotland. In the division 6f the city in
October, 1514, the third quarter is to be-according
to the Burgh records-? frae the Lopelie Stane
with the Cowgaitt, till Lord Borthwick?s Close,?
assigned to ?? Bailie Bansun,? with his sergeant
Thomas Amott, and his quartermaster Thomas
Fowler.
The property on the middle of the east side of
the close belonged to one of the Lords Napier of
Merchiston, but to which there is no record to
show; and it is n9t referred to in the minute will
of the inventor of logarithms, who died in 1617.
A new school belonging to Heriot?s Hospital
occupies the ground that intervenes between this
alley and the old Assembly Close.
On that site stood the town mansion of Lord
Dune, President of the Court of Session in 1642,
the hero of the ballad of ? Christie?s Will,? and
according thereto the alleged victim of the Earl of
Traquair, as given in a very patched ballad of the
Border Minstrelsy, beginning :-
? Traquair he has ridden up Chapelhope,
And sae has he doon by the Greymare?s Tail ;
Till he spiered for Christie?s Will?
But he never stinted his light gallop,
And hence for a time the alley bore the name of
Lord Dune?s Close.
On the site of his mansion, till its destruction by
the fire of 1824, stood the Old Assembly Rooms ... OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [High Street. CHAPTER XXVIII. THE HIGH STREET-(continued). ?The Salamander Land ?-The ...

Book 2  p. 242
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OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [ Restalrig.
them in my pocket and went up some public staircase
to eat them, without beer or water. In this
manner I lived at the rate of little more than fourpence
a day, including everything." In the following
season he lived in Edinburgh, and added to
his baps a little broth.
In 1760, when only in his nineteenth year,
Adam-one of that army of great men who have
made Scotland what she is to-day-obtained the
head mastership of Watson's Hospital.
This place was the patrimony of the Nisbet
family, already referred to in our account of the
ancient house of Dean, wherein it is related that
Sir Patrick Nisbet of Craigantinnie, who was created
a baronet of Nova Scotia in 1669, was subsequently
designated '' of Dean," having exchanged his paternal
lands for that barony with his second cousin,
Alexander Nisbet.
The latter, having had a quarrel with Macdougall
of Mackerston, went abroad to fight a duel with
1Hti Huudr: OF THE LnGANS OF RESTALRIG, LOCH END. (PUYfh Uftter a Skr4ch by fhe Author J J I ~ C in 1847.)
Year after year Restalrig was the favourite
summer residence of the Rev. Hugh Blair, author
of the well-known " Lectures on Rhetoric and
Belles-lettres," who died on the 27th of December
1800. ,
A little way north-east of Restalrig village stands
the ancient house of Craigantinnie, once a simple
oblong-shaped mansion, about four storeys in height,
with crowstepped gables, and circular turrets ; but
during the early part of this century made much
more ornate, with many handsome additions, and
having a striking aspect-like a gay Scoto-French
chheau-among the old trees near it, and when
viewed from the grassy irrigated meadows that lie
between it and the sea.
him, in 1682, attended by Sir William Scott of
Harden, and Ensign Douglas, of Douglas's Regiment,
the Royal Scots, as seconds. .On their
return the Privy Council placed the whole four in
separate rooms in the Tolbooth, till the matter
should be inquired into ; but the principals were,
upon petition, set at liberty a few days after, on
giving bonds for their reappearance.
On the death of Sir Alexander Nisbet at the
battle of Toumay, unmarried, the estates and title
reverted to his uncle, Sir Alexander, who was succeeded
by his eldest son Sir Henry ; upon whose
decease the title devolved upon his brother Sir
John, who died in 1776.
In that year the latter was succeeded by his ... AND NEW EDINBURGH. [ Restalrig. them in my pocket and went up some public staircase to eat them, without beer ...

Book 5  p. 136
(Score 0.9)

THE OLD TOWN. 29
and motive with the clear vision and minute anatomy of a Fielding or a
Shakespeare j and thence again to the 'large upper room' where Chalmers
was discoursing with all the vehemence of the pulpit on theism and antitheism,
Clarke, Hobbes, and Butler, and sometimes snatching up his AstrommfcaZ
Discourses and reading a passage from them with the fire and freshness
with which he had given it originally, fifteen years before, in the Tron Church
of Glasgow j and thence once more to the hall where Sir William Hamilton
was spreading out his enormous treasures of knowledge to an audience, few
if fit. It seemed almost as if Plato and Aristotle, and Chrysostom and
Copemicus, had come down from the higher spheres and alighted beside each
other !
' Such spells are past, and fled with these
The wine of life is on the lees.'
But still the College can boast of ingenious, learned, and celebrated Professors,
among whom we name, because they are best known to us, the
elastic, eloquent, eccentric, endless Blackie ; the strong, plodding, invincible
Masson ; the profound and clear-headed Tait ; the massive and erudite Flint j
not to speak of Sir Robert Christison, Sir Wyville Thomson, Hodgson,
Bdfour, Calderwood, Lister, Spence, Sellar, Geikie, and others. Let us be
permitted to step back out of the circle of the present Professors to others of
the past-to one ' clearer than the rest,' the great-souled John Goodsir, and
to the eminent Professor Sir James Y, Simpson, Bart., and also to drop a
word of sorrow as we recall the untimely fate of the late accomplished and
gifted Secretary to the University, our speciak friend the poet Alexander
Smith; and among the many in Edinburgh who do not but might grace
Professors' Chairs, let us not be accused of too much personal partiality if
we single out Dr. Hutchison Stirling, the learned and ingenious author of
The Secret of Hegeef.
Pursuing our way southward, passing the Surgeons' Hall, we reach
Nicolson Square, in the Methodist Chapel (hired for years for the use of
his' congregation) at the south-west corner of which we remember ofte-n
hearing in our early days the Rev. John Bruce, since of Free St. Andrew's
Church, holding forth with all that weird power, that fervour and originality,
*which rendered him, till the advent of Dr. Candlish, the most
attractive preacher to the intellectual classes in Edinburgh, and where
such youths as then were the late Patrick MacDougall, Professor of
Moral Philosophy, Edinburgh College, the late Dr. Eadie of Glasgow, ... OLD TOWN. 29 and motive with the clear vision and minute anatomy of a Fielding or a Shakespeare j and thence ...

Book 11  p. 47
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390 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
solemnly taking farewell of the public concerns of the church on earth, with
the glory of the church of heaven full in his view ; and to perceive that, while
the frail tabernacle of the body was evidently coming down, there was no want
of mental vigour, and no want of deep interest in what respected the spiritual
improvement of the community with which he had been so long connected.”
Dr. Davidson died at Muirhouse on the evening of Sabbath, 28th October
1827, and was succeeded in the Tolbooth Church by the Rev. James Marshall,
sometime minister of the Outer Church of Glasgow.
Only three of Dr. Davidson’s sermons were published, and these were
delivered on public occasions. One of them, preached before the Synod of
Glasgow and Ayr, on the propitiation of Christ, has been much admired.
By his first wife, a sister of the late
Provost Anderson, bookseller in Stirling, among other children, he had a son,
Captain William Davidson, who succeeded him in his estates. By his second
wife, a sister of Lord Cockburn, he had several children.
Besides the estate of Muirhouse, Dr. Davidson was proprietor of the Old
Barony of Hatton, which had belonged to the Lauderdale family, and which,
having been acquired by the Duchess of Portland, was sold in lots; and a
considerable portion of it, including the old mansion-house and patronage of the
parish of Ratho, was purchased by him. The residence of Dr. Davidson in
Edinburgh was successively in Windmill Street, Princes Street, and Heriot Row.
Dr. Davidson was twice married.
No. CLV.
COLONEL PATRICK CRICHTON,
OF THE EDINBURGH VOLUNTEERS, WITH A VIEW OF THE AWKWARD SQUAD.
THE principal figure in this scene at Bruntsfield Links gives an excellent
portrait of COLONELP ATRICCKR ICHTONi,n the attitude of directing the
movements of a body of Volunteers. The stout personage in the background,
to the rear of the Colonel, is Captain Coulter, afterwards Lord Provost, who
obtained great celebrity for a declaration which he made on one occasion, at a
civic feast. His health having been drunk, he embraced the opportunity, in
returning thanks, of placing his martial avocations in oppostiion to his civic
ones, and wound up the harangue by exclaiming-“ Although I am in body a
stocking-weaver, yet I am in soul a Sheepyo !” (Scipio). He retained the name
of Sheepyo ever afterwards. The left hand man of the grenadiers is Robert
Sym, Esq., W.S.
Colonel Crichton, whose father, Alexander Crichton, carried on the business
of coach-building in the Canongate for many years, was a gentleman well known ... BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES. solemnly taking farewell of the public concerns of the church on earth, with the glory ...

Book 8  p. 543
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Bomington] THE LAIRDS OF PILRIG. 91
His History of the Church and State of Scotland,?
though coloured by High Church prejudices,
is deemed a useful narration and very candid record
of the most controverted part of our national
annals, while the State documents used in its compilation
have proved of the greatest value to every
subsequent writer on the same subject. Very
curious is the list of subscribers, as being, says
Chambers, a complete muster-roll of the whole
Jacobite nobility and gentry of the period, including
among others the famous Rob Roy, the outlaw !
The bishop performed the marriage ceremony of
that ill-starred pair, Sir George Stewart of Grandtully
and Lady Jane Douglas, on the 4th of August, I 746.
In I 7 5 5 he published his well-known ? Catalogue
of Scottish Bishops,? a mine of valuable knowledge
to future writers.
The latter years of his useful and blameless life,
during which he was in frequent correspondence
with the gallant Marshal Keith, were all spent at
the secluded villa of Bonnyhaugh, which belonged
to himself. There he died on the 27th of January,
1757, in his seventy-sixth year, and was borne,
amid the tears of the Episcopai communion, to his
last home in the Canongate churchyard. There he
lies, a few feet from the western wall, where a plain
stone bearing his name was only erected recently.
In 1766 Alexander Le Grand was entailed in the
lands and estates of Bonnington.
In 1796 the bridge of Bonnington, which was of
timber, having been swept away by a flood, a
boat was substituted till 1798, when another wooden
bridge was erected at the expense of A30.
Here in Breadalbane Street, northward of some
steam mills and iron-works, stands the Bonnington
Sugar-refining Company?s premises, formed by a few
merchants of Edinburgh andLeith about 1865, where
they carry on an extensive and thriving business.
The property and manor house of Stewartfield
in this quarter, is westward of Bonnington, a square
edifice with one enormous chimney rising through a
pavilion-shaped roof. We have referred to the entail
of Alexander Le Grand, of Bonnington, in 1766.
The Scots Magazine for 1770 records an alliance
between the two proprietors here thus :-?At Edinburgh,
Richard Le Grand, Esq., of Bonnington
(son of the preceding?), to Miss May Stewart,
daughter of James Stewart of Stewartfield, Esq.?
On the north side of the Bonnington Road, and
not far from Bonnington House, stands that of
Pilrig, an old rough-cast and gable-ended mansion
among aged trees, that no doubt occupies the site
of a much older edifice, probably a fortalice.
In 1584 Henry Nisbett, burgess of Edinburgh,
became caution before the Lords of the Privy
Council, for Patrick Monypenny of Pilrig, John
Kincaid of Warriston, Clement Kincaid of the
Coates, Stephen Kincaid, John Matheson, and
James Crawford, feuars of a part of the Barony
of Broughton, that they shall pay to Adam Bishop
of Orkney, commendator of Holyrood House,
?what they ow-e him for his relief of the last
taxation of _f;zo,ooo, over and above the sum of
?15, already consigned in the hands of the col-
Lector of the said collection.?
In 1601 we find the same Laird of Pilrig engaged
in a brawl, ?forming a specimen of the
second class of outrages.? He (Patrick Monypenny)
stated to the Lords of Council that he had
a wish to let a part of his lands of Pilrig, called the
Round Haugh, to Harry Robertson and Andrew
Alis, for his own utility and profit. But on a certain
day, not satisfied, David UuA; a doughty indweller in
Leith, came to these per?sons, and uttering ferocious
menaces against them in the event of their occupying
these lands, effectually prevented them from
doing so.
Duff next, accompanied by two men named
Matheson, on the 2nd of March, 1601, attacked
the servants of the Laird of Pilrig, as they were
at labour on the lands in question, with similar
speeches, threatening them with death if they persisted
in working there; and in the night they,
or other persons instigated by them, had come
and broken their plough, and cast it into the
Water of Leith. ?John Matheson,? continues the
indictment, ?? after breaking the complenar?s plew,
came to John Porteous?s house, and bade him gang
now betwix the Flew stilts and see how she wald go
till the morning:? adding that he would have his
head broken if he ever divulged who had broken
the plough,
The furious Duff, not contentwith all this,trampled
and destroyed the tilled land. In this case the
accused were dismissed from the bar, but only, it
would appear, through hard swearing in their own
cause.
There died at Pilrig, according to the Scots
Magazine for 1767, Margaret, daughter of the late
Sir Johnstone Elphinstone of Logie, in the month of
January ; and in the subsequent June, Lady Elphinstone,
his widow. The Elphinstones of Logie were
baronets of 1701.
These ladies were probably visitors, as the then
proprietor and occupant of the mansion was James
Balfour of Pilng, who was born in 1703, and became
a member of the Faculty of Advocates on
the 14th of November, 1730, Three years later
on the death of Mr. Bayne, Professor of Scottish
Law in the University of Edinburgh, he and Mr. ... THE LAIRDS OF PILRIG. 91 His History of the Church and State of Scotland,? though coloured by High ...

Book 5  p. 91
(Score 0.89)

92 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [The Mound.
design, which shall consist of two departments : the
m e appropriated to the remains of ancient sculpture,
and the other to the study of living models.
From that time matters went on peacefully and
pleasantly till 1844, when 8 dispute about entrance
to their galleries ensued with the subordinates of
the Board of Manufactures, in whose building they
were-a dispute ultimately smoothed over. In
1847 another ensued between the directors of the
Royal Institution and the Academy, which led to
some acritnonious correspondence ; but all piques
and jealousies between the Academy and the Royal
Institution were ended by the erection of the Art
Galleries, founded in 1850.
Six months before that event Sir William Allan,
the second president, died on the 2 2nd of February,
after occupying the presidential chair for thirteen
years with much ability. It is to be regretted that
no such good example of his genius as his ?? Death
of Rizzio? finds a place in the Scottish National
Gallery, his principal work there being his large
unfinished picture of the ?? Battle of Bannockburn,?
a patriotic labour of love, showing few of the best
qualities of his master-hand, as it was painted
literally when he was dying. ?TO those who were
with Sir William in his latter days it was sadly
interesting to see him wrapped up in blankets,
cowering by his easel, with this great canvas
stretched out before him, labouring on it assiduously,
it may be truly said, till the day on which he
died,? writes a brother artist, who has since
followed him. ? The constant and only companion
uf his studio, a long-haired, glossy Skye terrier, on
his master?s death, refused to be comforted, to eat,
.or to live.?
His successor was Sir John Watson, who added
the name of Gordon to his own. He was the son of
Captain JamesWatson, RN., who served in Admiral
Digby?s squadron during the first American war,
Among his earlier works were the ? Shipwrecked
Sailor,? ? Queen Margaret and the Robber,? ?A
Boy with a Rabbit,? ?The Sleeping Boy and
Watching Girl? (his own brother and sister); but it
was as a painter of portraits strictly that he made
his high reputation; though it is said that the
veteran, his father, when looking at the ? Venus and
Adonis ? of Paul Veronese, declared it ? hard as
flints,? adding, ?I wouldn?t give my Johnny?s
? Shipwrecked Sailor? for a shipload of such.?
In early life he lived with his father in 27 Anne
Street, which he left regularly every morning at
nine o?clock, ?and walking down the beautidul
and picturesque footpath that skirted the bank
af the Water of Leith, he passed St. Bernard?s,
where almost invariably he was joined by the
portly figure of Sir Henry Raeburn. Engaged in
conversation, no doubt beneficial to the younger
but rising artist, they proceeded to Edinburgh-
Raeburn to his gallery and painting-room, No. 32
York Place, and John Watson to his apartments
in the first flat of No. 19 South St. David Street,
or, latterly, 24 South Frederick Street.??
During his presidency the Art Galleries were
completed and opened. By the Act 13 and 14
Vict., cap. 86, the entire building and property were
vested in the Board of Manufactures, as well as the
appropriation of the buildings when completed,
subject to the approbation of the Treasury, without
the sanction of which no fee for admittance
was to be charged on any occasion, except to the
annual exhibition of the Royal Scottish Academy.
?The general custody and maintenance of the
whole building shall be vested in the Board of
Manufactures,?? says the Government minute of
28th February, 1858 ; ?but the Royal Scottish
Academy shall have the entire charge of the councilroom
and library and of the exhibition galleries
during their annual exhibitions.?
After continuing in the exercise of his profession
until within a few weeks of his death, Sir John
Watson died at his house in George Street, 1st
June, 1864, in his seventy-sixth year, having been
born in 1788.
He was succeeded as president and trustee by
Sir George Harvey, born in Stirlingshire in 1805,
and well known as a painter successfully of historical
subjects and fabZeaux de genre, many of them
connected with the stirring events of the Covenant
He became a Scottish Academician in 1829, since
when his popularity spread far and wide by the
dissemination of numerous engravings from his
works. He was president only twelve years, and
died at Edinburgh on the zznd of January, 1876, in
his seventy-first year.
He was succeeded by Sir Daniel Macnee, R.S.A.,
who was also born in Stirlingshire in 1806, and
began early to study at the Trustees? Academy with
Duncan, Lauder, Scott, and other artists of native
repute. He rapidly became a favourite portrait
painter in both countries, and his famous portrait
of the Rev. Dr. Wardlaw won a gold medal at the
Paris International Exhibition of 1855. He has
painted many of the most prominent men of the
time, among them Lord Brougham for the College
of Justice at Edinburgh.
In connection with Scottish art we may here
refer to the Spalding Fund, of which the directors
of the Royal Institution were constituted trustees
by the will of Peter Spalding, who died in 1826,
leaving property, ? the interest or annual proceeds ... OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [The Mound. design, which shall consist of two departments : the m e appropriated to ...

Book 3  p. 92
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IS2 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [Leith
brunt in assis, and all thair moveable guidis to be
escheat.?
On the 6th of August, 1600, as Birrel tells us in
his Diary, there came to Edinburgh tidings of the
King?s escape from the Gowrie Conspiracy, upon
which the castle guns boomed from battery and
tower j the bells clashed, trumpets were sounded
and drums beaten; the whole town rose in arms,
?with schutting of muskettis, casting of fyre
workes and boynfyirs set furth,? with dancing and
such merriness all night, as had never before been
seen in Scotland.. The Earl of Montrose, Lord
Chancellor, the Master of Elphinstone, Lord Treasurer,
with other nobles, gathered the people around
the market cross upon their knees, to give thanks
to God for the deliverance of the King, who crossed
the Firth on the 11th of the month, and was received
upon the sands of Leith by the entire male
population of the city and suburbs, all in their
armour, ?with grate joy, schutting of muskettis,
and shaking of pikes.?
After hearing Mr. David Lindsay?s ? orisone,?
in St. Mary?s Church, he proceeded to the cross
of Edinburgh, which was hung with tapestry, and
where Mr. Patrick Galloway preached on the 124th
Psalm.
In 1601 a man was tried at Leith for stealing
grain by means of false keys, for which he was sentenced
to have his hands tied behind his back and
be taken out to the Roads and there drowned.
Birrel records that on the 12th July, 1605, the
King of France?s Guard mustered in all their bravery
on the Links of Leith, where they were sworn in
and received their pay ; but this must have referred
to some body of recruits for the Ecossuise du Roi,
of which ?? Henri Prince d?Ecosse ? was nominally
appointed colonel in 1601, and which carried on
its standards the motto, In omni modo JdeZis.
Exactly twenty years later another muster in the
same place was held of the Scots Guards for the
King of France, under Lord Gordon (son of the
Marquis of Huntly), whose younger brother, Lord
Melgum, was his lieutenant, the first gentleman of
the company being Sir William Gordon of Pitlurg,
son of Gordon of Kindroch. (? Gen. Hist. of the
Earls of Sutherland.?)
In the April of the year 1606 the Union Jack
first made its appearance in the Port of Leith. It
would seem that when the King of Scotland added
England and Ireland to his dominions, his native
subjects-very unlike their descendants-manifested,
says Chambers, the utmost jealousy regarding
their heraldic ensigns, and some contentions in
consequence arose between them and their English
neighbours, particularly at sea. Thus, on the 12th
April, 1606, ? for composing of some differences
between his subjects of North and South Britain
travelling by seas, anent the bearing of their flags,?
the King issued a proclamation ordaining the ships
of both nations to carry on their maintops the flags
of St. Andrew and St. George interlaced ; those of
North Britain in their stern that of St. Andrew, and
those of South Britain that of St. George.
In those days, whatever flag was borne, piracy
was a thriving trade in Scottish and English waters,
where vessels of various countries were often captured
by daring marauders, their crews tortured,
slaughtered, or thrown ashore upon lonely and
desolate isles. Long Island, on the Irish coast,
was a regular station for English pirate ships, and
from thence in 1609 a robber crew, headed by two
captains named Perkins and William Randall,
master of a ship called the Gryjhound, sailed for
Scottish waters in a great Dutch vessel called the
Iron Prize, accompanied by a swift pinnace, and
for months they roamed about the Northern seas,
doing an incredible deal of mischief, and they
even had the hardihood to appear off the Firth of
Forth.
The Privy Council upon this armed and fitted
out three vessels at Leith, from whence they sailed
in quest of the pirates, who had gone to Orkney to
refit. There the latter had landed near the castle
of Kirkwall, in which town they behaved barbarously,
were always intoxicated, and indulged
?in all manner of vice and villainy.? Three of
them, who had attacked a small vessel lying in
shore, belonging to Patrick Earl of Orkney, were
captured by his brother, Sir James Stewart (gentle
man of the bed-chamber to James VI.), and soon
after the three ships from Leith made their appearance,
on which many of the pirates fled in the
pinnace. A pursuit proving futile, the ships cap
tured the Iron Prize, but not without a desperate
conflict, in which several were killed and wounded.
lhirty English prisoners were taken and brought to
Leith, where-after a brief trial on the 26th of July
-twenty-seven of them, including the two captains,
were hanged at once upon a gibbet at the pier,
three of them being reserved in the hope of their
giving useful information. The Lord Chancellor,
in a letter to James VI., written on the day of the
execution, says that these pirates, oddly enough,
had a parson ?? for saying of prayers to them twice
a day,? who deserted from them in Orkney, but
was apprehended in Dundee, where he gave evidence
against the rest, and would be reserved for
the King?s pleasure.
The next excitement in Leith was caused by the
explosion of one of the King?s large English ships ... OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [Leith brunt in assis, and all thair moveable guidis to be escheat.? On the 6th of ...

Book 5  p. 182
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I 16 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. p e w Town,
himself and his lady. This lintel was removed by
the late Sir Patrick Walker, who had succeeded to
the estate, and was rebuilt by him into the present
ancient house, which is destined long to survive as
the deanery of St. Mary?s cathedral. Into the
walls of the same house were built some fragments
of sculpture from a mansion in the Cowgate, traditionally
known as the residence of the French
embassy in Mary?s time. They are now in the
north wing.
On the eastern side of the mansion of Coates are
two ancient lintels, one dated 1600, with the initials
C. C. I. and K. H. The other bears the same
initials with the legend,
I PRAYS YE LORD FOR
ALL HIS BENEFErIS, 1601.
Coates lay westward of Bearford?s Parks and the
old Ferry Road. The form?er edifice, a picturesque
old mansion, with turrets, dormer windows, and
crowstepped gables, in the Scoto-French style, still
remains unchanged among its changed surroundings
as when it was built, probably about 1611, by
Sir John Byres of Coates, whose, town residence was
in Byres? Close, in the High Street, and over the
door of which he inscribed the usual pious legend,
? Blksif be God ia aC his g$%$? with the initials of
?
1 On the west a dormer gable bears the date 1615,
with the initials J. B. and M. B., and a stone built
above the western door bears in large letters the
word IEHOVA, with the city motto and the date
1614
According to the inscription on the tomb of
? the truly good and excellent citizen John Byres
of Cokes,? in the Greyfriars churchyard, as given
by Monteith, it would appear that he was two
years city bailie, two years a suburban bailie, six
THE MANYION OF EASTER COATLS.
years Dean of Guild, and that he died on the
24th of November, 1629, iri his sixtieth year.
Prior to the time of the Byres the property had
belonged to the Lindsays, as in the ratification
by Parliament to Lord Lindsay, in 1592, are mentioned
?the landis of Dene, but the mylnes and
mure thereof, and their pertenents lyand within
the Sherifdom of Edinburgh, the manes of Drym,
the lands of Drymhill, the landis of Coittis and
Coitakirs, &c? (Acta Parl., Jacobi VI.)
The mansion of Wester Coates, advertised in the
Edinburgh papers of 1783 as ? the House of Coates,
or White House, belonging to the heirs of the
deceased James Finlay of Walliford, and as lately
possessed by Lord Covington, situated on the
highway leading to Coltbridge,? was removed in ... 16 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. p e w Town, himself and his lady. This lintel was removed by the late Sir Patrick ...

Book 3  p. 116
(Score 0.89)

24 MEMORIALS OF EDINBURGH.
horsis under the Castle wall, in the barrace,” the Scottish knight’s horse having failed
him in the first onset, they encountered on foot, continuing the contest for a full hour, till
the Dutchman being struck to the ground, the King cast his hat over the Castle wall a8 a
signal to stay the combat, while the heralds and trumpeters proclaimed Sir Patrick the
victor.
A royal experiment, of a more subtle nature, may be worth recording, as a sample of
the manners of the age. The King caused a dumb woman to be transported to the neighbouring
island of Inchkeith, and there being properly lodged and provisioned, two infants
were entrusted to her care, in order to discover by the language they should adopt, what
was the original human tongue. The result seems to have been very satisfactory, as, after
allowing them a suficient time,
it was found that ‘‘ they spak very
guid Ebrew I ”
But it is not alone by knightly
feats of arms, and the rude chivalry
of the Middle Ages, that
the court of James IV. is distinguished.
The Scottish capital,
during his reign, was the residence
of men high in every department
of learning and the arts.
Gawin Douglas, afterwards
Bishop of Dunkeld, the wellknown
author of “ The Palice of
Honour,” and the translator of
Virgil’s Bneid into Scottish
verse, was at this time Provost
of St Giles’s,’ and dedicated his
poem to the
“ Maist gracious Prince ouir Souerain Jamea the Feird,
Supreme honour renoun of cheualrie.”
Dunbar, “ the greatest poet that Scotland has produced,” ’ was in close and familiar
attendance on the court, and with him Kennedy, “ his kindly foe,” and Sir John Ross, and
“ Gentill Roull of Corstorphine,” as well as others afterwards enumerated by Dunbar, in his
“ Lament for the Makaris.” Many characteristic and very graphic allusions to the manners
of the age have been preserved in the poems that still exist, by them affording a curious
insight into the Scottish city and capital of the James’s. Indeed, the local and temporary
allusions that occur in their most serious pieces, are often quaint and amusing, in the highest
degree, as in Kennedy’s “ Passioun of Grist :”-
“ In the Tolbuth then Pilot enterit in,
Callit on Chrid, and sperit gif He wea King I ”
Keith’a Bishops, 8v0, 1824;~. 468. ’ Ellis’ Specimens, Svo, 1845, vol. i. p. 304.
VIGNETTE-North-e118t pillar, St Qiles’s choir. ... MEMORIALS OF EDINBURGH. horsis under the Castle wall, in the barrace,” the Scottish knight’s horse having ...

Book 10  p. 26
(Score 0.89)

INDEX TO THE NAMES, ETC. 497
HS;rdy, Mr. Thomas, 177
Harmer, Mr., 361
Harris, Mr. T., 316
Hart, Andrew, printer, 473
Harvey, Waiani, M.D., 450
Hastings, Lady Flora, 27
Hastings, Warren, Esq., 64
Hawley, General, 106
Hawswell, Peggy, 366
Hay, Dr. Thomas, 375
Hay, John, Esq., 263
Hay, Dr. David, 263
Hay, Lieutenant, 276
Hay, Mr. John, senior, 329
Hay, Mr. John, junior, 329
Hay, Mr. Frederick, 329
Hay, Miss Henrietta, 330
Hay, Sir John, Bart., 371
Headford, Marquis of, 305
Henderland, Lord, 90, 346
Henderson, Mr., 12
Henderson, Dr., 42
Henderson, Mr., 105
Henderson, Mr., 287
.Hendemon, Sir John, of Fordel
Bad., 403, 407, 408, 409, 41(
Henry, Blind, 320
Henry, Dr., 451
Hepburn, Colonel David, 393
Hepburn, Miss Grahame, 393
Herbert, Lady Henrietta-Antonia
Herd, Mr. David, 1, 4
Hermand, Lord, 163, 277, 380
Heron, Douglas and Co., 59
Herschel, Sir John F. W., 142
Hesse, Prince of, 137
Hibbert, Dr., 454
Hill, Rev. Rowland, 41
Hill, Lord, 41
Hill, Mr., surgeon, 45
Hill, Mr. Peter, senior, 94, 209
Hill, Mr. Peter, junior, 322
Hinton w. Donaldson, 20
Hodgins, Mr., 259
Hogg, Jameq the Ettrick Shep
Hogg, a. W., junior, 211
Holland, Dr., 452
Home, Rev. John, 72, 83
Home, Joseph, Esq., 73
Home, Miss Catharine, 73, 76
Home, Sir Jameg 73
Home, &., 73
VOL. 11.
469
384, 385, 438
400
herd, 99
Iome, Captain Joseph, 75
Iome, David, one of the Barons
of the Exchequer, 75, 420, 464
'Iome, John, Esq., W.S., 75
Tome, Miss Agnes, 76
Ionyman, Patrick, Esq., 162
lonyman, Captain Patrick, 163
lonyman, Lieutenant - Colonel
Robert, 163
Xooke, William Jackson, R.A.,
454
$ope, Hon. Charles, Lord Pre.
sident, 44,380, 401, 417, 442,
443
LIope, General, 163
Xope, Mr. John, 246
Hope, Lady Charlotte, 255
Hope, John, Esq., 255
Hope, Major-General, 274
Hope, Admiral Sir William John
Hope, Mr. Robed, 415
Hope, Dr. John, 450
Hope, Dr. Thomas Charles, 417
Hopetoun, Charles first Earl of
Hopetoun, John second Earl of
Hopetoun, James third Earl of
Aopetoun, John fourth Earl of
Korn, Bailie, 231
Horn, Miss Anne, 393
Horne, Mr. Jameq W.S., 407
Horner, Francis, Esq., M.P., 68
Howard, General Sir George, 351
Howie, Johnnie, 107
Hume, David, the historian, 22
72,73, 141, 445, 457
Hume, Mr. George, 370
Hunt, Mr. James, 403, 407, 408
Hunt, Mr. Thomas, 403
Hunter, Alexander G., of Black
Hunter, Robert, 156
Hunter, Mr. James, 282
Hunter, Dr., 452
Hunter, David, Esq., 452
Hunter, Miss, 452
Hunter, Mr., of Messrs. Mansfield
Hunter, and Ramsay, 13
Huntingdon, Earl of, 16
Huntingdon, Countess of, 102
Huntingdon, Lord, 262
stone, 295
246
179, 255
93
402
388, 413
ness, 1, 2, 457
Huntly, Marquis of, 247, 272,
Huntly, Marchioness of, 246
Hutchison, Mr., 439
Button, Mr. John, 402, 403,406,
Hutton, bfr. Robed, 403, 408
275, 427, 428
407, 408
I
INCLEDOMNr,. , 358, 359
Inglis, William, Esq., 238
Inglis, Thomas, 408
Inglis, John, Esq., 452
Jnnes, Rev. Mr. William, 39
Innes, Mr. Edward, 282, 287
Innes, Mrs., 284
Irvine, Miss Anne, 277
Irving, George, Esq., 462
Irving, Miss, 462
Ivory, Sir James, 140,142
J
JAOR, James, 44
Jackson, Rev, Mr., 173, 174
Jackson, Mr., 203, 258, 259, 260,
James I. of Scotland, 265.
James IY., 342
James VI., 8,125, 207, 324, 341,
James 11. of Britain, 208, 212
James, Mr., 42
Jameson, Robert, Esq., 321
Jamieson, Convener, 9
Jamieson, bb., 99
Jamieson, Mr., 189
Jamieson, Dr., 265, 366
Jamieson, Mr. Alexander, 321
Jamieson,Mr. William,TV.S., 363
Jardine, Rev. Dr. John, 327
Jardine, Professor, 465
Jefferson, President, 71
Jeffrey, Lord, 363
Jeffrey, Yr. George, 388 '
Jeffrey, Miss Charlotte Wilkes,
Jephson, Captain, 93, 205
Joass, Alexander, Esq., 38
Joass, Misv Mary, 38
Jobson, James, Esq., 436
Jobson, Miss, 436
Johnson, Rev. Robert, 161
Johnson, Dr. Samuel, 380
Johnston, Add Patie, 74:
Johnston, Robert, Esq., 76
Johnstnn, Miss Margaret, 76
264
343
392
3 s ... TO THE NAMES, ETC. 497 HS;rdy, Mr. Thomas, 177 Harmer, Mr., 361 Harris, Mr. T., 316 Hart, Andrew, ...

Book 9  p. 688
(Score 0.88)

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