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Old and New Edinburgh Vol. V

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Restalrig.] LHL LA31 UP THE LOGANS. I35 -_7n T I?- , sible eyrie, Fast Castle, there to await the orders of Elizabeth or the other conspirators as to the disposal of his person. Logan?s connection with this astounding treason remained unknown till nine years after his death, when the correspondence between him and the Earl of Gowrie was discovered in possession of Sprott, a notary at Eyemouth, who had stolen them from a man named John Bain, to whom they had been entrusted. Sprott was executed, and Logan?s bones were brought into court to havea sentence passed upon them, when it was ordained ?that the memorie?and dignitie of the said umqle Robert Logan be extiiict and abolisheit,? his arms riven and deleted from all books of arms and all his goods escheated. The poor remains of the daring old conspirator, were then retaken to the church of St. Mary at Leith and re-interred j and during the alterations in that edifice, in 1847, a coffin covered with the richest purple velvet was found in a place where no interment had taken place for years, and the bones in it were supposed by antiquaries to be those of the turbulent Logan, the last laird of Restalrig. His lands, in part, with the patronage of South Leith, were afterwards bestowed upon James Elphinstone, Lord Balmerino ; but the name still lingered in Restalrig, as in 1613 we find that John Logan a portioner there, was fined LI,OOO for hearing mass at the Netherbow with James of Jerusalem. Logan was forfeited in 1609, but his lands had been lost to him before his death, as Nether Gogar was purchased from him in I 596, by Andrew Logan of Coatfield, Restalrig in 1604 by Balmerino, who was interred, in 1612, in thevaulted mausoleum beside the church ; ?and the English army,? says Scotstarvit, ? on their coming to Scotland, in 1650, expecting to have found treasures in that place, hearing that lead coffins were there, raised up his body and threw it on the streets, because they could get no advantage or money, when they expected so much.? In 1633 Charles I. passed through, or near, Restalrig, on his way to the Lang Gate, prior to entering the city by the West Port. William Nisbet of Dirleton was entailed in the lands of Restalrig in 1725, and after the attainder and execution of her husband, Arthur Lord Balmerino, in I 746, his widow-Elizzbeth, daughter of a Captain Chalmers-constantly resided in the village, and there she died on the 5th January, 1767. Other persons of good position dwelt in the village in those days; among them we may note ? Sir James Campbell of Aberuehill, many years a Commissioner of the Customs, who died there 13th May, 1754, and was buried in the churchyard ; and in 1764, Lady Katharine Gordon, eldest daughter of the Earl of Aboyne, whose demise there is recorded in the first volume of the Edinburgh Adverhjer. Lord Alemoor, whose town house was in Niddry?s Wynd, was resident at Hawkhill, where he died in 1776 ; and five years before that period the village was the scene of great festal rejoicings, when Patrick Macdowal of Freugh, fifth Earl of Dumfries, was married to Miss Peggy Crawford, daughter of Ronald Crawford, Esq., of Restalng.? From Peter Williamson?s Directory it appears that Restalrig was the residence, in 1784, of Alexander Lockhart, the famous Lord Covington. In the same year a man named James Tytler, who had ascended in a balloon from the adjacent Comely Gardens, had a narrow escape in this quarter. He was a poor man, who supported himself and his family by the use of his pen, and he conceived the idea of going up in a balloon on the Montgolfier principle ; but finding that he could not carry a firestove with him, in his desperation and disappointment he sprang into his car with no other sustaining power than a common crate used for packing earthenware; thus his balloon came suddenly down in the road near Restalrig. For a wonder Tytler was uninjured; and though he did not reach a greater altitude than three hundred feet, nor traverse a greater distance than half a mile, yet his name must ever be mentioned as that of the first Briton who ascended with a balloon, and who was the first man who so ascended in Britain.? It is impossible to forget that the pretty village, latterly famous chiefly as a place for tea-gardens and strawbemy-parties, was, in the middle of the last century, the scene of some of the privations of the college life of the fine old Rector Adam of the High School, author of ?Roman Antiquities,? and other classical works. In 1758 he lodged there in the house of a Mr. Watson, and afterwards with a gardener. The latter, says Adam, in some of his MS. memoranda (quoted by Dr. Steven), was a Seceder, a very industrious man, who had family worship punctually morning and evening, in which I cordially joined, and alternately said prayers. After breakfast I went to town to attend my classes and my private pupils. For dinner I had three small coarse loaves called baps, which I got for a penny-farthing. As I was now always dressed in my best clothes, I was ashamed to buy these from a baker in the street. I therefore went down to a baker?s in the middle of a close. I put
Volume 5 Page 135
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