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Old and New Edinburgh Vol. V

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34 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [Wright?s H0u.w~ good behaviour of William Douglas of Hyvelie (Reg : Privy Council Scot.). His son Robert, who was a visitor at the house of William Turnbull of Airdrie, then resident in Edinburgh, on the 4th of September, 1608, ? by craft and violence,? carried off a daughter of the latter in her eleventh year, and kept her in some obscure place, where her father could not discover her. Turnbull brought this matter before the Privy Council, by Nhom Robert Napier was denounced as a rebel and outlaw. Of this old family nothing now remains but a tomb on the north side of the choir of St. Giles?s; it bears the Merchiston crest and the Wrychtishouse shield, and has thus been more than once pointed out as the last restingplace of the inventor of the logarithms. The Napiers of Wrychtishousis, says the biographer of the philosopher, were a race quite dis tinct from that of Merchiston, and were obviously a branch of Kilmahew, whose estates lay in Lennox. Their armorial bearings were, or on a bend azure, between two mullets or spur rowels. In its later years this old mansion was the residence of Lieutenant-General Robertson of Lude, who served throughout the whole American war, and brought home with him, at its close, a negro, who went by the name of Black Tom, who occupied a room on the ground floor. Tom was again and again heard to complain of being unable to rest at night, as the figure of a lady, headless, and with a child in her arms, rose out of the hearth, and terrified him dreadfully ; but no one believed Tom, and his story was put down to intoxication. Be that as it may, ? when the old mansion was pulled down to build Gillespie?s Hospital there was found under the hearthstone of that apartment a box containing the body of a female, from which the head had been severed, and beside her lay the remains of an infant, wrapped in a pillow-case trimmed with lace. She appeared, poor lady, to have been cut off in the blossom of her sins ; for she was dressed, and her scissors were yet hanging by a ribbon to her side, and her thimble was also in the box, having, apparently, fallen from her shrivelled fingers.?? If we are to judge from the following notice in the Edinburgh HeraZd for 6th April 1799, the mansion was once the residence of Lord Barganie (whose peerage is extiiict), as we are told that by Gillespie?s trustees, ?I Barganie House, at the Wrights Houses, has been purchased, with upwards of six acres of ground, where this hospital is to be erected, The situation is very judiciously chosen; it is elevated, dry, and healthy.? In 1800 the demolition was achieved, but not without a spirited remonstrance in the Edinburgh Mopzinc for that year, and Gillespie?s Hospital, a tasteless edifice, designed by Mr. Burn, a builder, in that ridiculous castellated style called ?&Carpenter?s Gothic,? took its place. The founder, James Gillespie, was the eldest of two brothers, who occupied a shop as tobacconists east of the Market Cross, Here John, the younger, attended to the business, while the former resided at Spylaw, near Colinton, and superintended a mill which they had erected there for grinding snuff; and there snuff was ground years after for the Messrs. Kichardson, 105, West Bow. Neither of the brothers married, ,and though frugal and industrious, were far from being miserly. They lived among their workmen and domestics, in quite a homely and patriarchal manner, ? Waste not, want not ? being ever their favourite maxim, and money increased in their hands quickly. Even in extreme age, we are told that James Gillespie, with an old blanket round him and a night-cap on, both covered with snuff, regularly attended the mill, superintending the operations of his man, Andrew Fraser, who was a hale old man, living in the hospital, when the first edition of I? Kay ? was published, in I 838. James kept a carriage, however, for which the Hon. Henry Erskine suggested as a motto :- ?Wha wad hae thocht it, That noses had bocht it?? He survived his brother five years, and dying at Spylaw on the 8th April, 1797, in his eightieth year, was buried in Colinton churchyard. By his will he bequeathed his estate, together with _f;I 2,000 sterling (exclusive of A2,700 for the erection and endowment of a school), ? for the special intent and purpose of founding and endowing an hospital, or charitable institution, within the city ,of Edinburgh or suburbs, for the aliment and maintenance of old men and women.? In 1801 the governors obtained a royal charter, forming them into a body corporate as ?The Governors of James Gillespie?s Hospital and Free School.?. The persons entitled to admittance were :-first, Mr. Gillespie?s old servants ; second, all persons of his surname over fifty-five years of age; third, persons of the same age belonging to Edinburgh and Leith, failing whom, from all other parts of Midlothian. None were to be admitted who had private resources, or were otherwise than ? decent, godly, and well-behaved men and women.? In the Council-room of the hospital-from which the school was built apart-is an excellent
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