BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES. 93
No. XLI.
THE REV. WILLIAM ROBERTSON, D.D.,
AUTHOR OF THE “HISTORY OF SCOTLAND,” AND “CHARLES v.”
THIS eminent divine resided within the old College, at the south gate, nearly
on the spot where the centre of the library now is. He was born in the year
1721, in the manse of Borthwick, of which parish his father, also called William,
was then minister, but who was afterwards presented to the Old Greyfriars’
Church, Edinburgh. His mother was Eleanor, daughter of David Pitcairn,
Esq. of Dreghorn ; by the father’s side he was descended from the Robertsons
of Gladney in Fife, a branch of the ancient house of Strowan. Dr. Robertson
received the first rudiments of his education at Dalkeith, under Mr. Leslie ; and,
in 1733, when his father removed to Edinburgh, he commenced his course of
academical study, which he completed at the University of Edinburgh in 1741.
In the same year he was licensed to preach by the Presbytery of Dalkeith ; and
in 1743 was, by the Earl of Hopetoun, presented to the living of Gladsmuir in
East Lothian. Soon after this, his father and mother died within a few hours
of each other, when six sisters,’ and a younger brother,” were left almost wholly
dependent on him. He immediately took them home to his humble residence
at Gladsmuir, where his stipend amounted to little more than 260 a year, and
devoted his leisure hours to the superintendence of their education. After
seeing them all respectably settled in the world, he married, in 1751, his cousin
Mary, daughter of the Rev. Mr. Nisbet, one of the ministers of Edinburgh.
In the Rebellion of 1745, when Edinburgh was threatened by the Highlanders,
he hastened into the city, and joined a corps of Volunteers raised for its
defence ; and when it was resolved to deliver up the city without resistance, he,
with a small band, tendered his assistance to General Cope, who lay with the
royal army at Haddington-an offer which the General (fortunately for the
Doctor and his party) declined. He then returned to the sacred duties of his
parish, where he was much beloved ; and soon afterwards began to display his
talents in the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, where he became
the object of universal attention and applause. It was about this time that Dr.
Robertson so ably defended his friend Mr. Home, the author of the tragedy of
Douglas, from the proceedings adopted against him in the clerical courts.
The first publication of Dr. Robertson was a sermon, which was preached by
him before the Society for propagating Christian Knowledge, in 1755 ; and to
it may be attributed the unanimity of his call to the charge of Lady Yester’s
Church in Edinburgh, to which he was translated in 1758. InFebruary 1759,
One of his sisters, Mrs. Syme, who lived at the head of the Cowgate, waa the grandmother of
’ Mr. Patrick Fbbertaon, who was bred a jeweller, and was very successful in businaw in Edinburgh.
Lord Brougham and Vaux.