.BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES. 197
by some of the more desperate members of the British Convention to seduce
the soldiers from their allegiance, or at all events to sow the seeds of discontent
among them, but without effect.
At Dumfries, where the corps was quartered in 1794, the following curious
circumstance occurred :-“ One of the Hopetoun Fencibles, now quartered in
that town,” says a newspaper of the day, “ was discovered to be a woman,
after having been upwards of eighteen months in the service. The discovery
was made by the tailor, when he was trying on the new clothes. It is remarkable
that she has concealed her sex so long, considering she always slept with a
comrade, and sometimes with two. She went by the name of John Nicolson,
but her real name was Jean Clark. Previous to her assuming the character of
a soldier, it seems she had accustomed herself to the dress and habits of a
man; having been bred to the business of a weaver at Closeburn, and employed
as a man-servant at Ecclefechan.”
The services of the Hopetoun Fencibles were at first limited to Scotland,
but were afterwards extended to England. They remained embodied till 1798,
when they were disbanded, after the regular militia had been organised.
His lordship afterwards, as Lord Lieutenant of the county of Linlithgow,
embodied a yeomanry corps and a regiment of volunteer infantry, both of
which were among the first that tendered their services to Government. These
he commanded as Colonel, and took a deep interest and a very active part in
training them, and rendering them efficient for the public service. During
those times of alarm, when the country was threatened by foreign invasion, his
influence, his fortune, and his personal exertions were steadily devoted to the
public safety; and so much were his services appreciated by the Executive, that
he was created a Baron of the United Kingdom in 1809, by the name, style,
and title of Baron Hopetoun of Hopetoun.
The Earl died at Hopetoun House, on the 29th May 1816, at the advanced
age of 75. He married, in 1756, Elizabeth, daughter of the Earl of Northesk,
by whom he had six daughters. They all died prior to himself, except Lady
Anne, upon whom the Annandale estates devolved, and who married Admiral
Sir William Johnstone.
Inheriting from his ancestors high rank and ample fortune, Lord Hopetoun
maintained the dignity and noble bearing of the ancient Scotch baron, with the
humility of a Christian, esteeming the religious character of his family to be its
highest distinction; and he was not more eminent for the regularity of his
attendance on all the ordinances of religion, than for the sincerity and reverence
with which he engaged in them. He was an indulgent landlord, a most munificent
benefactor to the poor, and a friend to all who lived within the limits
of his extensive domains.
The following lines, written at the period of his death, describe his estimable
character in glowing and forcible language :-
198 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
“ For worth revered, 10 I full of years,
Amid the sorrowing people’s tears,
Does Hopetoun to the tomb descend,
Who mourn their constant, kindest friend,
Oft have I heard, as o’er hie land
I wandered in my youthful days,
The farmer bless his fostering hand,
And ploughman’s ruder note of praise.
Oft,(too, in Humbie’s fairy vale-
Of Hopetoun have I heard the tale
Romantic vale I so sweetly wild-
Of sorrow soothed or want beguiled.
The mausoleum may arise,
But far superior are the sighs
Displaying well the sculptor’s art ;
That rise from many a wounded heart.
The historic record shall survive,
The legendary tribute live
And unimpaired its meed bestow ;
When time haa laid the structure low.
In early life to warfare trained,
He gained the glory arms can yield ;
When Gallia had her lilies stained
On Minden’s memorable field.
Hsnce wreathed, the titled path he trod-
A path (haw few pursue his plan !)
Bright, marked with piety to God
And warm benevolence to man.
The niche he leaves a brother fills,
Long, long o’er Scotia’s vales and hills
Whose prowess fame has blazoned wide ;
Shall Niddry’s deeds be told with pride !”
Having no male issue, the Earl of Hopetoun was succeeded by his half-brother
John, fourth Earl, G.C.B., and General in the Army, who had distinguished
himself so much by his gallantry and abilities in the West Indies in 1794 ; in
Holland in 1799 j and at the battles of Corunna, Bayonne, Bourdeaux, and
Toulouse. For these services he was created a British Peer in 1814, by the
title of Baron Niddry. A
handsome equestrian statue has lately been erected to his memory in St. Andrew
Square, in front of the Royal Bank, by the citizens of Edinburgh.
. Earl John was twice married,-first, in 1798, to Elizabeth, youngest
.(aughter of Charles Hope Vere of Craighall, who died without issue in 1801 ;
secondly, in 1803, to Louisa Dorothea, third daughter of Sir John Wedderburn
of Ballendean, by whom he had twelve children,’ of whom seven sons and
It will be recollected that when George IV. visited Scotland in 1822, his Majesty embarked at
Port-Edgar, having previously partaken of a repast at Hopetoun House with the Earl, his family,
and a select company assembled for the occasion. While at breakfaat, one of the Earl’s sons, a lively
He died at Paris on the 27th August 1823.
‘