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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 ...

Vol. 5  p. 161 (Rel. 2.62)

Canongate1 SIR JOHN WHITEFORD OF THAT ILK 35
but who, after being sentenced to death, escaped to
Rome, where he died in 1749, without issue, aceording
to Sir Robert Douglas ; and, of course, is
:the same house that has been mentioned in history
as the Lord Seton’s lodging ‘‘ in the Cannogait,”
wherein on his arrival from England, ‘.‘ Henrie Lord
Dernlie, eldest son of Matho, erle of Lennox,” re-
:sided when, prior to his marriage, he came to Edinburgh
on the 13th of February, 1565, as stated in
the ‘‘ Diurnal of Occurrents.”
In the same house was lodged, in 1582, according
to Moyse, Mons. De Menainville, who came
as an extra ambassador from France, with instructions
to join La Motte Fenelon. He landed at
Burntisland on the 18th of January, and came to
Edinburgh, where he had an audience with Janies
VI. on the 23rd, to the great alarm of the clergy,
who dreaded this double attempt to revive French
influence in’ Scottish affairs. One Mr. James
Lawson ‘‘ pointed out the French ambassaye”
as the mission of the King of Babylon, and characterised
Menainville as the counterpart of the
blaspheming Rabshakeh.
Upon the 10th February, says Moyse, “La Motte
having received a satisfying answer to his comniission,
with a great banquet at Archibald Stewart’s
lodgings in Edinburgh, took his journey homeward,
and called at Seaton by the way. The said Monsieur
Manzeville remained still here, and lodging
at my Lord Seaton’s house in the Canongate, had
daily access to the king’s majesty, to whom he
imparted his negotiations at all times.”
In this house died, of hectic fever, in December,
1638, Jane, Countess of Sutherland, grand-daughter
af the first Earl of Winton. She “was interred at
the collegiat churche of Setton, without any funeral1
ceremoney, by night.”
In front of this once noble mansion, in which
Scott lays some of the scenes of the “Abbot,”
there sprang up a kind of humble tavern, built
chiefly of lath and plaster, known as “Jenny Ha’s,”
from Mrs. Hall, its landlady, famous for her claret.
Herein Gay, the poet, is said to “‘have boosed
during his short stay in Edinburgh ;” and to this
tavern it was customary for gentlemen to adjourn
after dinner parties, to indulge in claret from the
butt.
On the site of the Seton mansion, and surrounded
by its fine old gardens, was raised the present
edifice known as Whiteford House, the residence of
Sir John Whiteford, Bart., of that ilk and Ballochof
the early patrons of Burns, who had been htre
duced to him by Dr. Mackenzie, and the grateful
bard never forgot the kindness he accorded to him.
The failure of Douglas, Heron, & Co., in whose
bank he had a fatal interest, compelled him to
dispose of beautiful Ballochmyle, after which he
resided permanently in Whiteford House, where
he died in 1803. To the last he retained a military
bearing, having served in the army, and been a
major in 1762.
Latterly, and for many years, Whiteford House
was best known as the residence of Sir William
Macleod Bannatyne, who was raised to the bench
on the death of Lord Swinton, in 1799, and was
long remembered as a most pleasing example of the
old gentleman of Edinburgh “before its antique
mansions and manners had fallen under the ban
of modern fashion.”
One of the last survivors of the Mirror Club,
in private life his benevolent and amiable qualities
of head and heart, with his rich stores of literary
and historical anecdote, endeared him to a numerous
and highly distinguished circle of friends. Robert
Chambers speaks of breakfasting with him in Whiteford
House so late as 1832, “on which occasion
the venerable old gentleman talked as familiarly
of the levees of the sous-nziniske for Lord Bute in
the old villa at the Abbey Hill as I could have
talked of the Canning administration, and even
recalled, 2.5 a fresh picture of his memory, his father
drawing on his boots to go to make interest in
London on behalf of some men in trouble for
the ‘45, particularly his own brother-in-law, the
Clanranald of that day.” He died at Whiteford
House on the 30th of November, 1833, in the
ninety-first year of his age. His mansion was
latterly used as a type-foundry.
On the south side of the street, nearly opposite
the site of the Seton lodging, the residence of the
Dukes of Queensberry still towers up, a huge, dark,
gloomy, and quadrangular mass, the scene of much
stately life, of low corrupt intrigue, and in one
instance of a horrible tragedy.
It was built by Lord Halton on land belonging
to the Lauderdale family; and by a passage in
Lord Fountainhall’s folios would seem to have been
sold bp him, in June, 1686, to William first Duke
of Queensbeny and Marquis of Dumfries-shire, Lord
High Treasurer and President of the Council,a
noted money-lender and land-acquirer, who built
the castle of Drumlanrig, and at the exact hour
.
niyle, a locality in Ayrshire, on which the muse of whose death, in 1695, it is said, a Scottish
of Bums has conferred celebrity, and whose father skipper, being in Sicily, saw one day a coach and
is said to have been the prototype of Sir Arthur ,six driving to flaming Mount Etna, while a dia-
Wardour in the “Antiquary.” Sir John was one 1 bolical voice was heard to exclaim, “Way for the ... old gardens, was raised the present edifice known as Whiteford House , the residence of Sir John Whiteford, ...

Vol. 3  p. 35 (Rel. 2.53)

C0NTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
THE CANONGATE.
@AGE
I& Origin-Songs concerning it-Reaords-Market Cross-St. John's and the G i h Crosses-Early History-The Town of Her-
Canongate Paved-The Governing Body-Raising the Devil-Purchase of the Earl of Roxbwgh's "Superiority"-The Foreign
Settlement-George Heriot the Elder-Huntly's HouseSu Walter Scott's Story of a Fire--The Mo- Land-How of Oliphant
of Newland, Lord David Hay, and Earl of Angus-Jack's Land-Shoemaker's Lands-Marquis of Huntly's House-Nisbet of Duleton'd
Mansion-Golfers' Land-John and Nicol Paterson-The Porch and Gatehouse of the Abbey-Lucky Spellcc . . . . . . I
CHAPTER 11.
THE CANONGATE (continwd).
Execution of the Marquis of Montrose-The First Dromedary in Scotland-The streets Cleansed-Raxbugh House--London Stages of r71a
and 175+-Religious Intolerance-Declension of the Burgh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
CHAPTEK 111.
THE CANONGATE (con#i+vwd).
Closes and AlleF on the North Side-Fiesh-market and Coull's Cloxs-Canongate High School-&e's Close--Riillach's Lodging-New
Street and its Residents-Hall of the Shoemakers-Sir Thos Ddyell-The Canongate Workhouse-Panmure HousbHannah
Robertson-The White Horse Hostel-% Water Gate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
CHAPTER IV.
THE CANONGATE (continued).
Closes and Alleys on the South Side-Chessel's Court-The Canongate Theatre-Riots Therein-"Douglas" Performed-Mr. Diggea and Mra.
Bellamy-St. John's Close-St. John's Street and iks Residents-The Haaunennan's Clo~-Horse Wynd, Abbey-House of Lord Napier 22
CHAPTER V.
THE CANONGATE (roniinued).
Separate or Detached Edifices therein-Sir Walter Scott in the Canongate--The Parish C%urch-How it came to be built-Its Official
Position- Its Burying Ground-The Grave of Fergusson-Monument to Soldiers interred the-Ecceotric Henry PrentiaThe
Tolbth-Testimony as to its Age-Its latu uses-Magdakne Asylum-Linen Hall-Many House-Its Hstorical Associari ons-The
WiotooXo-Whiteford Howe-The Dark Story of Queuriberry House . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 7
CHAPTER VI.
THE CANONGATE (coduded).
mthiin H u t - M PalmerstowSt. Thomas's Hospita-The Tennis Court and its Theawe4&wen Mq's --The Houxr of Croftan-
Righandclock-mill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
CHAPTER ' VII.
HOLYROOD ABBEY.
Foundation of the Ahbey-Text of King David's Charter-Original Extent of the Abbey Char&-The sc-alled Miracdau b - T h e
Pawnages of the Canons-Its Tbirtyanc Abbots-Its Relics and Revenues . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 ... I. THE CANONGATE. @AGE I& Origin-Songs concerning it-Reaords-Market Cross-St. John's ...

Vol. 4  p. 385 (Rel. 1.35)

Canongate] SIR ARCRIBALD ACHESON. 27
polished ashlar, with sculptured dormer windows,
dine stringcourses, and other architectural details of
:the period. The heavily moulded doorway, which
measures only three feet by six, is surmounted by
&he date 1633, and a huge monogram including the
initials of himself and his wife Dame Margaret
Hamilton. Over all is a cock on a trumpet and
scroll, with the motto Yzgilantibzls. He had been a
puisne judge in Ireland, and was first knighted by
Charles I., for suggesting the measure of issuing
out a commission under the great seal for the sltr-
If Hawthornden and of Sir William Alexander
Earl of Stirling.
A succession of narrow and obscure alleys
ollows till we come to the Horse Wynd, on the
LINTEL ABOVE THE DOOR OF SIR A. ACHESON’S HOWL
east side of which lay the royal stables at the time
of Darnley’s murder. In this street, on the site of a
school-house’ &c., built by the Duchess of Gordon
for the inhabitants of the Sanctuary, stood an old
tenement, in one of the rooms on the first floor of
which the first rehearsal of Home’s ‘‘ Douglas ”
took place, and in which the reverend author was
assisted by several eminent lay and clerical friends,
among whom were Robertson and Hume the
historians, Dr. Carlyle of Inveresk and the
author taking the leading male parts in the cast,
while the ladies were represented by the Rev. Dr.
Blab and Professor Fergusson. A dinner followed
in the Erskine Club at the Abbey, when they were
joined by the Lords Elibank, Kames, Milton, and
Monboddo. To the south of this house was the
town mansion of Francis Scott Lord Napier, who
inherited that barony at the demise of his grandmother,
Lady Napier, in 1706,and assumed the name
of Napier, and died at a great old age in 1773.
At its southern end the wynd was closed by an
arched gate in the long wall, which ran from the
Cowgate Port to the south side of the Abbey Close.
CHAPTER V.
THE CANONGATE (continued).
‘Separate or Detached Edifices therein-Sir Walter Scott in the CanongattThe Parish C%urch-How it came to be built-Its Official Position
--Its Burying Ground-The Grave of Ferguuon-Monument to Soldiers interred there-Ecceotric Henry Prentice-The Tolhth-
Testimony as to its Age-Its later uses-Magdalene Asylum-Linen Hall-Moray House-Its Historical Associations-The Winton House
-Whiteford House-The Dark Story of Queensbemy House.
THE advancing exigencies of the age and the of the court suburb, but there still remain some
necessity for increased space and modern sanitary ’ to which belong many historical and literary
improvements have made strange havoc among the I associations of an interesting nature. Scott was
ald alleys and mansions of the great central street ~ never weary of lingering among them, and recalling ... Hall-Moray House-Its Historical Associations-The Winton House - Whiteford House -The Dark Story of Queensbemy ...

Vol. 3  p. 27 (Rel. 1.3)

CON TENTS. V
CHAPTER XIII.
THE DISTRICT OF RESTALRIG.
PAGE
Abbey Hill-Baron Norton-Alex. Campbell and 'I Albjm's Anthology "--Comely Gardens-Easter Road-St. Margaret's Wellxhurch
and Legend of St. Tnduana-Made Collegiate bv James 111.-The Mausoleum-Old Barons of Restalrig-The Logans, &c-
Conflict of Black Saturday-Residents of Note-First Balloon in Britain-Rector Adams-The Nisbeb of Craigantinnie and Dean
-The Millers-The Craixantinnie Tomb and Marbles-The Marionville Tragedy-The Hamlet of Jock's Lodge-Mail-bag Robberies
in Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries-Piemhill House and Barracks. . . . . . . . . . . . . I 27
CHAPTER XIV.
PORTOBELLO.
Portobell~The Site before the Houses-The Figgate Muir--ctone Coffiqs-A Meeting with Cramwell-A Curious Race-Portobello Hut-
Robbers-William Jamieson's Feuing-Sir W. Scott and "The Lay "-Portobello Tower-Review of Yeomanry and Highlanders-
Hugh Miller-David Lamg-Joppa-Magdalene Bridge-Rrunstane House . . . . . . . . . . . . I43
CHAPTER XV.
LEITH WALK.
A Pathway in the 15th Century probable-Genera1 Leslie's Trenches-Repulse of Cramwell-The Rood Chapel-Old Leith Stazes-Propsal
for Lighting the Walk-The Gallow Lea-Executions there-The Minister of Spott- Five Witches-Five Covenanters-The Story of
their Skulls-The Murder of Lady Baillie-The Effigies of "Johnnie Wilkes" . . . . . . . . , . . 150
CHAPTER XVI.
LEITH WALK (conchfed).
East Side-Captain Haldane of the Tabernacle-New Road to Haddington -Windsor Street-Mrs H. Siddons -Lovers' Loan-Greenside
House-Andrew Macdonald. the Author of" Vimonda "-West Side-Sir J. Whiteford of that Ilk-Gayfield House-Colonel Crichton
--Prince Leopold-Lady Maxwell-Lady Nairne-SFr;ngfield-McCulloch of Ardwell and Samuel Foote . . . . . ' 157
CHAPTER XVII.
LEITH-HISTORICAL SURVEY.
Origin of the Name-Boundaries of South and North Leith-Links of North Leith-The Town frrst mentioned in History--King Robert's
Charter-Superiority of the Logans and Magistrates of Edinburgh-Abbot Ballantyne's Bridge and Chapel-Newhaven given to
Edinburgh by Jam- 1V.-The Port of 153c-The Town Burned by the English . . . . , . . . . . - . 164
CHAPTER XVIII.
LEITH-HISTORICAL SURVEY (continued).
The Great Siege-Arrival of the French-The Fortifications-Re-capture of Inchkeith-The Town Invested-Arrival of the English Fleet
and Army-Skirmishes-Opening of the BatteriesFailure of the Great Assault-Queen Regent's Death-Treaty of Peace-Relics of
thesiege . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .r7o
CHAPTER XIX.
LEITH-HISTORICAL SURVEY (catinued).
rhc Fortifications demolished-Landing of Queen Mary-Leith Mortgaged-Edinburgh takes Military Pasession of it-A Convention-A
Plague-James VI. Departs and Returns -Witches-Cowrie Con%pkacy-The Union Jack-Pirates-Taylor the Water Poet-
A Fight in the Harbour-Death of Jamer VI. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , 178 ... TENTS. V CHAPTER XIII. THE DISTRICT OF RESTALRIG. PAGE Abbey Hill-Baron Norton-Alex. Campbell and 'I ...

Vol. 6  p. 395 (Rel. 1.14)

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 ...

Vol. 3  p. 166 (Rel. 0.93)

282 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [High Street.
style, with many ornate gables, dormer windows,
%ut was a second time stolen ; and in the strangulation
on the scaffold, and the being fouricl in a
ditch among water, the superstitious saw retributive
justice for the murder of which he was
assumed to be guilty. “ I t will be acknowledged,”
says the author of the “ Domestic Annals,”
“that in the circumstances related there is not a
particle of valid evidence against the young man.
The surgeons’ opinion as to the fact of strangulation
is not entitled to much regard ; but, granting
its solidity, it does not prove the guilt of the ac-
.cused. The horror of the young man on seeing
his father’s blood might be referred to painful recol-
Jections of that profligate conduct which he knew
had distressed his parent, and brought his grey
hairs with sorrow to the grave-especially when we
reflect that Stanfield would himself be impressed
with the superstitious feelings of the age, and might
.accept the hzmorrhage as an accusation by heaven
on account of the concern his conduct had in
shortening the life of his father. The whole case
:seems to be a lively illustration of the effect of
superstitious feelings in blinding justice.”
We have thus traced the history of the High
Street and its closes down once more to the
Nether Bow.
In the World’s End Close Lady Lawrence was
a residenter in 1761, and Lady Huntingdon in 1784,
and for some years after the creation of the New
Town, people of position continued to linger in the
Old Town and in the Canongate. And from Peter
Williamson’s curious little ‘‘ Directory ” for 1784,
we can glean a few names, thus :-
I Scottish gentleman, who, though he did not partici-
Lady Mary Carnegie, in Bailie Fyfe’s Close;
Lady Colstoun and the Hon. Alexander Gordon,
on the Castle Hill; General Douglas, in Baron
Maule’s Close; Lady Jean Gordon, in the Hammerman’s
Close; Sir James Wemyss, in Riddle’s
Close; Sir John Whiteford of that ilk, in the
Anchor Close ; Sir Jameg Campbell, in the Old
Bank Close; Erskine of Cardross, in the Horse
Wynd ; Lady Home, in Lady Stair’s Close.
In Monteith‘s Close, in 1794, we find in the
“ Scottish Hist. Register for 1795 recorded the
death of Mr. John Douglas, Albany herald, uncle
of Sir Andrew Snape Douglas, who was captain of
the Queen CharZoffe, of IIO guns, and who fought
her so valiantly in Lord Bridport’s battle on “ the
glonous 23rd of June, 1795.” The house occupied
‘by Lady Rothiemay in Turk’s Close, below
Liberton’s Wynd, was advertised for sale in the
Couranf of 1761 ; and there lived, till his death in
1797, James Nelson, collector of the Ministers’
Widows’ Fund.
In Morrison’s Close in 1783, we find one of the
most fashionable modisfes of Edinburgh announcing
in the Adverfiser of that year, that she is from “one
of the most eminent houses in London,” and that
her work is finished in the newest fashions :-
“ Chemize de Lorraine, Grecian Robes, Habit Bell,
Robe de Coure, and Levites, different kinds, all in
the most genteel and approved manner, and on the
most reasonable terms.”
In the same year, the signboard of James and
Francis Jeffrey, father and uncle of Lord Jeffrey,
still hung in the Lawnmarket.
CHAPTER XXXIV.
NEW STREETS WITHIN THE AREA OF THE FLODDEN WALL.
h r d ’Cockburn Street-Lord Cockburn-The Scotsmun NewspapeFCharles Maclaren and Alexander Russel-The Queen’s Edinburgh
Rifle Brigade-St. Giles Street-Sketch of the Rise d Journalism in Edinburgh-The EdinQxrgk Courunt-The Daily Rnrieur-Jelfrey
Street-New Trinity College Church
THE principal thoroughfare, which of late years has
been run through the dense masses of the ancient
alleys we have been describing, is Lord Cockburn
Street, which was formed in 1859, and strikes
northward from the north-west corner of Hunter‘s
Square, to connect the centre of the 012 city with
-the railway terminus at Waverley Bridge ; it goes
curving down a comparatively steep series of slopes,
and is mainly edificed in the Scottish baronial
lofty tenements in many of the closes that descend
from the north side of the High Street, and was
very properly named after Lord Cockburn, one
entitled to special remembrance on many accounts,
and for the deep interest he took in all matters
connected with his birthplace. When he died,
in April, 1854, he was one of the best and kindliest
of the old school of “Parliameht House Whigs,”
and was a thorough, honest, shrewd, and benevolent
and conical turrets, high over all of which towers
. the dark and mighty mass of the Royal Exchange.
This new street expdses aromantic section of the
pate to any extent in the literary labours of his
contemporaries, has left behind him an interesting
volume of “ Memorials.” Many can yet recall his ... OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [High Street. style, with many ornate gables, dormer windows, %ut was a second time ...

Vol. 2  p. 282 (Rel. 0.91)

High Street.] THE REGENT MORTON. 259
the king‘s chamber j the lie was given, and a somewhat
ribald altercation followed, but nothing occurred
for nearly three weeks after, till Sir William
Stewart, when coming down the High Street with
a party of his friends, met Bothwell, accompanied
by the Master of Gray and others, going up.
A collision between two such parties was inevitable,
and, in the spirit of the times, unavoidable.
Sword and dagger were instantly resorted to, and
in the general fight Sir William Stewart slew a friend
of Bothwell’s, but in doing so lost his sword, and,
being defenceless, was compelled to fly into
Blackfriars Wynd. Thither the vengeful Bothwell
pursued him ; and as he stood unarmed against a
wall, “strake him in at the back and out at the
belly, and killed him.”
For this Bothwell found it necessary to keep
out of the way only for a few days ; and such
events so commonly occurred, that it is not curious
to find the General Assembly, exactly a week
after this combat, proceeding qnietly with the
usual work of choosiiig a Moderator, providing for
ministers, and denouncing Popery, exactly as they
do in the reign of Queen Victoria.
The next most remarkable event was in 1668,
when, on Saturday the 9th of July, James Sharpe,
Archbishop of St. Andrews, whose residence was
then in the Wynd, so narrowly escaped assassination.
His apostacy from the Covenant, and unrelenting
persecution of his former compatriots, its adherents,
had roused the bitterness of the people against
him. He was seated in his coach, at the head of
the Wynd, waiting for Andrew Honeyman, Bishop
of Orkney, when Mitchell, a fanatical assassin and
preacher, and bosom friend of the infamous Major
Weir, with whom he was then boarding in the
house of Mrs. Grise1 Whiteford in the Cowgate,
fired a pistol at the primate, but, missing him,
dangerously wounded the Bishop of Orkney. He
was immediately seized, and, with little regard
to morality or justice, put to the torture, without
eliciting any confession ; . and after two years
seclusion on the Bass Rock, he was brought to
Edinburgh in 1676, and executed in the Grassmarket,
to strike terror into the Covenanters ; but
history has shown that their hearts never knew
what terror was.
Sir William Honeyman, Bart., Lord Armadale in
1797, was the fourth in descent from the bishop
who was wounded on this occasion by a poisoned
bullet, as it is affirmed.
While much of the west side of Blackfriars
Wynd was left standing, the east, in the city improvements,
was completely swept away. On the
latter side, near the head of the wynd, was a
house with a decorated lintel, inscribed-IN. THE.
LORD. IS. MY. nom. 1564. The ground floor of
it consisted of one great apartment, the roof or
ceiling of which was upheld by a massive stone
column. This hall formed the meeting-place of
those who adhered to the Covenanted Kirk, after
the Revolution of 1688, and was long known as
“ The Auld Cameronian Meeting-house,” and in
the upper storey thereof tradition alleges that
Nicol Muschat, the murderer, lived, when a student‘
attending the university.
On the west side of the Wynd was the ancient
residence of the Earls of Morton, with a handsome
ogee door-head and elaborate mouldings, shafted
jambs, and in the tympanum of the lintel a
coroneted shield supported by unicorns, though
the arms of the family have always had two savages,
or wild men, hence the edifice is supposed to be of a
date anterior to the days of the Regent. Yet it is
distinctly described, in a disposition by Archibald
Douglas younger of Whittinghame, as “ that tenement
which was sometime the Earl of Morton’s,’’
from which, according to Wilson, it may be inferred
to have been the residence of his direct ancestor,
John second Earl of Morton, who sat in the Parliament
of James IV. in 1504, and whose grandson,
William Douglas of Whittinghame, was created
a senator of the College of Justice in 1575.
Tradition has unvaryingly alleged this house to
have been that of the Regent Morton, in those
days when the king‘s men and queen’s men were
fighting all over the city, and Kirkaldy of Grange
was bent upon driving him out of it ; and here no
doubt it was that he had his body-guard, which
was commanded by Alexander Montgomery the
poet, whom Melvil in his diary mentions as
“Captain Montgomery, a good honest man, and
the Regent‘s domestic ; ” and the house is often
referred to, during the, civil wars of that period,
before he attained the Regency.
While Lennox was in office, Morton projected
the assassination of the Laird of Drumquhasel, whom
the former confined to his residence in Leith as a
protection. This Morton deemed an affront to
himself, and prepared to leave Leith and the king‘s
standard together. ‘‘ Alarmed .by the probable
loss of the most influential earl of the house of
Douglas, the weak Regent, affecting to be ignorant
of his wrathful intentions, sent a servant to acquaint
him that ‘he meant to dine with him that day,’
‘ I am sorry I cannot have the high honour of his
lordship’s company,’ replied the haughty earl ; ‘ my
business is pressing, and obliges me to leave Leith
without even bidding him adieu.’ Lennox was ... Street.] THE REGENT MORTON. 259 the king‘s chamber j the lie was given, and a somewhat ribald altercation ...

Vol. 2  p. 259 (Rel. 0.9)

‘‘ Letters,” that the Countess of Stair was subject
to hysterical fits-the result perhaps of all she had
undergone as a wife. After being long the queen
of society in Edinburgh, she died in November,
1759, twelve years after the death of the Marshal.
She was the first person in the city, of her time,
who had a black domestic servant. Another
dowager, the Lady Clestram, succeeded her in the
old house in the close. It was advertised for
sale, at the upset price of A250, in the Edinburgh
Advertiser of 1789; and is described as “that
large dwelling-house, sometime belonging to the
Dowager Countess of Stair, situated at the entry
to the Earthen Mound. The sunk storey consists
of a good kitchen, servants’ rooms, closets, cellars,
&c. j the second of a dining and bed rooms ; the
third storey of a dining and five bed rooms.” It has
long since been the abode of the humblest artisans.
The parents of Miss Fetrier, the well-known
novelist, according to a writer in T’jZe Bar for
November, 1878, occupied a flat in Lady Stair‘s
Close after their .marriage. Mrs. Femer ( d e
Coutts) was the daughter of a farmer at Gourdon,
near Montrose, and was a woman of remarkable
beauty, as her portrait by Sir George Chalmers,
Bart. (a native of Edinburgh) in 1765 attests. At
the time of her mamage, in 1767, she had resided
in Holyrood with her aunt, the Hon. Mrs. Maitland,
widow of a younger son of Lord Lauderdale;
and the flat the young mamed couple took in
the old close had just been vacated by Sir James
Pulteney and his wife Lady Bath.
When Sir Richard Steele, of the Spectator, visited
Edinburgh, in 1717, on the business of the Forfeited
Estates Commission, we know not whether he
resided in Lady Stair’s Close, but it is recorded
that he gave, in a tavern there, a whimsical supper,
to all the eccentric-looking mendicants in the city,
giving them the enjoyment of an abundant feast,
that he might witness their various oddities.
Richard Sheils mentions this circumstance, and
adds that Steele confessed afterwards that he had
“drunk enough of native drollery to compose a
comedy.”
Upper Baxter‘s Close, the adjoining alley, is
associated with the name of Robert Burns. There
the latter, in 1786, saved from a heartless and
hopeless exile by the generosity of the blind poet,
Dr. Blacklock, came direct from the plough and
the banks of his native Ayr, to share the humble
room and bed of his friend Richmond, a lawyer‘s
clerk, in the house of Mrs. Carfrae. But a few
weeks before poor Bums had made arrangements
to go to Jamaica as joint overseer on an estate; but
the publication of his poems was deemed such a
jUCCeSS, that he altered his plans, and came to
Edinburgh in the November of that year. In one
Jf the numbers of the Lounger appeared a review
3f the first (or Kilmarnock) edition of his poems,
written by Henry Mackenzie, who was thus the
means, together with Dr. Blacklock, of kindly
bringing Burns before the learned and fashionable
circles of Edinburgh. His merited fame had
come before him, and he was now caressed by all
ranks. His brilliant conversational powers seem
to have impressed all who came in contact with
him as much as admiration of his poetry. Under
the patronage of Principal Robertson, Professor
Dugald Stewart, Henry Mackenzie, author of the
“ Man of Feeling,’’ and Sir John Whiteford of that
ilk, but more than all of James Earl of Glencaim,
and other eminent persons, a new edition of his
poems was published in April, 1787 ; but amid all
the adulation he received he ever maintained his
native simplicity and sturdy Scottish independence
of character. By the Earl of Glencaim he was introduced
to the members of the Caledonian Hunt,
and he dedicated to them the second edition of
his poems In verse he touchingly records his
gratitude to the earl :-
‘( The bridegroom may forget the bride
The monarch may forget the crown
The mother may forget the child
But I’ll remember thee, Glencairn,
Was made ’his wedded wife yestreen ;
That on his head an hour has been ;
That smiles sae sweetly on her knee ;
And all that thou hast done for me!”
Bums felt acutely the death of this amiable and
accomplished noble, which occurred in 1791.
The room occupied by Bums in Baxter‘s Close,
and from which he was wont to sally firth to dine
and sup with the magnates of the city, is still pointed
out, with its single window which opens into Lady
Stair’s Close. There, as Allan Cunningham records,
he had but “his share of a deal table,a sanded
floor, and a chaff bed, at eighteenpence a week.”
According to the same biographer, the impression
which Burns made at first on the fair, the
titled, and the learned, of Edinburgh, “though
lessened by intimacy on the part of the men,
remained unimpaired on that of the softer sex
till his dying day. His company, during the
season of balls and festivities, continued to be
courted by all who desired to be reckoned gay
or polite. Cards of invitation fell thick. on him;
he was not more welcomed to the plumed and
jewelled groups whom her fascinating Grace of
Gordon gathered about her, than he was to the
grave divines and polished scholars who assembled ... Letters,” that the Countess of Stair was subject to hysterical fits-the result perhaps of all she ...

Vol. 1  p. 106 (Rel. 0.87)

34 OJ,D AND NEW EDINBURGH. -. -
by a clause in one of the Acts of the North British
Railway; and since 1847 it has fortunately become
the property of the Free Church of Scotland, by
whom it is now used as a training college or nor.
mal school, managed by a rector and very efficient
staff,
On the Same side, but to the eastward, is Milton
House, a large and handsome mansion, though
heavy and sombre in style, built in what had been
originally the garden of Lord Roxburghe’s house,
or a portion thereof, during the eighteenth century,
by Andrew Fletcher of Milton, raised to the bench in
1724 in succession to the famous Lord Fountainhall,
and who remained a senator of the Court of
Session till his death. He was the nephew of the
noble and patriotic Fletcher of Salton, and was an
able coadjutor with his friend Archibald the great
Duke of Argyle, during whose administration he
exercised a wise control over the usually-abused
Government patronage in Scotland. He sternly
discouraged all informers, and was greatly esteemed
for the mild and gentle manner in which he used his
authority when Lord Justice Clerk after the battle
of Culloden.
From the drawing-room windows on the south a
spacious garden extended to the back of the
Canongate, and beyond could be seen the hill of
St. Leonard and the stupendous craigs. Its walls
are still decorated with designs and landscapes,
having rich floral borders painted in distemper,
and rich stucco ceilings are among the decorations,
and “ interspersed amid the ornamental borders
there are various grotesque figures, which have the
appearance,” says Wilson, “ of being copies, from
an illuminated missal of the fourteenth century.
They represent a cardinal, a monk, a priest, and
other churchmen, painted with great humour and
drollery of attitude and expression. They so entirely
differ from the general character of the composition,
that their insertion may be conjectured to
have originated in a whim of Lord Milton’s, which
the artist has contrived to execute without sacrificing
the harmony of his .design.”
Lord Milton was the guardian of the family of
Susannah Countess of Eglinton for many years,
and took a warm and fatherly interest in her beautiful
girls after the death of the earl in 1729 ; and
the terms of affectionate intimacy in which he stood
with them are amusingly shown in “ The petition of
the six vestal virgins of Eglinton,” signed by them
all, and addressed “ To the Honourable Lord Milton,
at his lodgings, Edinburgh,” in I 735-a curious
and witty production, .printed in the “Eglinton
Memorials.”
Lord Milton died at his house of Brunstane,
[Canangate. -
near Musselburgh, on the 13th of December, 1766,
aged seventy-four. Four years after that event the
Scots Magazine for 1770 gives us a curious account
of a remarkable mendicant that had long haunted
his gates:--“ Edinburgh, Sept. 29th. A gentleman,
struck with the uncommon good appearance
of an elderly man who generally sits bareheaded
under a dead wall in the Canongate, opposite to
Lord Milton’s house, requesting alms of those
who pass, had the curiosity to inquire into his
history, and learned the following melancholy account
of him. He is an attainted baronet, named
Sif John Mitchell of Pitreavie, and had formerly
a very affluent estate, . In the early part of his life
he was a captain in the Scots Greys, but was broke
for sending a challenge to the Duke of Marlborough,
in consequence of some illiberal reflections thrown
out by his Grace against the Scottish nation.
Queen Anne took so personal a part in his prosecution
that he was condemned to transportation
for the offence ; and this part of his sentence was,
with difficulty, remitted at the particular instance
of John Duke of Argyle. Exposed, in the hundredth
year of his age, to the inclemencies of the
weather, it is hoped the humane and charitable
of this city will attend to his distresses, and relieve
him from a situation which appears too severe a
punishment for what, at worst, can be termed his
spirited imprudence. A subscription for his annual
support is opened at Balfoufs coffee-house, where
those who are disposed to contribute towards it will
receive every satisfaction concerning the disposal of
their charity and the truth of the foregoing relation.”
The aged mendicant referred to may have been
a knight, but the name of Mitchell is not to be
found in the old list of Scottish baronets, and Pitreavie,
belonged to the Wadlaws.
In later years Milton House was occupied as a
Catholic school, under the care of the Sisters of
Charity, who, with their pupils, attracted considerable
attention in 1842, on the occasion of the first
visit of Queen Victoria to Holyrood, from whence
they strewed flowers before her up the ancient street.
It was next a school for deaf and dumb, anon
5 temporary maternity hospital, and then the property
of an engineering firm.
Where Whiteford House stands now, in Edgar’s
map €or 1765 there are shown two blocks of
buildings (with a narrow passage between, and a
Zarden 150 feet long) marked, “Ruins of the Earl
Df Winton’s house,” a stately edifice, which, no
loubt, had fallen into a state of dilapidation from
its extreme antiquity and abandonment after the
attainder of George, fourth Earl of Winton, who
was taken prisoner in the fight at Preston in 1715,
’ ... and then the property of an engineering firm. Where Whiteford House stands now, in Edgar’s map €or 1765 ...

Vol. 3  p. 34 (Rel. 0.86)

392
I. 344 341, 111. 158; Foote's
attack on Whitefield I. 342
Whiteford, Sir John, I.'106,~82, 11.
35 166 111. 161
White Hart, Leg&d of the. I. 11,22
White Hart Inn, Grassmarket, The
Whit; Hbrx hot& The, I. 99, 11.
Whik Horse Inn, I. 4, 6, 299.303
White House Loan, 111.43, 46,47,
Whihorh HOW 11. U, 35
old I1 234 235 *237
21 22739
W%e iron smith, h e first, :I. 263
"White Rose of Scotland, The,
Wig Club The 111. 124
Wigan dfred 'the actor, I. 351
W i g h u k , h i d Provost, I. 94
Wigmer, John, 11. 278
Wi ton Earl of 11. 270
Wi&er&rce, William, 11. 336
Wilkes the demagogue 111. 157
Wilkie: Sir David, L ;Os, 11. 89,
Wilkieof Foulden 11. 142
w i l l i III., PrAlamation of, I.
62; unpopularity of, 11. 324;
proposed statue to, 111. 123 : announcement
of the death of, I. 201
W i l l i IV. inLeithRoads, 111.198
W i l l i de Dedervk. alderman, 11.
11. 123
po7.337~ 111. 7'
_ .
W:fi7ram the Lion King, 11. 46, 50,
Willram Foular's Close, 11. 241
Williams, the actor, 1. 348
Williamson, David, the ejected
minister 11. 133,111. 67
Williamso~, Peter, the printer, I.
122, 176, 282, 356, 11. 25, 173,
111. 250
Willow Brae The 11.314, 318
Willox, Johi, the Reformer, 11.286
Wilson, Alexander, Provost ofEdin-
339. 111. 94, 174* 327, 335, 346,
347. 361
' burgh, 1. 131, 2x8
OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH.
Wilson, Execution of Alexander, I.
129, 11. 231, 315
Wilson Charles, painter 11. 86
Wilson; Daniel, antiqdian, I. 10,
14, 21, 118, 126, 139, 142, 150,
178, 207, 213, 217, 221, 228, 230,
245, 262, 267, 268, 276,278, Nos,
317. 11. 6, 7, 9, 11, 21, 34, 58,
379, 111. 2. 32, 37, 46, 47,49, 51,
66, 72. 74. 86, 103. 113, 14 130,
131, 213, 214, 217, 221, 223, 226,
230, 232 234 a38 246 257 258
Wilson, david, th; pokcal' shamaker,
I. 230, 11. 25
Wilson; Professor George, 11. 107
Wilson, James (" Ckudero "), 11.
Wilson, Patrick, architect, Ill. 50
Wilson, Prof. John, I. 107, 339, 11.
1277 135, 140, 14Zi '42, 143, 193
223, 111. 68, 126; humother, 11. , 155, 156; anecdotes of the prcfessor,
I I. 200; his love of dogs, i6.
Wilson, Willlam Deputy-Clerk of
Session I. 46 '67 163
Wilsm, Fhhweh's;ervant inDarnley's
murder, I. 263, 111. 4, 6
Windlestrawlee farmstead, 111. 3 9
Wind Mill The 11. 346
Windmill $tree: 11. 333, 346
Windsor Street 'III. 158 159
Windy Coule, $he, 11. ;IS, 314
Wham, Colonel John, I. 62, 63,
WinLm The family of III. 338
Winter A d e n , The, 11: 214, 215
Winton, Earl of, II.34,35. 111. 57
Wishart, George, the martyr, I. w,
III.15a
Wishart George, minister of Leith
andBi;hop of Edinburgh, 11. 14,
111. 254
Wishart, Rev. William, Ill. 219,
101, 116, 135s 1% 2273 2342 2421
250, 2518 253, 2542 258, 327, 3748
250
155, 156, 194, 19s~ !w, 204 =I%
64 65
za
Wishprt of Pittarow, James, 111.
Wi:&raft, Belief in, I. 255,II. 22
111. I&. DW: Demons accused od , ,_.. ~~~ ~ 11. r~z, 223,330,111.339; witch&
burned 11. 181 Ill. 134,155,181
~odrow,' Rev. Gobert, I. 58, 60,
111, 123, 179, 196, 222, 247 287
11- 10, 17, 23, 133, 354, 111. 99:
191, 260
Women, Sumptuary laws against,
I. 198
Wood Lord 11. 174
Wood' Si Andrew, the "Scottish
Ne&n," 111. 199, 200, =I, 202,
204 206 214 267 298
Wood th;his;oriaA 111. 107 108
Wood' oseph, the &tor, 1. 3k
Wood: kr. Alexander, 11. 283,293,
303, 111.131
Woodbine Cottage, Trinity, 111.79
Woodhall 111. 2
Woodhouhe, IIf. 33
Woodhowlee, Lord, I. 156, 230,
11. I ~ , Z I O , 270, zga, 111.33
Woods theactor I. 347
Wood': Farm 11'115 117 182
Wood's Victo;! kall,'II1.'88
Wool trade, Edlnhurgh the Seat of
Wwlmet, near Dalkeith, 111. 134,
Wor ouse The 11. 325
Workhouse: Erekon of St. Cuththe,
11. 264
3 3 ~ 3 6 4 ,
bert's, 11,'135
Works at Neu
teenth century, 1 I I . z ~
World's End Close, I. 281, 282
World's End Pool, Dean village,
W
Ill A"
Wright, the acto;, I. 3i1
Wright, Thomas, 111. 47
Wrightsand masons The 11.264
Wright's-houses, Th;, II.'36, 111.
subposed denkation, 111.3; ; the
lo *32, 3+ *36, 3 9 . its
THE END.
Napiers of, 111.34; laird of, 111.
33 Wrightslands Lord I. 226 111.32~
Writer's Codt, I. :zo, 186: 229
Writers to the Signet, I. * z * ;
libraryofthe I. 123 *1z8, 1%:
186; Society'of the '1. 158 167
built on thesiteof G;orgeHbriot'G
workshop, 1. 175
Wyndham, the theatrical manager,
I. 8, 351, 11. 179, I l l . 95
W n%am, Mrs., the actress, I. 351,
111. 95
Y
Yardheads,The, Leith III.a27,z34
Y y s , Mr. and Mrs.,'I. 343, 344.
3 51
Yelverton Mrs. 111. 307
Yester, Jdmes d r d Hay of, I. 278,
11. 286
Yester, Lady, 1.278,11.286; church
of 11. 28 286 187 *n88, ago, 291,
zd9, IIL'r58 I he:sons 11. 286
York and AlbAy, Duke)of, 1. 79,
1 5 9 ~ 1 h 355, 371,1I.10~3771 111-
57
York Cardinal I. 71, 7z
York'Hotel 11: 230
York Lane '11. 188
York Plac;, 1.366 11. go, 92, 180,
182, I&, 185, 1i6, 187, 188, 190,
199, 328, 111. 158
Young, Charles tragedian, I. 348
Young Si Joh:, l!I. 4
Young: Dr., ph siclan, 91. 17, 18
Young's Land, 11. 159
Younger, the comedian, 11. 24
Yuwn, Andrew, Provost, 11. 278
z
Zoologid Gardens, The, 111.88
CASSELL & COMPANY LIMITED, BELLX SAWAGE WORKS, hNDON, kc ... 344 341, 111. 158; Foote's attack on Whitefield I. 342 Whiteford, Sir John, I.'106,~82, 11. 35 ...

Vol. 6  p. 392 (Rel. 0.7)


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