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Chapter
CHAPTER 1
My Ancestry
Contents
Sentiment of
Ancestry , Origin of the name of
Naesmyth , Naesmyth of Posso , Naesmyth of Netherton
, Battle of
Bothwell Brig , Estate confiscated , Elspeth Naesmyth , Michael Naesmyth
builder and architect , Fort at Inversnaid , Naesmyth family tomb ,
Former
masters and men , Michael Naesmyth's
son , New Edinburgh , Grandmother Naesmyth ,
Uncle Michael
Edinburgh
Castle, From the Vennel
MY ANCESTRY.
OUR history begins before
we are born. We represent the hereditary influences of our race,
and our ancestors virtually live in us. The sentiment of ancestry
seems to be inherent in human nature, especially in the more
civilised races. At all events, we cannot help having a due
regard for the history of our forefathers. Our curiosity is
stimulated by their immediate or indirect influence upon
ourselves. It may be a generous enthusiasm, or, as some might
say, a harmless vanity, to take pride in the honour of their
name. The gifts of nature, however, are more valuable than those
of fortune; and no line of ancestry, however honourable, can
absolve us from the duty of diligent application and
perseverance, or from the practice of the virtues of self-control
and self-help.
Sir Bernard Burke, in his
Peerage and Baronetage Ed 1879 Pp 885-6, gives a faithful
account of the ancestors from whom I am lineally descended.
"The family of Naesymth, he says, "is one of remote
antiquity in Tweeddale, and has possessed lands there since the
13th century." They fought in the wars of Bruce and Baliol,
which ended in the independence of Scotland.
The following is the
family legend of the origin of the name of Naesymth:--
In the troublous times
which prevailed in Scotland before the union of the Crowns, the
feuds between the King and the Barons were almost constant. In
the reign of James III. the House of Douglas was the most
prominent and ambitious. The Earl not only resisted his liege
lord, but entered into a combination with the King of England,
from whom he received a pension . He was declared a rebel, and
his estates were confiscated. He determined to resist the royal
power, and crossed the Border with his followers. He was met by
the Earl of Angus, the Maxwells, the Johnstons, and the Scotts.
In one of the engagements which ensued the Douglases appeared to
have gained the day, when an ancestor of the Naesmyths, who
fought under the royal standard, took refuge in the smithy of a
neighbouring village. The smith offered him protection, disguised
him as a hammerman, with a leather apron in front, and asked him
to lend a hand at his work.
While thus engaged a
party of the Douglas partisans entered the smithy. They looked
with suspicion on the disguised hammerman, who, in his agitation,
struck a false blow with the sledge hammer, which broke the shaft
in two. Upon this, one of the pursuers rushed at him, calling
out, "Ye're nae smyth!" The stalwart hammerman
turned upon his assailant, and, wrenching a dagger from him,
speedily overpowered him. The smith himself, armed with a big
hammer, effectually aided in overpowering and driving out the
Douglas men. A party of the royal forces made their appearance,
when Naesmyth rallied them, led them against the rebels, and
converted what had been a temporary defeat into a victory. A
grant of lands was bestowed upon him for his service. His
armorial bearings consisted of a hand dexter with a dagger,
between two broken hammer-shafts, and there they remain to this
day. The motto was, Non arte sect marte,"Not by art
but by war?' In my time I have reversed the motto (Non marte
sed arte); and instead of the broken hammer-shafts, I have
adopted, not as my "arms" but as a device, the most
potent form of mechanical art -- the Steam Hammer.
Origin of
the Name. By James Nasmyth.
Sir Michael Naesmyth,
Chamberlain of the Archbishop of St. Andrews, obtained the lands
of Posso and Glenarth in 1544, by right of his wife, Elizabeth,
daughter and heiress of John Baird of Posso. The Bairds have ever
been a loyal and gallant family. Sir Gilbert, father of John
Baird, fell at Flodden in 1513, in defence of his king.
The royal eyrie of Posso
Crag is on the family estate; and the Lure worn by Queen Mary,
and presented by her son James VI. to James Naesmyth, the Royal
Falconer, is still preserved as a family heirloom.
During the intestine
troubles in Scotland, in the reign of Mary, Sir Michael Naesmyth
espoused the cause of the unfortunate Queen. He fought under her
banner at Langside in 1568. He was banished, and his estates were
seized by the Regent Moray. But after the restoration of peace,
the Naesmyths regained their property. Sir Michael died at an
advanced age.
He had many sons. The
eldest, James, married Joana, daughter of William Veitch or Le
Veitch of Dawick. By this marriage the lands of Dawick came into
the family. He predeceased his father, and was succeeded by his
son James, the Royal Falconer above referred to. Sir Michael's
second son, John, was chief chirurgeon to James VI. of Scotland,
afterwards James I. of England, and to Henry, Prince of Wales. He
died in London in 1613, and in his testament he leaves "his
herb to his young master, the Prince's grace." Charles I.,
in his instructions to the President of the Court of Session,
enjoins "that you take special notice of the children of
John Naesmyth, so often recommended by our late dear father and
us." Two of Sir Michael's other sons were killed at
Edinburgh in 1588, in a deadly feud between the Scotts and the
Naesmyths. In those days a sort of Corsican vendetta was
carried on between families from one generation to another.
Sir Michael Naesmyth,
son of the Royal Falconer, succeeded to the property. His eldest
son James was appointed to serve in Claverhouse's troop of horse
in 1684. Among the other notable members of the family was James
Naesmyth, a very clever lawyer. He was supposed to be so deep
that he was generally known as the "Deil o' Dawyk" His
eldest son was long a member of Parliament for the county of
Peebles; he was, besides, a famous botanist, having studied under
Linnaeus, Among the inter-marriages of the family were those with
the Bruces of Lethen, the Stewarts of Traquhair, the Murrays of
Stanhope, the Pringles of Clifton, the Murrays of Philiphaugh,
the Keiths (of the Earl Marischal's family), the Andersons of St.
Germains, the Marjoribanks of Lees, and others.
In the fourteenth
century a branch of the Naesmyths of Posso settled at Netherton,
near Hamilton. They bought an estate and built a residence. The
lands adjoined part of the Duke of Hamilton's estate, and the
house was not far from the palace. There the Naesmyths remained
until the reign of Charles II. The King, or his advisers,
determined to introduce Episcopacy, or, as some thought, Roman
Catholicism, into the country, and to enforce it at the point of
the sword.
The Naesmyths had
always been loyal until now. But to be cleft by sword and pricked
by spear into a religion which they disbelieved, was utterly
hateful to the Netherton Naesmyths. Being Presbyterians, they
held to their own faith. They were prevented from using their
churches, [note:In the reign of James II. of England and
James VII. of Scotland a law was enacted, "that whoever
should preach in a conventicle under a roof, or should attend,
either as a preacher or as a hearer, a conventicle in the open
air, should be punished with death and confiscation of
property." ]
and they accordingly
met on the moors, or in unfrequented places for worship. The
dissenting Presbyterians assumed the name of Covenanters.
Hamilton was almost the centre of the movement. The Covenanters
met, and the King's forces were ordered to disperse them. Hence
the internecine war that followed. There were Naesmyths on both
sides -- Naesmyths for the King, and Naesmyths for the Covenant.
In an early engagement
at Drumclog, the Covenanters were victorious. They beat back
Claverhouse and his dragoons. A general rising took place in the
West Country. About 6000 men assembled at Hamilton, mostly raw
and undisciplined countrymen. The King's forces assembled to meet
them, -- 10,000 well-disciplined troops, with a complete train of
field artillery. What chance had the Covenanters against such a
force? Nevertheless, they met at Bothwell Bridge, a few miles
west of Hamilton.
It is unnecessary to
describe the action.[note:See the account of a Covenanting
Officer in the Appendix to the Scots Worthies. See also
Sir Waiter Scott's Old Mortality, where the battle of
Bothwell Brig is described. ]
The Covenanters,
notwithstanding their inferior force, resisted the cannonade and
musketry of the enemy with great courage. They defended the
bridge until their ammunition failed. When the English Guards and
the artillery crossed the bridge, the battle was lost. The
Covenanters gave way, and fled in all directions; Claverhouse,
burning with revenge for his defeat at Drumclog, made a terrible
slaughter of the unresisting fugitives. One of my ancestors
brought from the battlefield the remnant of the standard; a
formidable musquet -- "Gun Bothwell" we afterwards
called it; an Andrea Ferrara; and a powder-horn. I still preserve
these remnants of the civil war.
My ancestor was
condemned to death in his absence, and his property at Netherton
was confiscated. What became of him during the remainder of
Charles II.'s reign, and the reign of that still greater
tormentor, James II., I do not know. He was probably, like many
others, wandering about from place to place, hiding "in
wildernesses or caves, destitute, afflicted, and tormented."
The arrival of William III. restored religious liberty to the
country, and Scotland was again left in comparative peace.
My ancestor took refuge
in Edinburgh, but he never recovered his property at Netherton.
The Duke of Hamilton, one of the trimmers of the time, had long
coveted the possession of the lands, as Ahab had coveted Naboth's
vineyard. He took advantage of the conscription of the men
engaged in the Bothwell Brig conflict, and had the lands
forfeited in his favour. I remember my father telling me that, on
one occasion when he visited the Duke of Hamilton in reference to
some improvement of the grounds adjoining the palace, he pointed
out to the Duke the ruined remains of the old residence of the
Naesmyths. As the first French Revolution was then in full
progress, when ideas of society and property seemed to have lost
their bearings, the Duke good-humouredly observed, "Well,
well, Naesmyth, there's no saying but what, some of these days,
your ancestors' lands may come into your possession again!"
Before I quit the
persecutions of "the good old times," I must refer to
the burning of witches. One of my ancient kinswomen, Elspeth
Naesmyth, who lived at Hamilton, was denounced as a witch. The
chief evidence brought against her was that she kept four black
cats, and read her Bible with two pairs of spectacles! a practice
which shows that she possessed the spirit of an experimental
philosopher.
In doing this she adopted
a mode of supplementing the power of spectacles in restoring the
receding power of the eyes. She was in all respects
scientifically correct. She increased the magnifying power of the
glasses; a practice which is preferable to using single glasses
of the same power, and which I myself often follow.
Notwithstanding this improved method of reading her Bible, and
her four black cats, she was condemned to be burned alive! She
was about the last victim in Scotland to the disgraceful
superstition of witchcraft.
The Naesmyths of
Netherton having lost their ancestral property, had to begin the
world again. They had to begin at the beginning. But they had
plenty of pluck and energy. I go back to my
great-great-grandfather, Michael Naesmyth, who was born in 1652.
He occupied a house in the Grassmarket, Edinburgh, which was
afterwards rebuilt, in 1696. His business was that of a builder
and architect. His chief employment was in designing and erecting
new mansions, principally for the landed gentry and nobility.
Their old castellated houses or towers were found too dark and
dreary for modern uses. The drawbridges were taken down, and the
moats were filled up. Sometimes they built the new mansions as an
addition to the old. But oftener they left the old castles to go
to ruin; or, what was worse, they made use of the stone and other
materials of the old romantic buildings for the construction of
their new residences.
Michael Naesmyth
acquired a high reputation for the substantiality of his work.
His masonry was excellent, as well as his woodwork. The greater
part of the latter was executed in his own workshops at the back
of his house in the Grassmarket. His large yard was situated
between the back of the house and the high wall that bounded the
Greyfriars Churchyard,to the east of the flight of steps which
forms the main approach to George Heriot's Hospital.
Michael
Naesmyth's House, Grassmarket.The lower building at the right
hand corner of the engraving, with the three projecting gable
ends
The last work that
Michael Naesmyth was engaged in cost him his life. He had
contracted with the Government to build a fort at Inversnaid, at
the northern end of Loch Lomond. It was intended to guard the
Lowlands, and keep Rob Roy and his caterans within the Highland
Border. A promise was given by the Government that during the
progress of the work a suitable force of soldiers should be
quartered close at hand to protect the builder and his workmen.
Inversnaid
Fort. After a drawing by Alexander Nasmyth
Notwithstanding many whispered warnings as
to the danger of undertaking such a hazardous work, Michael
Naesmyth and his men encamped upon the spot, though without the
protection of the Government force. Having erected a temporary
residence for their accommodation, he proceeded with the building
of the fort. The work was well advanced by the end of 1703,
although the Government had treated all Naesmyth's appeals for
protection with evasion or contempt.
Winter set in with its
usual force in those northern regions. One dark and snowy night,
when Michael and his men had retired to rest, a loud knocking was
heard at the door. "Who's there?" asked Michael. A man
outside replied, "A benighted traveller overt aken by the
storm" He proceeded to implore help, and begged for God's
sake that he might have shelter for the night. Naesmyth, in the
full belief that the traveller's tale was true, unbolted and
unbarred the door, when in rushed Rob Roy and his desperate gang.
The men, with the dirks of the Macgregors at their throats,
begged hard for their lives. This was granted on condition that
they should instantly depart, and take an oath that they should
never venture within the Highland border again.
Michael Naesmyth and his
men had no alternative but to submit, and they at once left the
bothy with such scanty clothing as the Macgregors would allow
them to carry away. They were marched under an armed escort
through the snowstorm to the Highland border, and were there left
with the murderous threat that, if they ever returned to the
fort, they would meet with certain death.
Another attempt was made
to build the fort at Inversnaid. But Rob Roy again surprised the
small party of soldiers who were in charge. They were disarmed
and sent about their business. Finally, the fort was rebuilt, and
placed under the command of Captain (afterwards General) Wolfe.
When peace fell upon the Highlands and Rob Roy's country became
the scene of picnics, the fort was abandoned and allowed to go to
ruin.
Poor Michael never
recovered from the cold which he caught during his forced retreat
from Inversnaid. The effects of this, together with the loss and
distress of mind which he experienced from the Government's
refusal to pay for his work -- notwithstanding their promise to
protect him and his workmen from the Highland freebooters -- so
preyed upon his mind that he was never again able to devote
himself to business. One evening, whilst sitting at his fireside
with his grandchild on his knee, a death-like faintness came over
him; he set the child down carefully by the side of his chair,
and then fell forward dead on his hearthstone.
Thus ended the life of
Michael Naesmyth in 1705, at the age of fifty-three. He was
buried by the side of his ancestors in the old family tomb in the
Greyfriars Churchyard.
The Naesmyth
Tomb in Greyfriars Churchyard
This old tomb, dated 1614, though much
defaced, is one of the most remarkable of the many which surround
the walls of that ancient and memorable burying-place.
Greyfriars Churchyard is one of the most
interesting places in Edinburgh. The National Covenant was signed
there by the Protestant nobles and gentry of Scotland in 1638.
The prisoners taken at the battle of Bothwell Brig were shut up
there in 1679, and, after enduring great privations, a portion of
the survivors were sent off to Barbadoes. When I first saw the
tombstone, an ash tree was growing out of the top of the main
body of it, though that has since been removed. In growing, the
roots had pushed out the centre stone, which has not been
replaced. The tablet over it contains the arms of the family, the
broken hammer-shafts, and the motto "Non arte sed marte."
There are the remains of a very impressive figure, apparently
rising from her cerements. The body and extremities remain, but
the head has been broken away. There is also a remarkable motto
on the tablet above the tombstone -- "Ars mihi vim contra
Fortunce; which I take to be, "Art is my strength in
contending against Fortune," -- a motto which is appropriate
to my ancestors as well as to myself.
The business was
afterwards carried on by Michael's son, my great-grandfather. He
was twenty-seven years old at the time of his father's death, and
lived to the age of seventy-three. He was a man of much ability
and of large experience.
One of his great
advantages in carrying on his business was the support of a staff
of able and trustworthy foremen and workmen. The times were very
different then from what they are now. Masters and men lived
together in mutual harmony. There was a kind of loyal family
attachment among them, which extended through many generations.
Workmen had neither the desire nor the means to shift about from
place to place. On the contrary, they settled down with their
wives and families in houses of their own, close to the workshops
of their employers. Work was found for them in the dull seasons
when trade was slack, and in summer they sometimes removed to
jobs at a distance from headquarters. Much of this feeling of
attachment and loyalty between workmen and their employers has
now expired. Men rapidly remove from place to place. Character is
of little consequence. The mutual feeling of goodwill and zealous
attention to work seems to have passed away.
My grandfather,
Michael Naesmyth, succeeded to the business in 1751. He more than
maintained the reputation of his predecessors. The collection of
first-class works on architecture which he possessed, such as the
folio editions of Vitruvius and Palladio, which were at that time
both rare and dear, showed the regard he had for impressing into
his designs the best standards of taste. The buildings he
designed and erected for the Scotch nobility and gentry were well
arranged, carefully executed, and thoroughly substantial. He was
also a large builder in Edinburgh. Amongst the houses he erected
in the Old Town were the principal number of those in George
Square. In one of these, No. 25, Sir Walter Scott spent his
boyhood and youth. They still exist, and exhibit the care which
he took in the elegance and substantiality of his works.
I remember my father
pointing out to me the extreme care and attention with which he
finished his buildings. He inserted small fragments of basalt
into the mortar of the external joints of the stones, at close
and regular distances, in order to protect the mortar from the
adverse action of the weather. And to this day they give proof of
their efficiency. The basalt protects the joints, and at the same
time gives a neat and pleasing effect to what would otherwise
have been merely the monotonous line of mason-work.
A great change was about
to take place in the residences of the principal people of
Edinburgh. The cry was for more light and more air. The extension
of the city to the south and west was not sufficient. There was a
great plateau of ground on the north side of the city, beyond the
North Loch. But it was very difficult to reach; being alike steep
on both sides of the Loch. At length, in 1767, an Act was
obtained to extend the royalty of the city over the northern
fields, and powers were obtained to erect a bridge to connect
them with the Old Town.
The magistrates had the
greatest difficulty in inducing the inhabitants to build
dwellings on the northern side of the city. A premium was offered
to the person who should build the first house; and £20 was
awarded to Mr. John Young on account of a mansion erected by him
close to George Street. Exemption from burghal taxes was also
granted to a gentleman who built the first house in Princes
Street. My grandfather built the first house in the south-west
corner of St. Andrew Square, for the occupation of David Hume the
historian, as well as the two most important houses in the centre
of the north side of the same square. One of these last was
occupied by the venerable Dr. Hamilton, a very conspicuous
character in Edinburgh. He continued to wear the cocked hat, the
powdered pigtail, tights, and large shoe buckles, for about sixty
years after this costume had become obsolete. All these houses
are still in perfect condition, after resisting the ordinary tear
and wear of upwards of a hundred and ten northern winters. The
opposition to building houses across the North Loch soon ceased;
and the New Town arose, growing from day to day, until Edinburgh
became one of the most handsome and picturesque cities in Europe.
There is one other thing
that I must again refer to the highly-finished character of my
grandfather's work. Nothing merely moderate would do. The work
must be of the very best. He took special pride in the sound
quality of the woodwork and its careful workmanship. He chose the
best Dantzic timber because of its being of purer grain and freer
from knots than other wood. In those days the lower part of the
walls of the apartments were wainscoted -- that is, covered by
timber framed in large panels. They were from three to four feet
wide, and from six to eight feet high. To fit these in properly
required the most careful joiner-work.
It was always a holiday
treat to my father, when a boy, to be permitted to go down to
Leith to see the ships discharge their cargoes of timber. My
grandfather had a Wood-yard at Leith, where the timber selected
by him was piled up to he seasoned and shrunk, before being
worked into its appropriate uses. He was particularly careful in
his selection of boards or stripes for floors, which must be
perfectly level, so as to avoid the destruction of the carpets
placed over them. The hanging of his doors was a matter that he
took great pride in -- so as to prevent any uneasy action in
opening or closing. His own chamber doors were so well hung that
they were capable of being opened and closed by the slight puff
of a hand-bellows.
The excellence of my
grandfather's workmanship was a thing that my own father always
impressed upon me when a boy. It stimulated in me the desire to
aim at excellence in everything that I undertook; and in all
practical matters to arrive at the highest degree of good
workmanship. I believe that these early lessons had a great
influence upon my future career.
I have little to record
of my grandmother. From all accounts she was everything that a
wife and mother should be. My father often referred to her as an
example of the affection and love of a wife to her husband, and
of a mother to her children. The only relic I possess of her
handiwork is a sampler, dated 1743, the needlework of which is so
delicate and neat, that to me it seems to excel everything of the
kind that I have seen.
I am fain to think that
her delicate manipulation in some respects descended to her
grandchildren, as all of them have been more or less
distinguished for the delicate use of their fingers -- which has
so much to do with the effective transmission of the artistic
faculty into visible forms. The power of transmitting to paper or
canvas the artistic conceptions of the brain through the fingers,
and out at the end of the needle, the pencil, the pen, the brush,
or even the modelling tool or chisel, is that which, in practical
fact, constitutes the true artist.
This may appear a
digression; though I cannot look at my grandmother's sampler
without thinking that she had much to do with originating the
Naesmyth love of the Fine Arts, and their hereditary adroitness
in the practice of landscape and portrait painting, and other
branches of the profession.
My grandfather died in
1803, at the age of eighty-four, and was buried by his father's
side in the Naesmyth ancestral tomb in Greyfriars Churchyard. His
wife, Mary Anderson, who died before him, was buried in the same
place.
Michael Naesmyth left
two sons -- Michael and Alexander. The eldest was born in 1754.
It was intended that he should have succeeded to the business;
and, indeed, as soon as he reached manhood he was his father's
right-hand man. He was a skilful workman, especially in the finer
parts of joiner-work. He was also an excellent accountant and
bookkeeper. But having acquired a taste for reading books about
voyages and travels, of which his father's library was well
supplied, his mind became disturbed, and he determined to see
something of the world. He was encouraged by one of his old
companions, who had been to sea, and realised some substantial
results by his voyages to foreign parts. Accordingly Michael,
notwithstanding the earnest remonstrances of his father,
accompanied his friend on the next occasion when he went to sea.
After several voyages to
the West Indies and other parts of the world, which both
gratified and stimulated his natural taste for adventures, and
also proved financially successful, his trading ventures at last
met with a sad reverse, and he resolved to abandon commerce, and
enter the service of the Royal Navy. He was made purser, and in
this position he entered upon a new series of adventures. He was
present at many naval engagements. But he lost neither life nor
limb. At last he was pensioned, and became a resident at
Greenwich Hospital. He furnished his apartments with all manner
of curiosities, such as his roving naval life had enabled him to
collect. His original skill as a worker in wood came to life
again. The taste of the workman and the handiness of the seaman
enabled him to furnish his rooms at the Hospital in a most quaint
and amusing manner.
My father had a most
affectionate regard for Michael, and usually spent some days with
him when he had occasion to visit London. One bright summer day
they went to have a stroll together on Blackheath; and while my
uncle was enjoying a nap on a grassy knoll, my father made a
sketch of him, which I still preserve. Being of a most cheerful
disposition, and having a great knack of detailing the incidents
of his adventurous life, he became a great favourite with the
resident officers of the Hospital; and was always regarded by
them as real good company. He ended his days there in peace and
comfort, in 1819, at the age of sixty-four.
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