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Dumbarton,
Scotland

Dumbarton
is situated on the river Leven, near its confluence with the Clyde.
Although thus a place of great antiquity, the history of the town
practically centres in that of the successive fortresses on the
Rock of Dumbarton, a twin-peaked mount, 240 ft. high and a mile
in circumference at the base. The fortress was often besieged
and sometimes taken, the Picts seizing it in 736 and the Northmen
in 870, but the most effectual surprise of all was that accomplished,
in the interests of the young King James VI., by Thomas crawford
of Jordanhill on March 31, 1571. The castle was held by Queen
Marys adherents, and as it gave them free communication with France,
its capture was deemed essential. Crawford decided to climb the
highest point, concluding that, owing to its imagined security,
it would be carelessly guarded.
Favored
with a dark and foggy night the party of 150 men and a guide reached
the first ledge of rock undiscovered. In scaling the second precipice
one of the men was seized with an epileptic fit on the ladder.
Crawford bound him to the ladder and then turned it over and was
thus enabled to ascend to the summit. At this moment the alarm
was given, but the sentinel and the sleepy soldiers were slain
and the cannon turned on the garrison. Further resistance being
useless, the castle was surrendered.
During
the governorship of Sir John Menteith, William Wallace was in
1305 imprisoned within its walls before he was removed to London.
The higher of the two peaks is known as Wallaces seat, a tower,
perhaps the one in which he was incarcerated, being named after
him. On the portcullis gateway may still be seen rudely carved
heads of Wallace and his betrayer, the latter with his finger
in his mouth. Queen Mary, when a child, resided in the castle
for a short time. It is an ugly barrack-like structure, defended
by a few obsolete guns, although by the Union Treaty it is one
of the four fortresses that must be maintained. The rock itself
is basalt, with a tendency to columnar formation, and some parts
of it have a magnetic quality.
The town arms
are the elephant and castle. Dumbarton was of old the capital
of the earldom of Lennox, but was given up by Earl Maldwyn to
Alexander II., by whom it was made a royal burgh in 1221 and declared
to be free from all imposts and burgh taxes. Later sovereigns
gave it other privileges, and the whole were finally confirmed
by a charter of James VI. It had the right to levy customs and
dues on all vessels on the Clyde between Loch Long and the Kelvin.
Offers dues on foreign ships entering the Clyde were also exacted.
The first steam navigation. company was established in Dumbarton
in 1815, when the Duke of Wellington (built in the town) plied
between Dumbarton and Glasgow. But it was not till 1844, consequent
on the use of iron for vessels, that shipbuilding became the leading
industry, though that has now passed.
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To Scottish Placename Anecdotes
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