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Dunkeld
After the year 1689
The
little city, though thus reduced to ashes, rose again and played
its part in various recorded historical events. The Earl of Mar,
after raising the Standard for King James in 1715 at Braemar,
also formed four regiments of Athollmen at Dunkeld, and many suffered
for the support they gave to the Stewart cause in '15. General
Wade helped to suppress this Rising, but he is remembered chiefly
by the military roads he constructed in the Highlands. One of
his roads linked up Fort George with Dunkeld, and there are yet
many traces of his work in the district. His roads connected various
towns in the Highlands with Perth and Stirling, and Dunkeld was
one of those thus favoured. The great North Road passed through
it on to Inverness, although the first three miles of the present
road is not the one constructed by him about 1739. Wades
road began opposite Inver at the West Ferry, running along by
the river side until it reached the higher ground two miles from
Dowally. From that point his road is still in use hut altered
and improved, for it was so rough that one of the Dukes of Atholl
is said to have taken twelve hours to drive from Dunkeld to Blair
Atholl. The General did not build his projected bridge over the
Tay at Dunkeld, showing his resentment at an imagined affront
he received from the Duke by building the bridge at Aberfeldy
instead. Other bridges of his, though of less importance, are
in the neighbourhood. One at Ballinloan, in Strathbraan, forms
a picturesque feature in the landscape; another at Dalguise, near
the Tay, is in ruins.
The
45 brought trouble and tribulation to Dunkeld. In September,
1745, the "Bonnie Prince Charlie " of Jacobite ballads
was entertained in Dunkeld House by the Marquis of Tullibardine,
second son of the first Duke of Atholl. Another son, Lord George
Murray, of whom an old ballad sings
"Hes
the flowr o Glenisla
An
the darlin o Dunkel,"
recruited
actively for the Prince, becoming the Lieut.-General of the Jacobite
Forces. The Chevalier was proclaimed King at the Market Cross,
and Prince Charles also proclaimed as Regent for his father by
Lord Nairne and Cameron of Lochiel, who had come to Dunkeld some
days before. This Cross stood where the Fountain now stands, but
was removed about 1800. It was a round stone pillar on which were
four balls supporting a pyramidal top. It was 20 feet high and
to it were attached four iron jougs, the terror of offenders.
Many answered to the call for recruits, the personal charm of
the young Chevalier possibly contributing to swell the number,
one of whom was the famous fiddler, Niel Gow, then a lad of eighteen.
He had played with others at the entertainment given to the Prince,
but his enthusiasm soon evaporated. He marched with the army as
far as Stirling, whence he returned to Dunkeld. There is a curious
story of another recruit whose name is recorded on an old sundial
in the town. The "Scots Magazine" of October, 1746,
relates the incident, particulars being copied from a York paper
which gave a list of rebels tried at York, five of whom were acquitted,
amongst them John Ballantine from Dunkeld. An extract is as follows:
"John Ballantine acted as piper in Captain James Stewarts
Company in Lord George Murray s regiment. Several witnesses
deponed `that he was forced into the service by a party of the
rebels, who took him by violence out of his bed, threatened to
stab him if he did not go with them, and did not allow him time
even to put on his cloathes; and that afterwards they placed a
guard over him to prevent his making his escape. When the
jury returned their verdict Not Guilty ' the poor fellow
was in such a transport of joy that he threw his bonnet up to
the very roof of the Court and cried out, `My Lords and Gentlemen,
I thank you. Not Guilty! Not Guilty! Not Guilty! Pray God, bless
King George for ever. Ill serve him all the days of my life,
and immediately ran out into the Castleyard, with his irons on,
took up a handful of channel water and drank his Majestys
health."
Clearly
Ballantine had not been an ardent Jacobite. With regard to the
irons mentioned, a descendant of his used to tell how she remembered,
as a child, seeing the marks left by them, so roughly had he been
used.
Prince
Charles passed again through Dunkeld on his retreat to Culloden,
but with vastly different feelings and with broken hopes. Lord
George Murray afterwards despatched a party to Dunkeld, where
they remained till the approach of the Hessians, the Duke of Cumberlands
troops, from Perth. They then retired northward, and several skirmishes
took place between them and the Hessians, but on the whole the
latter showed no great wish to leave Dunkeld nor to meet the Athollmen.
They treated the inhabitants very harshly, using the town as an
advanced post, and, as the sympathies of the people were mostly
Jacobite, they did not accord "Butcher" Cumberlands
soldiers a very hearty welcome. It was probably to this occupation
of the victors troops that Culloden House, at present the
Royal School, owed its name. One man at least in the Duke of Cumberlands
army had an eye for other things than warfare. An English Volunteer
Officer published a small book in 1747, conveying his impressions
and observations as he marched through Perthshire. At first he
"looked with dread upon the mountains, but dread soon passed
into admiration." After a short stay in Perth, he was sent
with two detachments, of 500 foot each, to Dunkeld. They left
early on the 8th of February (1746), reaching Dunkeld at 4 oclock.
It was snowing hard when they started out but, he remarks, "they
had a most agreeable .variety" on the march, the hilly character
of the country delighting him. The fir-clad peaks attracted his
eye, and his comment thereon is that in a Roman Catholic country
"no place would be more acceptable for the fixing of a crucifix
to worship." He also describes the streams and waterfalls
near Dunkeld and confesses that "with all these pleasing
varieties we are able to endure great fatigue and hunger."
Others,
as the country settled, found the scenery pleasing, and Dunkeld
had its share of notable visitors, amongst whom might be mentioned
Bums, Pennant, Dr. Garnett, Harriet Martineau, Wordsworth, and
the poet Gray.
In
1809 the Bridge across the Tay was finished and this further facilitated
travel, a new road being constructed northwards from the Bridge,
joining Wades road near Dowally.
A
yearly Highland Gathering, claiming to be the first in Scotland,
was inaugurated in 1822 for the express purpose of maintaining
the garb, music and sports of the Highlands, and was continued
until 1872. The Games now held annually in Birnam may be said
to be a continuation of those formerly held in Dunkeld.
A
visit which created great excitement was that of Queen Victoria
and the Prince Consort in 1842. It was regarded as an event of
supreme importance, being the first visit paid by a Hanoverian
sovereign to a Jacobite stronghold and also the first visit of
a reigning monarch since Queen Mary of Scots.
A
letter written by the shoemaker-poet, James Stewart, renders a
graphic description in homely language of the excitement and preparations
in Dunkeld. He writes thus to a friend - "The Queen! The
Queen! Nothing but the Queen .... I am to be sworn in as a rodman
to clear the highway for the Queens approach to the "City
of the Hills," and I am to get half-a-crown for looking at
Her Majesty and allowing my body to be squeezed and my toes crushed.
All are rodmen here from the Bailie to the Bard. The Duchess of
Atholl is making great preparations. She is going to give Her
Majesty "a chack o meat" on the green before the
door. Correctly speaking there is a tent fitting up on the site
of the old house of Dunkeld north of the Cathedral. Lord Glen-lyon
is to have in attendance 150 Highlanders and other Highland lairds
are bringing tails of the bipeds ...... "
A
glorious monarchy man was proposing to have an arch stretched
between Birnam and Newtylea distance of one mile. His project
was laughed at.
"Yere
wrang," says he, "we could brawly streek a string across
frae the tap o the hills and hae broom cowes danglin
on it." "An amendment," said another, "what
wad you think instead o haein broom cowes waffin
in the wind, to hae sklates on yer string, Tam?" (the said
Tam being lessee of the slate quarry of Newtyle).
The
enthusiasm was certainly great and a very full account is narrated
in the "Memorial of the Royal Progress in Scotland,"
written by Sir Thomas Dick Lauder in 1847. There were triumphal
arches all the way from Perth to Dunkeld. At Birnam Pass the Queen
and Prince Albert had their first glimpse of Highland scenery,
both showing marked appreciation. The Queen in a letter to her
uncle, King Leopold, wrote - "The situation of Dunkeld down
in a valley surrounded by wooded hills, is very, very pretty."
Bonfires
and flags everywhere testified to the loyalty of all. The morning
was dull, but when the Royal party reached Dunkeld Bridge, the
sun shone gloriously. A Gothic arch at the end of the bridge was
a subject of general admiration; it was composed of heath and
juniper (Murray badge) with a floral crown, and adorned besides
with stuffed specimens of blackcock and eagle. Above were two
deer with the words, "Welcome to Atholl." A battery
was fired from Stanley Hill. A large body of Atholl Highlanders
was in evidence after lunch, the pipers played and local High-landers
showed their agility and skill in reels and sword dances. In the
Queens words, "We lunched at Dunkeld, the beginning
of the Highlands, in a tentall the Highlanders in their
fine dress being encamped there with their old swords and
shields, looking very romantic, chiefly Lord Glenlyons men."
At
lunch Niel Gows famous glass was in requisition, filled
with Atholl brose. Thousands poured into the town to welcome their
Queen. There is a story of a schoolboy, afterwards a prominent
Magistrate in his native town, who ran all the way from Blairgowrie,
playing truant for the day; there is another of a Dunkeld herd
laddie who forgot his charge in the gratification of his curiosity,
and there is still another of an old woman who pressed into the
throng determined to speak to Her Majesty, " I hae
a basketfu o bonnie aipples and I want her tae tak
them an gie them tae her bairns."
Queen
Victoria and various members of her family have visited Dunkeld
on several occasions; so have other Royalties, including the Empress
Eugenie and her son.
The
Disruption of the Church of Scotland also left its mark. The Rev.
John Mackenzie, minister of the Cathedral, seceded in 1843. Through
Lady Effinghams liberality a building was erected for worshippers,
and on the same site, gifted by Pox Maule Ramsay, afterwards Earl
of Dalhousie, another church, more commodious, was built in 1874,
Dr. Duff, the great Indian missionary, opening it formally in
the following year. The present minister of the congregation is
the Rev. J. W. Hamilton, M.A., whose pastorate has extended over
many years. The Perth to Dunkeld railway was opened in 1866, and
in 1863 extended towards Inverness.
Dunkeld
was again occupied by the military in 1868, a detachment of the
Black Watch being stationed there during the disturbances known
as the Toll Riots. It is on record, however, that the soldiers
declared they had never resided in a more peaceful community.
So pleasant was their visit that they left it with regret. Since
then there have been several military occupations, mainly Volunteer
Camps. The cavalery regiments of the Scottish Horse, first raised
by the Marquis of Tullibardine (afterwards 8th Duke of Atholl)
for service in the Boer War, encamped at Inver during the summers
and were billeted in winter quarters in Dunkeld and Birnam from
1914-1917. They rendered valiant service in the Great War, and
the Marquis received the appointment of Brigadier-General. Dunkeld
still remains the headquarters of this regiment.
That
Dunkeld and district did their duty nobly in the war is evinced
by the record of losses graved on the Cairn Memorial at the Cross
Roads, on the various Rolls of Honour, and in the Royal School
Memorial.
By
public subscription, a Fountain was erected at the Cross in 1866
to the memory of the 6th Duke of Atholl, who died in 1864. It
was opened by his widow, Her Grace the Duchess Dowager, and is
a handsome and beautiful piece of work.
After
the railway opened many more illustrious visitors arrived, but
the list is too long to be fully enumerated.
Several
whose coming or sojourn in the district may be reckoned as events
of importance may be mentioned.
Sir
John Everett Millais, PRA., the well-known artist, was in residence
for some time in Eastwood, St. Marys Tower, and other houses.
Many of his most famous pictures portray the beauty spots around.
Of such are "The Sound of Many Waters," " Ower
the hills an far awa," "Winter Fuel," and
others too numerous to mention.
In
1875 the Premier of Canada, the Hon. Alexander Mackenzie, visited
Dunkeld, and was greeted with enthusiasm and honour. He was born
in Logierait, but, the family removing to Dunkeld, many of his
early years were spent there. That he and other members of his
family did not forget the home of youth was shown for a long period
by a yearly gift of apples to the town. Dunkeld also boasts connection
with another Canadian statesman. This was the Hon. J. A. Stewart,
Minister of Railways and Canals (in the Government of the Right
Hon. Arthur Meighen) in the Canadian Parliament of 1921. He was
born and died in Canada, but his father, Robert Stewart, was a
native of Dunkeld, who emigrated in early life, revisiting his
native town and relatives on several occasions.
Many
statesmen have visited Dunkeld and Birnam. The Duke of Rutland,
long Postmaster-General, when Lord John Manners, had a residence
in Birnam, where he received many distinguished guests, such as
Lord Salisbury. Butterstone House, in 1897, was the last place
in Scotland honoured by a lengthy visit from the veteran statesman,
the Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone.
Amongst
later statesmen are Mr Lloyd George and Mr Baldwin, the latter
of whom has been the guest on several occasions of the Duke and
Duchess of Atholl at Eastwood House, Dunkeld. The Duchess of Atholl,
who is often in residence at Eastwood, gained the distinction
in 1924 of being the first woman in Scotland to become a Member
of Parliament, she being returned then for West Perthshire and
Kinross. Later on she gained another distinction on becoming the
first woman in Britain to attain Cabinet rank.
The
Restoration and Preservation of the Cathedral may also be regarded
as historic and national events.
Dunkeld
an Ancient City
Elizabeth Stewart
Dunkeld, 1926
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to Dunkeld History
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