General Nisbet Balfour of Dunbog, 1744-1823
Nisbet
Balfour was born on 20 January (OS) 1744, at Dunbog in Fife
(then sometimes spelled 'Denboig'), the third son of Henry Balfour
of Dunbog (1708-64) and his wife Katherine Porterfield (1721-before
1791). Nisbet's grandfather, Major Henry Balfour of Dunbog,
formerly of the Scots Greys, was the third son of John, third
Lord Balfour of Burleigh. Major Balfour had represented Fife
in the old Scots Parliament, opposed the Union of Parliaments,
and later supported the Jacobites in 1715, as did his brother
Lieutenant Colonel John Balfour of Fernie. They were both forfeited
for treason. Nisbet's father didn't help matters by lending
a horse to a rebel called David Wemyss (Lord Elcho, or just
a namesake?) in 1745, or by naming one of his daughters 'Stewart'
as a first name!
Nisbet
matriculated at the University of St. Andrews in February 1757,
but his name appears only once in matriculation record, so it
is likely he did not graduate, but was brushing up his studies
for a term or two. This was not unusual in 18C, especially with
young teenaged students. He joined the 4th Foot as Ensign in
1761, and progressed through the regiment steadily over the
next few years: Lieutenant, 1765; Captain, 1770. Meanwhile,
on 31 July 1764, his father Henry died, aged 58. The heir was
Nisbet's older brother Henry ('Harry'), b. 1741, an officer
in the Royal Scots (1st Regiment of Foot). Harry Balfour had
already attracted a rather sniffy entry from the minister in
Dunbog parish register, as on 9 December 1762:
Mr
Balfour younger of Dunbog Commonly Calld Captain had a son was
begotten in fornication with Ann Henderson called Henry.
Nisbet
and his regiment were posted to the American colonies in June
1774. His comrades included Captain John Webster. He narrowly
escaped death at Bunker/Breed's Hill, 17 June 1775, when a musket-ball
struck his cartridge box, slightly wounding him in the belly.
He also participated in the Battle of Long Island, 27 August
1776. The Howes sent him back to London with their dispatches
and instructions at the end of September 1776. He arrived on
2 November to find that his older brother, Major Harry, had
been accidentally shot in the head while fowling by another
brother (probably Walter) at Fort George, near Inverness, 1
October. A passing comment of Patrick Ferguson's suggests that
the weapon was a double-barreled gun, then regarded as technically
unreliable and dangerous. The family suffered another bereavement
shortly afterwars, when Aunt Emilia Balfour, widow of David
Clephane of Carslogie, died at Anstruther on New Year's Eve.
Nisbet
wintered in Scotland, and returned to the Colonies a Major,
sailing on 28 March 1777. After the Philadelphia campaigns,
he was appointed Lieutenant Colonel of 23rd Foot in 1778 while
in Philadelphia, selling on his Majority in the 4th to Sir James
Murray (future Secretary at War, Sir James Murray Pulteney),
a cousin of Patrick Ferguson. He matriculated his arms as Balfour
of Dunbog with the Lord Lyon on 24 April 1779, and took part
in Clinton's expedition to the Southern colonies in December.
As
Commandant at Fort Ninety-Six in 1780, he was involved in recruiting
Loyalist militia, with Patrick Ferguson. However, they seem
to have had something of a personality clash: Ferguson did not
keep Balfour informed of his communications with Clinton and
Cornwallis over fortification plans, and there were tensions
between them. However, in August Nisbet Balfour was appointed
Commandant in Charleston by Cornwallis. Brevet Colonel 1781.
He
served as a commissioner for examining and processing Loyalist
claims in the aftermath of the war, and became a Burgess of
Edinburgh in 1783.
The
family estates were restored in 1784 by the Disannexing Act,
and in 1791, after their mother's death, we get a pen-picture
of the Balfours in her will. Only 6 of the children were still
living: Nisbet; Walter, now a writer in the East India Company
(perhaps a sensible career move, if he was the one who had shot
Harry!); Elizabeth, widow of Thomas Boswall, accountant in Edinburgh;
Euphan; and Jean and (Ann) Stewart, who had both recently got
married - Jean to Captain Thomas Inglis, Stewart to Robert Stewart
of St. Fort and Castle Stewart.
Nisbet
served as MP for Wigtown Burghs 1790-96, and for Arundel 1797-1802.
He was and as Major-General under Abercromby in Flanders. He
becameADC to His Majesty, 1782-93. Major-General 1793. Colonel
93rd Regiment and 39th Regiment 1794. Lieutenant-General 1798.
General 1803. He died, unmarried, on 16 Oct. 1823, aged 79,
at Dunbog, where he is buried.