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Robert
Baillie (d. 1684)
Scottish
conspirator, known as Baillie Of Jerviswood, was the son of George
Baillie of St. John's Kirk, Lanarkshire. He incurred the resentment
of the Scottish government by rescuing, in June 1676, his brother-in-law
Kirkton, a Presbyterian minister who had illegally been seized
and confined in a house by Carstairs, an informer. He was fined
500, remaining in prison for four months and then being liberated
on paying one-half the fine to Carstairs. In despair at the state
of his country he determined in 1683 to emigrate to South Carolina,
but the plan came to nothing. The same year Baillie, with some
of his friends, went to London and entered into communication
with Monmouth, Russell and their party in order to obtain redress;
and on the discovery of the Rye House Plot he was arrested. Questioned
by the king himself he repudiated any knowledge of the conspiracy,
but with striking truthfulness would not deny that he had been
consulted with the view of an insurrection in Scotland. He was
subsequently loaded with irons and sent back a prisoner to Scotland.
Though
there was no evidence whatever to support his connection with
the plot, he was fined and kept in close confinement. He was already
in a languishing state when on the 23rd pf December 1684 he was
brought up again before the high court on the charge of treason.
He was pronounced guilty on the following day and hanged the same
afternoon at the market cross at Edinburgh with all the usual
barbarities. His shocking treatment was long remembered as one
of the worst crimes committed by the Stuart administration in
Scotland. Bishop Burnet, who was his cousin, describes him as
"in the presbyterian principles but ... a man of great piety
and virtue, learned in the law, in mathematics and in languages."
He married a sister of Sir Archibald Johnston, Lord Warriston,
and left a son, George, who took refuge in Holland, afterwards
returning with William III. and being restored to his estates.
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