Kilsyth
KILSYTH, a burgh of barony and a parish, in the
county of Stirling; containing, with the late quoad
sacra parish of Banton, and the village of Auchinmully,
5613 inhabitants, of whom 4106 are in the burgh, 12½
miles (N. E.) from Glasgow. This place was anciently
called "Monaebrugh," from the name of the barony
which now forms the eastern portion of the parish, and
of which alone it for many years consisted till the annexation of the barony of Kilsyth in 1649. Since that
period, the whole parish has assumed the appellation of
Kilsyth, from the name of that barony, which previously
was a portion of the parish of Campsie, and of which
the etymology, like that of Monaebrugh, is involved in
doubt and obscurity. The lands once formed part of
the possessions of the Livingstone family, of whom Sir
James Livingstone, in acknowledgment of his services
in defending the castle of Kilsyth against Cromwell, was
elevated to the peerage by Charles II., in 1661, by the
titles of Lord Campsie and Viscount Kilsyth. The
estates continued with his descendants till the year
1715, when they became forfeited to the crown on the
attainder of William, third viscount Kilsyth, for his
participation in the rebellion; and the lands were purchased in 1784, by Sir Archibald Edmonstone, of Duntreath, whose grandson. Sir Archibald Edmonstone,
Bart., is now the chief proprietor of the parish. The
principal event of historical importance connected with
the place is the memorable battle of Kilsyth, in 1645,
between the army of the Covenanters, consisting of 6000
infantry and 1000 cavalry, commanded by General
Baillie, and the forces of the Marquess of Montrose,
consisting of 4400 infantry and 500 cavalry. This sanguinary battle, which occurred near the site now occupied by the reservoir of the Forth and Clyde canal,
terminated in the entire defeat of the Covenanters, with
the slaughter of nearly the whole of their infantry;
while of the forces of the marquess, a very inconsiderable number were slain.
The town is situated on the north road from Glasgow to Edinburgh, and consists of several streets irregularly formed; it is lighted with gas, and the inhabitants are amply supplied with water, conveyed from a
spring in the neighbourhood into public cisterns by
earthen pipes. The principal trade is the weaving of
cotton by handlooms, in which more than 1300 persons
are engaged for the Glasgow merchants; and there are
two factories recently established, in which lappets,
cloth for umbrellas, and checked ginghams are made,
affording occupation to about 130 persons. The manufacture of white and brown paper is also carried on, to
a moderate extent, employing from forty to fifty persons; and many of the inhabitants are engaged in mines
of ironstone and coal, and in the quarries in the parish.
There is no regular market-day, though the town is
amply supplied with provisions of every kind: fairs are
held on the second Friday in April and the third Friday
in November, but they are not much frequented. The
post-office, under that of Glasgow, has a daily delivery
by a post gig, which also carries one passenger; and
facility of communication is afforded by the road from
Glasgow to Edinburgh, and by the great canal within
a mile to the south of the town. Kilsyth was erected
into a burgh of barony by charter of George IV., in
1826; the government is vested in a bailie, dean of
guild, and four councillors, elected under the provisions
of the act of the 3rd of William IV. There are no incorporated trades possessing exclusive privileges; and
the occupation of a tenement of the annual value of £5,
on lease, is sufficient to qualify as a burgess, upon paying a fine of five shillings on admission. The magistrates
exercise jurisdiction, in criminal matters, only in petty
offences; and no regular courts are held.
The parish, which is bounded on the north by the
river Carron, and on the south by the river Kelvin, is
about seven miles in length and three and a half in
average breadth, and comprises 15,000 acres, of which
nearly 4000 are arable, 7000 meadow and pasture, and
the remainder, with the exception of a few acres of plantations, moorland and waste. The surface is boldly
diversified with hill and dale, and is generally of bleak
and barren aspect. The Kilsyth hills, which intersect
the parish from east to west, and a portion of the
Campsie fells, which skirt it on the north-west, are
among the most lofty elevations; and some of them
attain a height of more than 1200 feet above the level
of the sea. From the summit of these hills is an unbounded view, extending from the Atlantic Ocean to
the German Sea, and commanding nearly the whole
country at a glance. The Meikleben, which unites the
Kilsyth range with the Campsie fells, has an elevation
of 1500 feet; and the Garrel and Laird's hills, also in
the parish, rise to a height of 1300 feet. The chief
river is the Carron, which has its source in the adjacent
parish of Fintry, flowing eastward into the Forth at
Grangemouth; it abounds with trout, and forms in its
sinuous course numerous romantic cataracts. The Kelvin has its source within the parish, and, though for
some distance from its rise but a small rivulet, has been
diverted by Sir Archibald Edmonstone into a wider and
deeper channel, and, after flowing under the aqueduct
of the Forth and Clyde canal, increases in importance
as it advances towards Glasgow. Of the smaller streams
that intersect the parish, the principal is the Garrel,
which descends from the Garrel hill, and, in its course,
within a mile and a half, has a tall of 1000 feet. Its
waters, as it approaches the ancient village of Kilsyth,
have been partly diverted into the reservoir at Townhead, for the supply of the Forth and Clyde canal; but,
after receiving some small tributaries, it flows southward into the Kelvin. The reservoir is of oval form,
about seventy-five acres in extent, and occupies a natural hollow of considerable depth, by filling up the entrance to which, to the height of twenty-five feet, the
inclosure was formed at a very inconsiderable expense.
The soil in the lower parts of the parish is a rich
and deep loam; in the higher parts, light and sandy,
but of great fertility; in other parts, gravel alternated
with clay, and there are also some large tracts of peatmoss. The crops are, oats, barley, wheat, potatoes,
and turnips. The cultivation of potatoes in the open
fields is said to have been first practised in this parish
by Mr. Graham, of Tamrawer, who, from one peck
planted in April, 1762, obtained a produce of 264 pecks
in the October following. The system of husbandry
has been greatly improved under the encouragement
held out by the Farmers' Association for this parish
and others adjacent, which meets at the principal inn
annually, in June, when a cattle-show takes place, and
prizes are awarded to the successful competitors. The
farm-buildings have been rendered commodious, and
the lands inclosed with fences of thorn, kept in excellent
repair; tile-draining has been extensively practised,
and all the more recent improvements in the construction of agricultural implements have been adopted.
The hill-pastures are well adapted for the feeding of
sheep, and the meadows in the vale of Kilsyth are
among the most luxuriant in the country. Great attention is paid to the dairy-farms, on which all the
cows are of the Ayrshire breed; the chief produce is
butter and milk, of which large quantities are sold for
the supply of the neighbourhood. The plantations were
formerly on a very limited scale, chiefly confined to the
demesnes of the principal landholders; but they have
lately been extended. They consist of ash, birch,
mountain-ash, elm, alder, oak, and sycamore, for which
the soil seems well adapted. The substratum is mostly
of the coal formation, and ironstone and limestone are
found in abundance: the coal, which is of good quality,
is wrought for the supply of the adjacent district, and
the ironstone by the Carron Company. There are also
quarries of limestone, and of freestone of a fine colour,
and of good quality for building. The rateable annual
value of the parish is £9288.
The ecclesiastical affairs are under the superintendence of the presbytery of Glasgow and synod of
Glasgow and Ayr. The minister's stipend is £271. 6.7.,
with a manse, and a glebe valued at £20 per annum;
patron, the Crown. The parish church, erected in
1816, at the western extremity of the town, is an elegant
structure in the later English style of architecture, and
containing 860 sittings. A church has been built at
Banton; and there are places of worship for members
of the Free Church, the Relief, and Wesleyans. Parochial schools are maintained in the burgh, at ChapelGreen, and at Banton; the master of the first has a
salary of £30, with a house and garden, and the fees,
averaging £60. The master of the Banton school has
a salary of £12. 6., with fees amounting to £23; and
the master at Chapel-Green a salary of £9, to which are
added £22, the proceeds of a bequest by Mr. John
Patrick, and fees averaging £30 per annum. At Conney park and Balcastle are remains of Pictish forts, of
which the latter is the most entire of all the works of
the kind in the kingdom. There are also some of the
ruins of Colzium Castle, and of a smaller mansion of
the Livingstone family which was burnt by Oliver
Cromwell on his route to Stirling. Small remains still
exist of the ancient castle of Kilsyth, on an eminence
overlooking the town; and in the town is the old mansion of Kilsyth, now inhabited by poor families, but in
which are yet preserved the apartments where Prince
Charles Edward spent a night. Under the old church
was the burying-place of the Livingstone family, of whom
William, the third viscount, after his attainder retired to
Holland, where Lady Kilsyth and her infant son were
killed by the accidental falling in of the roof of the
house in which they lived. Their bodies were embalmed, and, being inclosed in a leaden coffin, were
sent to Scotland, and interred in the family vault, now
in the open churchyard. On examining the coffin in
1796, the remains of both were found in so perfect a
state, and even the complexion so fresh, as to present
every appearance of natural sleep.
Kiltarlity
KILTARLITY, a parish, in the county of Inverness, 4 miles (S. W. by W.) from Beauly; containing
2869 inhabitants. This place, the origin of the name of
which is altogether uncertain, and which comprehends
the old parish of Convinth, is situated in one of the
most beautiful and romantic districts in the Highlands.
The parish is separated from the main part of that of
Kilmorack by the Beauly river, which, a few miles to
the north-east, forms the loch of the same name, the
latter communicating with the Moray Frith. It is one
of the largest parishes in the country, measuring in
length, from the north-eastern to the south-western
extremity, about forty-five miles, though the average
breadth doth not exceed six miles. The surface is
characterized by hills and mountains, and thicklywooded glens and ravines, interspersed with numerous
lochs, and some verdant pastures and well-cultivated
tracts, rendered more strikingly picturesque in many
parts by the course of rapid streams with various cascades. Among the lochs, which are of great number
and diversity of appearance, and which abound in pike,
trout, char, and other fish, the largest, and those most
famed for their scenery, are, Loch Affaric, Loch Naluire,
and Loch Beinnemhian. Each of these is about a mile
broad, and varies in length from three to seven miles;
all are very deep, and embosomed in hills and mountains, shrouded with birch, mountain-ash, and stately
firs, the remains of the old Caledonian forest. The
three lakes are united by the river Glass, which, rising
in Loch Affaric, and proceeding north-easterly through
the other two lakes, is in its course along the northwestern boundary of the parish, skirted on each side by
lofty hills, and joined at Fasnacoil by the rapid stream
of Deaothack. The Deaothack is celebrated for its
waterfalls, especially those of Plodda and Easnambroc,
and for the splendid firs on its banks, intermixed with
birch and oak. At Invercannich, about four miles from
Fasnacoil, the Glass is joined by the river Cannich, a
large stream; and again, at the distance of a few miles,
by the Farrer, after which it takes the name of Beauly.
The distance from the last junction to the Beauly Frith is
about nine miles; and though the river is only navigable for a mile and a half from the frith, up to the village
of Beauly, it is found of great service for transporting
timber for exportation. The fishery of the Beauly belongs to Lord Lovat, producing a rent of £1600 per
annum.
On the north-eastern side of the parish is a tract of
land measuring about nine square miles, which is flat
and low; but, with this exception, the surface is hilly
and rocky throughout, and intersected with glens and
valleys, the principal of which are Glen-Convinth and
Strath-Glass. The latter of these was formerly covered
with wood, which supplied Cromwell with a large portion of the timber used in the fortifications at Inverness,
but of which none now remains except the forest of
Cugie, where are firs of immense bulk and stature. The
highest hill is supposed to be that of Aonach-Sassan,
"English Hill," rising about 2000 feet above the level
of the sea. In the south-western part of the parish
the rocks are so lofty, rugged, and inaccessible, that they
are not only the resort of eagles, falcons, and numerous
birds of prey, but furnish lurking-places for large herds
of goats, so wild as to bid defiance to capture. The
soil is generally thin and light, of a reddish hue, and
very hard. It is found intractable for successful husbandry, except on the lower grounds in the northeastern district, which are much more fertile than the
higher portion, where, on account of its mossy character, the crops are stunted and sickly, especially in
seasons of drought. Agriculture has, however, made
considerable progress within the last twenty years. The
most approved rotation of cropping has been introduced;
and where trenching, liming, and draining have been
adopted to a sufficient extent to counteract the natural
impediments of the land, the produce is of good quality.
The rocks in the parish consist chiefly of gneiss, intersected with veins of granite; and sandstone, with
asbestos, rock-crystal, and other varieties, is found in
the hills. There are several interesting caves, one of
which, called Corriedow, is said to have been a retreat,
for some days, of Prince Charles Edward Stuart. Wood
was once the only article exported from this locality;
and independently of the old Scotch firs, and other
noble trees, the memorials of former ages, extensive
plantations still exist, and have been recently augmented. These comprise ash, elm, beech, plane, and
especially larch, all of which attain a fine growth,
and prove a source of considerable emolument to the
proprietors. The rateable annual value of the parish is
£6160.
The gentlemen's seats are numerous, and in general
are so well situated as to command views of the most
interesting groups of scenery. Beaufort Castle, the
property of Lord Lovat, is a spacious but plain building,
standing on the site of the old fortress of Beaufort, or
Downie, which, in the time of Alexander I., was besieged by the royal troops. Cromwell, also, seized a
castle here, and demolished the citadel; and immediately after the battle of Culloden, the then fortress
was burnt to the ground by the Duke of Cumberland's
army. Indeed, the present is said to be the twelfth
edifice erected on the same site: it is thought to have
been built as a residence for the government factor
while the estate lay under forfeiture, the proprietor, the
aged Lord Lovat, having been executed in 1747 for
aiding in the rebellion. The mansion commands extensive and beautiful views, comprehending the Beauly
Frith; and the large parks attached are ornamented
with fine specimens of ancient trees, and with well laid
out pleasure-grounds and gardens. The present proprietor, a Roman Catholic, and the principal heritor in
the parish, was raised to the peerage in 1837. Erchless
Castle, the seat of "the Chisholm," situated near the
confluence of the Farrer and Glass rivers, is a lofty
turreted building, erected in the fifteenth century, and
still in very good preservation. Attached to it is a
splendid park, ornamented with many stately trees,
relics of the old Caledonian forest; and in addition to
750 acres of land constantly kept in cultivation, the
estate comprehends 1000 acres, planted, within the last
thirty years, with larch, elm, beech, oak, Scotch fir, and
chesnut. About four miles east of Erchless, on the
opposite bank of the Beauly, is the beautiful mansion of
Eskadale; and not far off, the house of Aigas, the property of the Chisholm. At a short distance north of
Aigas, the river divides and again unites, forming the
romantic island of Aigas, covered with oaks and weepingbirches, and on which a mansion of elegant design has
been erected by Lord Lovat. A few miles to the southeast of this spot, about a quarter of a mile from the
public road, is Belladrum, a modern mansion, splendidly
fitted up, and almost shrouded with the foliage of plantations. Attached is a very superior farm-steading.
This estate, comprising 2600 acres of hill pasture, 700
acres under tillage, and 1000 under wood, chiefly Scotch
fir and larch, formerly belonged to James Fraser, Esq.,
but has passed by purchase to John Stewart, Esq., of
Carnousie, for the sum of £80,000. The other mansions are those of Ballindown, Guisachan, and the house
of Struy. The last is the seat of a branch of the clan
Fraser, and is situated on the border of the Farrer, a
mile from its junction with the Glass, each of which
streams, at about the same distance from their confluence, is crossed by an excellent bridge. The parliamentary road from Inverness traverses the parish, from
north-east to south-west; the nearest post-office is at
the village of Beauly, two miles from the boundary.
The produce is sent for sale to Inverness, twelve miles
distant. The only "manufacture" is that of timber,
large quantities of which are cut down every year, and
prepared for sale at three saw-mills, as well as by
numerous handsaws.
The parish is in the presbytery of Inverness and synod
of Moray, and in the patronage of Professor Scott, of
King's College, Aberdeen, to whom Lord Lovat has
transferred his right of presentation. The minister's
stipend is £239, with a manse, and a glebe of nearly
fifty acres, of the annual value of £20. The church,
built in 1829, is finely situated in the midst of a cluster
of lofty trees, and contains about 800 sittings, all free.
A church, also, was erected by the late Chisholm, at
Erchless, in connexion with the Establishment, and has
400 sittings; the salary of the minister is paid by the
Chisholm. There is a mission at Strath-Glass, comprehending the upper part of this parish and that of
Kilmorack; the salary is £80 per annum, £60 of which
are from the Royal Bounty, and the remainder raised by
subscription. The members of the Free Church have a
place of worship. A chapel was erected a few years
since, by Lord Lovat, on an eminence near the small
rural hamlet of Wester Eskadale, about four miles from
Erchless, for the accommodation of the Roman Catholic
population, which is of considerable extent. There are
three parochial schools, which afford instruction in the
usual elementary branches; the master of the principal
one has a salary of £25. 16., with a house, and about
£20 fees. The salary in each of the other schools,
which are of recent establishment, is £12. 18., increased
by the Chisholm to £25. The mistress of a female
school has £15 per annum from the Lovat family, with
a neat school-house and accommodations.
Kiltearn
KILTEARN, a parish, in the county of Ross and
Cromarty, 5¾ miles (N. E. by N.) from Dingwall; containing, with the villages of Drummond and Evanton,
1436 inhabitants. This place derives its name from two
Gaelic words, Kiell Tighearn, signifying "the buryingplace of the laird," though the particular circumstance
which gave rise to the appellation is unknown. The
family of Munro of Fowlis, which, even from ancient
times, has been the most conspicuous in the parish, is
said to have been founded by Donald Munro, who,
among many others, received gifts of land from Malcolm
II., for important services rendered in assisting the
king in the expulsion of the Danes. When this desirable end was accomplished, Malcolm feued out the
country to his friends; and that part between the burgh
of Dingwall and the water of Alness was assigned to
Donald Munro, from which circumstance it received the
name of Ferindonuil, or "Donald's land." A portion of
these lands was afterwards erected into a barony, called
Fowlis; and the present Sir Hugh Monro, Bart., who
is proprietor of about two-thirds of the parish, and lineally descended from the above-named Donald Munro,
is the 29th baron.
The parish is situated in about the middle of the
county, and extends six miles along the north shore of
the Frith of Cromarty, whence it stretches inward twentytwo miles; it is bounded on the north by Contin and
Lochbroom parishes, on the east by Alness, and on the
west by Dingwall and Fodderty. The whole, except a
small tract on the shore, consists of one mass of hills,
overspread with heath, or, in some places, planted with
firs. The hill of Wyvis rises 3720 feet above the level of
the sea, and is never without snow, even in the hottest
summer: the forest of Wyvis is held of the king, on the
singular condition of paying a snow-ball any day in the
year, if required. The valleys between the hills are
covered, to a great extent, with coarse grass: in some
of them, small lakes have been formed by the mountain
streams, diversifying the scenery, and affording good
sport to the angler. The principal lake is Loch Glass,
near the south end of which is a small island, where the
lairds of Fowlis had at one time a summer-house: its
waters are discharged into the sea by the Aultgraad, a
stream which flows along a remarkably deep and narrow
channel, formed in the solid rock by the action of the
waters. The only river is the Skiack, which is supplied
by mountain streams, and falls into the sea near the
church. Several varieties of trout are found in the
lochs and streams; and shell-fish, of the smaller kinds,
are obtained on the shore.
The soil on the high grounds is moss, and near the
Frith chiefly alluvial; it varies in other parts, exhibiting
many of the ordinary combinations. About 3000 acres
are cultivated, or occasionally in tillage; 600 are undivided common, and the rest natural pasture. There are
a considerable number of plantations, comprising all the
trees suited to the climate: many tracts were planted
about the middle of the last century. All the usual
white and green crops are raised; and as the improved
system of agriculture has been for some time followed,
and much attention is paid to the cultivation of the soil,
the produce is equal in quality to any in the country.
The sheep are chiefly the native black-faced, but on the
low grounds are a number of Cheviots: the cattle are
of the Ross-shire and the Argyllshire breeds, the latter
of which is much preferred. The principal rock in the
parish is sandstone: coal has been discovered, but not
in sufficient quantity to defray the expense of working;
and a small amount of lead-ore has also been met with.
The rateable annual value of Kiltearn is £5106.
The village of Evanton, built within the present
century, upon a piece of waste land, is remarkable for
the regular and neat appearance of the houses: a fair
is held here on the first Tuesday in June, and another
on the first Tuesday in December. The hamlet of
Drummond is seated on the Skiack. There are several
extensive tracts of moss in the heights of the parish,
where the inhabitants cut peat in summer to serve for
winter fuel. The great parliamentary road runs along
the shore, and communicates with the northern parts
by means of excellent county roads; it passes over two
good bridges, one at the east, and the other at the west,
end of the village of Evanton. The ecclesiastical
affairs are directed by the presbytery of Dingwall and
synod of Ross; patron, the Crown. The stipend of the
minister is £249, with a commodious manse, and a glebe
of nine arable acres, valued at £12 per annum. The
church, situated on the coast, was built in 1791, and is
a neat edifice, accommodating nearly 700 persons. There
is a place of worship in the village of Evanton connected
with the United Secession. A parochial school is maintained, in which Latin and Greek, with the usual branches,
are taught; the master has a salary of £30, with a house
and garden, and about £20 fees. The family of Munro
is distinguished for the eminent individuals who have
belonged to it. Sir Robert Munro, grandfather of the
present baronet, when a very young man, served for several years in Flanders under the Duke of Marlborough,
and there formed an intimacy with the celebrated Col.
Gardiner, whose history and character have become
so well known through the memoir written by Dr.
Doddridge.
Kilvickeon
KILVICKEON, county of Argyll.—See Kilfinichen.
Kilwinning
KILWINNING, a manufacturing town and parish,
in the district of Cunninghame, county of Ayr; containing, with the villages of Dalgarvan, Doura, and
Fergushill, 5251 inhabitants, of whom 2971 are in the
town, 3 miles (N. N. W.) from Irvine, and 3 (N. E. by E.)
from Saltcoats. This place, which is of great antiquity,
derives its name from the dedication of its original
church to St. Winnin, who came from Ireland in 715,
to convert the inhabitants of this part of the country to
Christianity. In 1140, a monastery was founded in
honour of this saint by Hugh de Moreville, lord high
constable of Scotland, for monks of the Tyronensian
order, whom he introduced into it from the abbey of
Kelso. This monastery, which was amply endowed by
the founder, and enriched with large grants of land from
several of the Scottish monarchs, continued to flourish
till the Dissolution, when its revenues, notwithstanding
previous alienations, amounted to £880. 3. 4., exclusive
of numerous payments in kind. In 1296, the abbot of
Kilwinning swore fealty to Edward I. of England; in
1513, the abbot of the monastery accompanied James
IV. to the battle of Flodden Field, where he was killed
fighting by the side of his sovereign. Of the other
abbots none are distinguished in history, with the exception of Gavin Hamilton, the last, the zealous adherent of Mary, Queen of Scots, whom he attended at the
battle of Langside, and for whom he afterwards appeared
at York, as one of her commissioners to treat with
Elizabeth of England. The site of the monastery, and
the lands appertaining to it, were, after the Reformation,
granted by the crown to Alexander Cunningham, son
of the Earl of Glencairn, who was appointed commendator, and, during his tenure, alienated a portion of the
lands. In 1592, the remainder of the lands belonging
to the monastery were erected into a temporal lordship,
in favour of William Melville, who subsequently transferred the lordship to Hugh, fifth earl of Eglinton,
whose descendants are the present proprietors. Of that
once stately and venerable structure, which was almost
demolished at the Reformation, the gable of the south
transept, portions of the walls, with a few of the finelypointed arches, and an ancient gateway, are the only remains. A part of the abbey church, a spacious cruciform
structure, was repaired, and appropriated as the parochial church till the year 1775, when it was taken down,
and the present church erected on its site. The tower
of the abbey church, a square massive structure 103
feet high, and which had been repaired by the Earl of
Eglinton in 1789, remained till the year 1814, when it
fell from natural decay; and in the year following, a
similar tower, of nearly equal dimensions, was erected on
the site.
The introduction of freemasonry into Scotland appears to have originated in the building of the monastery
of Kilwinning, for which purpose several of those masons and artificers of Rome whom the pope had incorporated for the promotion of ecclesiastical architecture,
and invested with peculiar privileges, were brought over
from the continent. The architect who superintended
the erection of the monastery, the masons who accompanied him, and such of the workmen of the neighbourhood as were qualified to assist them, were formed
into a society, of which the architect was elected mastermason. Similar societies were gradually instituted in
various parts of the country, subordinate to that of
Kilwinning, which, as the oldest of the kind, retained
an acknowledged pre-eminence, and of which the master-mason was chosen as grand master over all the
others. After his return from England, James I. of
Scotland patronized the lodge of Kilwinning, and presided as grand master of the order for some time; subsequently delegating the election of a grand master,
generally a man of high rank, to the brethren of the
various lodges. James II., however, conferred the
office of grand master on William Sinclair, Earl of
Orkney, and Baron of Roslin, and made the office hereditary in his family; and his successors, barons of Roslin,
held their courts or grand lodges at this place. In 1736,
Lord Roslin assembled thirty-two of these lodges at
Edinburgh, to whom he resigned all his hereditary rights
as grand master; and the grand lodge of Scotland, consisting of representatives from all the other lodges of
the kingdom, has since that period been established
there.
The town is pleasantly situated on an acclivity, rising
gently from the west bank of the river Garnock, and
consists of one narrow street nearly a mile in length,
from which diverge some lanes, and of some ranges of
detached houses. The houses are indifferently built,
and of antique appearance, with the exception of a few
of modern erection; but the environs abound with a
variety of beautiful scenery, in which the pleasure-grounds
of Eglinton Castle form a conspicuous and interesting
feature. A society for the practice of archery, which
has existed in the town since the year 1488, holds annual meetings in July, which are numerously attended
by persons from all parts of the country. The chief
prize is a silver arrow, which is given by the society to
the successful competitor, who becomes captain for the
following year, and presides as master of the ceremonies
at a ball given on the occasion. The principal trade
is the weaving of silk, woollen, and cotton goods, in which
about 400 looms are employed; there are three factories
for carding and spinning cotton-wool; and an extensive
tannery has been established for more than half a century. Many of the inhabitants, also, are engaged in the
mines and collieries in the immediate vicinity; and in
the town are several shops, well supplied with various
articles of merchandise. The post-office has a daily
delivery; a branch of the Commercial Bank of Scotland
has been opened; and fairs for horses and cattle are held
in the town on the 1st of February and the first Wednesday in November. Facility of communication is
maintained by excellent roads, which intersect the
parish in different directions, and of which eleven miles
are turnpike; the Glasgow and Ayr railway, also, passes
the western extremity of the town, where it has an intermediate station, and where it meets the branch line
to Ardrossan. A branch from the main line to Kilmarnock also runs through the parish, within a mile of the
town; and a railroad from the collieries of Doura and
Fergushill was some years since laid down, which joins
the Ardrossan branch of the Glasgow and Ayr railway
about two miles from the harbour.
The parish, which is of very irregular form, is about
seven miles in length and five in extreme breadth,
and comprises nearly 12,000 acres, of which from 3000
to 4000 are arable, and the remainder woodland,
pasture, and moor, the proportions whereof cannot be
well ascertained. The surface rises in graceful undulations from the south-east to the north-west, without
attaining any great degree of elevation; and is intersected by the beautiful valleys of the Garnock and the
Lugton, of which the former is richly cultivated, and
the latter thickly wooded. The high lands command
an extensive and beautifully-diversified prospect, embracing the vale of Garnock, the woods of Mountgreenan
and Eglinton, the towns of Saltcoats, Stevenston, and
Irvine, with the bay of Ayr, the rock of Ailsa, the Mull
of Cantyre, and the mountains of Arran. The river
Garnock, which has its source among the hills of Kilbirnie, flows in a copious stream southward through the
parish, and, after passing the town, pursues a remarkably
sinuous course towards the south-west, and falls into the
sea near the mouth of the Irvine. The Lugton issues
from Loch Libo, in Renfrewshire, and, taking a southwestern course, runs through the demesne of Mountgreenan and the pleasure-grounds of Eglinton into the
river Garnock, about two miles from its influx into the
sea. The Caaf, a small tributary of the Garnock, after
forming for a short distance a boundary between this
parish and that of Dalry, flows through a narrow
wooded dell at Craigh-Head mill, where it forms a beautifully-picturesque cascade. The only lake is that of Ashgrove, about a mile and a half to the north-west of the
town, and partly in the parish of Stevenston; it contains
pike and perch, but is neither of great extent nor distinguished by any peculiar features. Salmon and
salmon-trout are still found in the Garnock, on which
the fisheries were formerly lucrative, yielding a considerable rent to the proprietors; but, from stake-fishing at
the mouth of the river, and from various other causes,
they have been for many years comparatively unproductive.
The soil on the higher grounds, and in the central
parts of the parish, is generally a clay of no great depth;
on the lands sloping towards the rivers, a richer loam;
and in other parts, light and sandy, but of great fertility. The chief crops are oats and potatoes, with a
moderate proportion of wheat, and the usual grasses;
the system of husbandry has been gradually improving,
and a due rotation of crops is invariably observed.
Much progress has been made in surface-draining; the
lands have been inclosed with hedges of thorn, which
are kept in good repair; and the farm-buildings, though
of inferior order, are generally adapted to the size of
the farms, which vary from fifty to eighty acres. Great
attention is paid to the improvement of live stock. The
sheep are mostly of the black-faced breed, with some
few of the Leicestershire and South-Down kind; the
cattle are usually of the Ayrshire, and the horses of the
Clydesdale, breed. There are very considerable remains
of ancient wood, particularly in Eglinton Park, where
many fine specimens of stately timber are found: among
these are numerous beeches of venerable growth, of
which kind of tree the planting has for some years been
discontinued. The plantations, which are very extensive, and in a thriving state, consist of ash, elm, oak,
larch, and Scotch fir, and contribute greatly to enrich
the scenery. The substrata of the parish are principally of the coal formation, with bands of ironstone,
limestone, and sandstone; and clay for making bricks
and draining-tiles is also found. The coal, which occurs
in several varieties, and of good quality, is wrought at
Doura, Fergushill, Redstone, and Eglinton. The mines
afford employment to about 250 men; and of the produce, exclusively of what is sold for the supply of the
neighbourhood, 50,000 tons are annually sent by the
railroad to the harbour of Ardrossan, whence they are
shipped for Ireland and the Mediterranean. There are
two quarries of limestone, and a quarry of excellent
freestone, in constant operation, and which together
employ a considerable number of men. The rateable
annual value of the parish is £15,261.
Eglinton Castle, the seat of the earls of Eglinton,
descendants of Roger de Montgomerie, a near relative
of William the Conqueror, whom he accompanied to
England, is a splendid castellated mansion, erected
about the year 1798, by Hugh, the twelfth earl, and
beautifully situated in an extensive park, about a mile
to the south-east of the town. The castle occupies a
spacious quadrangular area, defended at the angles with
circular turrets, and comprehending the ancient keep,
a round tower of great strength and lofty dimensions.
It contains numerous stately apartments superbly embellished, to which an entrance is afforded from a magnificent circular saloon, thirty-six feet in diameter,
rising to the roof, and lighted from an elegant dome.
The park, which comprises above 1200 acres, and is
well stocked with deer, is tastefully laid out in lawns,
parterres, and pleasure-grounds, through which the
river Lugton takes its winding course to the Garnock,
adding greatly to the beauty of the scenery of the
demesne, which is also embellished by more than 400
acres of thriving plantations, diversified with ancient
timber of majestic growth. A tournament was celebrated within the grounds, on a truly magnificent scale,
by the present earl, in August, 1839, and attracted a
large concourse of nobility and gentry from all parts of
the United Kingdom and from the continent. The lists
were formed in the gently-sloping grounds near the
castle, and inclosed an area 650 feet in length and 250
feet in breadth; and a splendid pavilion was erected
immediately behind the mansion, 375 feet long and
forty-five feet wide, for the accommodation of 2000
persons, who were courteously entertained on the occasion. The Earl of Eglinton presided as lord of the
tournament; Lord Saltoun officiated as judge of the
lists; the Marquess of Londonderry as king of the
tournament; and Lady Seymour, attended by a numerous train of ladies of high rank, and followed by the
Irvine archers, appeared as the Queen of Beauty.
Among the knights that entered the lists were, the
Marquess of Waterford, the Earl of Craven, Viscount
Alford, Lord Glenlyon, Lord Cranstoun, the Earl of
Cassilis, and Prince Louis Napoleon Buonaparte. The
tournament continued for two days; and though more
than 80,000 spectators were assembled within the park,
which was thrown open indiscriminately to the public,
not the slightest damage of any kind occurred. Mountgreenan House is an elegant modern mansion, situated
in a well-planted demesne watered by the Lugton; and
Monkcastle and Ashgrove are also handsome residences.
The ecclesiastical affairs of the parish are under
the superintendence of the presbytery of Irvine and
synod of Glasgow and Ayr. The minister's stipend is
£266. 12., with a manse, and a glebe valued at £14. 10.
per annum; patron, the Earl of Eglinton. The church,
situated in the centre of the town, is a neat plain structure erected in 1771, and contains 1030 sittings. There
are places of worship for the United Secession, Free
Church, and Original Seceders. The parochial school
is well attended; the master has a salary of £34. 4. 4.,
with a house and garden, and the fees average about
£20 per annum. Near the village of Doura, a large
schoolroom, with a play-ground, and a dwelling-house
for a master, has been erected at the sole expense of
the Earl of Eglinton; and there are schools in connexion with the collieries.
Kinbettock
KINBETTOCK, county of Aberdeen.—See Towie.
Kinbuck
KINBUCK, a village, in the parish of Dunblane,
county of Perth, 2½ miles (N. by E.) from Dunblane;
containing 131 inhabitants. It is seated in the centre
of the parish, on the road from Dunblane to Auchterarder; and is formed of East and West Kinbuck.
The population are partly employed in the woollen
manufacture, for which there is a mill in the village.
Kincairnie
KINCAIRNIE, a village, in the parish of Caputh,
county of Perth, 2 miles (N.) from Caputh; containing
83 inhabitants. It lies in the eastern part of the parish,
and south of the road from Cluny to Dunkeld. Kincairnie House, in the vicinity of the village, is the seat
of the Murray family.
Kincaple
KINCAPLE, a village, in the parish and district of
St. Andrew's, county of Fife, 2½ miles (W. N. W.) from
St. Andrew's; containing 186 inhabitants. It is situated
upon the eastern coast, near the mouth of the Eden, in
St. Andrew's bay; and on the road from St. Andrew's
to Leuchars. The population is chiefly agricultural.
In 1834 a minister was appointed to perform divine
service, once a month, in each of four villages in the
parish, of which this is one.
Kincardine
KINCARDINE, county of Inverness.—See Abernethy.
Kincardine
KINCARDINE, a sea-port town and a burgh of
barony, in the parish of Tulliallan, county of Perth,
5 miles (S. E.) from Alloa, and 12 (E. S. E.) from
Stirling; containing 2875 inhabitants. The name of
this now considerable place was formerly West Pans,
from the number of its salt pans, of which, in 1780,
there were fifteen, though none exist at present. It is
pleasantly seated on the north-east bank of the river
Forth; and though irregularly built, and having some
narrow streets, it contains several of good breadth,
with a number of substantial houses and neat villas,
surrounded by gardens. The harbour, which is one of
the best for trade on the Forth, and very commodious, is
capable of admitting vessels of between three and four
hundred tons' burthen; and as many as a hundred of
this size may have safe anchorage within it. Shipbuilding, principally of the class of vessels adapted to
coasting traffic, is carried on here; and this avocation,
together with rope-making, and the manufacture of sailcloth, employs a great part of the population. There
are about forty ship-owners in the town, who form a
local marine insurance association, and have a considerable capital; and ships belonging to the port, whose
aggregate burthen exceeds 9000 tons, visit America, the
West Indies, the shores of the Baltic, and St. Petersburgh. In the neighbourhood was once a distillery; and
in the town are two good inns, a post-office, a library
consisting of more than 1000 volumes, and branches of
the Glasgow and Commercial Banks, these last affording
great encouragement to enterprise, and accommodation
to the surrounding district. The coast-road from Stirling passes through it; a coach runs daily to Glasgow;
the river is crossed by a steam-boat ferry; and steamers
ply regularly between Stirling and Edinburgh, taking
in passengers at the pier, at any state of the tide. The
trustees of Lord Keith are the superiors of the town,
and they appoint baron-bailies, who act as magistrates.
There is an elegant new church; also a place of worship for the United Secession, and schools in which the
ordinary branches of education are taught. It was from
this barony that the ancient and illustrious family of
Bruce took the title of Earl, now conjoined with the
earldom of Elgin, the present, and sixth, Earl of Elgin
being also eleventh Earl of Kincardine.
Kincardine
KINCARDINE, a parish, in the county of Ross and
Cromarty, 14 miles (W. N. W.) from Tain; containing
2108 inhabitants, of whom 316 are in that part of the parish which formed the late quoad sacra parish of Croich.
This place perhaps derives its name, of Celtic origin,
signifying "the termination of the heights," from its
situation at the extremity of some ranges of lofty hills.
It appears to have been, at a very early period, the
baronial residence of the chiefs of the clan Ross, and to
have been the scene of various hostilities between them
and rival clans, of which the most sanguinary was
the battle of Tuiteam-Tarbhach, about the year 1397.
In 1650, the Marquess of Montrose arrived at Orkney
with a force of 1500 men, and, crossing the Pentland
Frith, landed at the northern extremity of Caithness,
and took possession of the castle of Dunbeath, whence
he advanced to Ross-shire. The Earl of Sutherland, his
opponent, at first retired before him, but afterwards
passed over into Sutherland, to intercept his retreat to
the north; and Colonel Strachan advancing to meet
Montrose with a force of 230 cavalry and 170 infantry,
a battle ensued near the pass of Invercharron, on the
borders of this parish, which terminated in the defeat
of the Marquess, and the slaughter of nearly the whole
of his men. The spot where the battle was fought has
been since called "Craigachaoineadh," or the Rock of
Lamentation. Montrose, after the engagement, throwing
off his embroidered cloak, and changing clothes with a
Highland soldier, swam across the Kyle, a sheet of water
dividing part of this parish from Sutherland, and effected
his escape from the field of slaughter. But, after wandering for several days in Strath-Oikell, and concealing
himself in the woods of Assynt, he was at length discovered by Neil Macleod, the proprietor of that place,
who had been formerly one of his followers, and to
whom, in the hope of finding protection, he made himself known. Macleod, however, being either afraid to
conceal him, or tempted by the large reward offered for
his apprehension, betrayed Montrose to his pursuers,
who sent him, by order of General Leslie, to Skibo
Castle, whence he was removed to Braan Castle, and
afterwards to Edinburgh, where, after suffering the most
barbarous indignities, he was publicly executed, and his
head placed on the Tolbooth. There are still some vestiges of the ancient residence of the family of Ross,
whose territories were, in the eleventh century, erected
by Malcolm Canmore into an earldom, which remained
in that family till the death of William, the last earl,
without issue male, in 1371, after which the dignity
continued to be held by various claimants till the year
1478, when it was finally annexed to the crown. The
present representative of the title, and of the chieftainship of the clan, is George Ross, Esq., of Pitcalnie, a
descendant from the brother of the Earl William, who
died in 1371; and the chief proprietor of the lands in the
parish is Sir Charles W. A. Ross, of Balnagown, Bart.
The parish, which is bounded on the north-east
mainly by the Frith of Tain, is about thirty-five miles
in length, and varies from three to sixteen miles in
breadth, comprising an area of nearly 230 square miles,
of which but a very small portion is arable. The surface is strikingly diversified with hills of various elevation, and with open valleys and narrow glens; and near
the western extremity is the ancient and extensive forest
of Balnagown, in which are deer of unusually large
size. The most lofty of the hills are, Cairnchuinaig, on
the lands of Dibbisdale, in which are found cairngorms
of great beauty; and Sithain-a-Charra, in Balnagown
forest, in which, though it is at a very considerable distance from the sea, have been discovered shells of
different kinds. The principal river is the Oikell, which
has its source in the adjoining parish of Assynt, and,
after a course of thirty miles, in part of which it forms
the northern boundary of the parish, falls into the Kyle
Frith; it is navigable for nearly twelve miles. The
river Carron intersects the parish from west to east,
and joins the Kyle at Bonar-Bridge. There are also
numerous lakes, some of which contain trout of excellent quality, especially Loch-a-Chorry, in which are trout
weighing six pounds; but none of these lakes are of
great extent, or distinguished by any interesting features.
The rivers Oikell and Carron abound with salmon;
there is likewise a salmon-fishery at Bonar-Bridge, and
flounders are taken at ebb-tide. The fisheries are all
the property of the Duke of Sutherland.
The soil is exceedingly various. On the arable lands,
which are under good cultivation, producing favourable crops, it is tolerably fertile; but the hills and other
parts are heathy and barren. The hills afford, however,
good pasture for sheep, of which great numbers are
reared, and sent mainly to the Falkirk trysts and to
Edinburgh: the cattle, which are generally of the Highland black breed, are grazed in large herds on the
pastures, and forwarded chiefly to Leith and to London,
by the northern steamers. There are some considerable
remains of ancient wood; and extensive plantations
have been formed on some of the lands, consisting
chiefly of oak, birch, and firs, all of which are in a very
thriving state. The prevailing rocks are of the granite
or the conglomerate kind, alternated with gneiss and
whinstone; mica-slate and greywacke are sometimes met
with; and at Knockierny, on the confines of the parish
of Assynt, white and variegated marbles of the purest
quality are found. The rateable annual value of the
parish is £5172. Invercarron House, on the north bank
of the river Carron; Gladefield House, the property of
the Duke of Sutherland; Braelangwell Lodge, belonging
to Sir Charles W. A. Ross, beautifully situated on the
Carron, which forms a picturesque cascade near the
house; and Amat Cottage, the occasional residence of
George Ross, Esq., of Pitcalnie, near the confluence of
some small rivulets with the Carron, are all handsome
residences. The parish is connected with the coast of
Sutherland by a substantial and elegant bridge across
the Frith at Bonar, erected in 1812, to supersede the
dangerous ferry, previously the only means of communication. This important structure, which cost £14,000,
consists of three arches: one, on the Sutherland side,
is of cast iron, 150 feet in span; and the others, which
are of stone, are of fifty and sixty feet respectively.
There are no manufactures; but some trade is carried
on here in the exportation of grain, wool, oak-bark, and
salmon, and in the importation of coal, lime, salt, meal,
and other articles for the supply of the district. Many
fishing-boats, also, visit the Frith during the season. A
good pier of stone was constructed at Bonar some years
since, by Mr. Ross, late of the Balnagown Arms inn,
at his own expense; and the harbour affords safe shelter
and accommodation to vessels not exceeding sixty tons'
burthen, which can come up to the bridge. A postoffice at Bonar has a daily delivery: the mail is conveyed from Tain by a post gig, which carries also four
passengers. A fair is held annually, generally in the
last week of November, but sometimes in the first
week of December; it continues for three days, and
is numerously attended by dealers from all parts of
the adjacent districts. On the first day there is a fine
show of Highland cattle; and on the two others, large
quantities of dairy and agricultural produce, and various
kinds of merchandise, with home-spun webs in abundance, are exposed for sale, and general business to a
great extent is transacted.
The ecclesiastical affairs are under the superintendence of the presbytery of Tain and synod of Ross. The
minister's stipend is £278, with a manse, and a glebe
valued at about £15 per annum; patron, John Hay
Mackenzie, Esq., of Cromarty. The church is a neat
substantial structure, erected in 1799, and containing
650 sittings, all free: in the steeple is a fine-toned bell
which was found in a French ship of war of 74 guns,
captured in 1775 by Admiral Sir John Lockhart Ross,
of Balnagown. A church was erected by parliamentary
grant, in 1827, at Croich, a remote pastoral district;
and another portion of this extensive parish is under
the care of a missionary connected with the Established Church, whose charge also extends over a part
of the parish of Criech, in the county of Sutherland,
where his station is, at Rosehall. The chapel for the
mission, erected by Dunning, Lord Ashburton, and repaired in 1832, contains 300 sittings; and the missionary, who is appointed by the Royal Bounty committee, receives a stipend of £60, to which £5 are
added by the Duke of Sutherland. The members of
the Free Church have also a place of worship. The
parochial school, situated near the church, is attended
by about 100 children; the master has a salary of
£34, with a house, and an allowance of £2. 2. in lieu
of garden, the fees averaging £20 per annum. A parochial library, consisting chiefly of religious books,
is supported by subscription. There are numerous circular forts in the parish, supposed to be of Pictish or
Danish origin; but most of them are in a very imperfect
state, from the removal of the stones as materials for
building. In the churchyard is a stone five feet in
length, and about two feet in breadth and thickness; it
has been hollowed into two unequal cells, and is elaborately sculptured with various figures, among which
are a man on horseback in the act of darting a javelin,
an imperial crown, and what appears to be a camel.
This relic is supposed to be part of a sarcophagus in
which, according to tradition, the remains of a warrior
who died here of the wounds he received in battle, were
deposited. There are also some remains of Druidical
circles in different parts of the parish.
Kincardine In Monteith
KINCARDINE IN MONTEITH, a parish, in the
county of Perth, 2 miles (S. by W.) from Doune;
containing, with the villages of Kirklane and Woodlane,
2232 inhabitants. This parish, of which the name is of
very uncertain etymology, is pleasantly situated in the
vale of Monteith, and in the southern part of the county;
it is of triangular form, having the east angle washed by
the confluence of the rivers Forth and Teith, of which
the former bounds the parish on the south, and the
latter on the north-east. The parish extends from the
east point for nearly ten miles to the south-west, and
for about twelve miles to the north-west; but is
intersected by a portion of the parish of Kilmadock,
three miles in breadth, which reaches from the Teith to
the Forth. It comprises by computation 7500 acres, of
which 5000, on the shores of the Forth, are mostly rich
carse land, and the remainder, on the banks of the Teith,
dry-field. The surface towards the Forth is generally
level, but rises in gentle undulations, westward of Blair-Drummond, into a ridge, which has an elevation of
300 feet above the level of the sea, and commands a fine
view of the Grampian mountains to the north and west;
of the Ochils to the east, with the castle of Stirling, the
field of Bannockburn, and the hill of Craigforth; and
to the south, of the hills of Lennox, extending from the
castle of Stirling to Dumbarton. The river Goodie,
which has its source in the loch of Monteith, in the
parish of Port, intersects this parish in its course towards the Forth; and there are numerous springs, and
several small burns in various parts. The carse land
includes the moss of Kincardine, which to a considerable extent has been cleared, and also part of Moss
Flanders.
The soil, where the moss has been removed, is generally a rich blue clay of great depth and fertility, producing grain of all kinds and good green crops; that of
the dry-field is chiefly a light loam, yielding excellent
crops of oats, barley, potatoes, turnips, and the various
grasses. The farms are of moderate extent, and the
system of agriculture in an improved state; the farmbuildings are substantial and commodious, and the
lands have been partly inclosed. Considerable attention
is paid to live stock; the cattle were formerly of the
Highland breed, but on most of the dairy-farms cows of
the Ayrshire breed have been introduced. Few sheep
are pastured. The horses used for agriculture on the
dry-field lands are of a moderate size; but on the
carse, which requires a stronger kind, a breed between
the hardier of the Perthshire, and the Clydesdale, is preferred. The substratum of the parish is chiefly of the
old red sandstone formation; in some parts, of good
quality for building, for which purpose it is quarried;
but in other parts, of too soft a texture for that use.
Veins of calcareous spar, and occasionally barytes, are
found in the quarries; but no organic remains, except a
few vegetable impressions, have been discovered. The
woods and plantations are of oak, ash, beech, elm, birch,
and firs, for which the soil appears well adapted; and
the plantations, which have been recently much extended, are well managed and in a thriving condition.
The rateable annual value of the parish is £12,500.
Blair-Drummond, the seat of Henry Home Drummond,
Esq., M. P., the principal landowner, is a spacious and
handsome mansion, erected about the year 1715, by his
ancestor, George Drummond, Esq., and to which a wing
has been added by the present proprietor. It is situated
in a richly-wooded park planted by Lord Kames, who,
by marriage with the grand-daughter of George Drummond, succeeded to the estate, which at that time
included 1500 acres of Kincardine Moss. Of this moss
a considerable portion was recovered by his exertions;
and under those of his son and successor, nearly the
whole of the remainder was reclaimed. In the house is
a collection of portraits by Sir Godfrey Kneller, among
which are those of the Lord Chancellor Perth and his
brother, the Earl of Melfort, and, in the drawing-room,
a portrait of the late Lord Kames in his robes of office
as a judge. Ochtertyre, the seat of David Dundas,
Esq., M.P. for Sutherlandshire, is beautifully situated on
the banks of the Teith. On the lands of Blair-Drummond, and also on those of Ochtertyre, various comfortable cottages have been built by the proprietors,
for the accommodation of the families of the persons
employed on their estates; and in the district which
formed part of the late quoad sacra parish of Norrieston
is the village of Thornhill, noticed in the account of
Norrieston.
The ecclesiastical affairs are under the superintendence of the presbytery of Dunblane and synod of
Perth and Stirling. The minister's stipend is £255. 8.,
with a manse, and a glebe valued at £14 per annum;
patroness, Lady Willoughby de Eresby. The church,
which was greatly dilapidated, was rebuilt in 1814,
chiefly through the exertions of Mr. Drummond, who, in
addition to the payment of more than two-thirds of the
expense of a plainer building, contributed the whole
additional charge of the present elegant structure after
a design by the late Mr. Crichton, of Edinburgh. It is
a cruciform edifice in the later English style, with an
embattled tower crowned by minarets, and contains
770 sittings. The parochial school is well conducted,
and is attended by about seventy children; the master
has a salary of £34, with a good house and garden, and
the fees average £14 per annum. There are schools,
also, at Norrieston; a school in Kincardine Moss, of
which the master has a dwelling-house, with an acre of
land, the gift of Mr. Drummond; and two others, unendowed. Within the gardens of Blair-Drummond is a
tumulus, 92 yards in circumference and fifteen feet in
height; and in the pleasure-grounds is one of larger
dimensions. Near the east lodge is another, in which
were found fragments of urns and human bones; it is
surrounded with a circular fosse, called Wallace's trench.
In clearing the moss, several remains of antiquity were
discovered, among which were a large brass camp kettle,
some spear heads, and part of a Roman road, of which
seventy yards were clearly defined, crossing the moss of
Kincardine from the Forth to the Teith.
Kincardine O'Neil
KINCARDINE O'NEIL, a parish, in the district of
Kincardine O'Neil, county of Aberdeen, 11 miles
(S. by E.) from Alford; containing 1857 inhabitants, of
whom 288 are in the village. This place, which is of
some antiquity, derives its name from its situation near
the termination of a range of hills; and its distinguishing adjunct, O'Neil, from the name of a rivulet which
flows round the village. A small hospital for the support of eight aged men was built at an early period, by
one of the bishops of Aberdeen, and subsisted till the
time of the Reformation, when it was suppressed: no
vestiges of the building now remain. The parish, which
is bounded on the south by the river Dee, is about seven
miles in extreme length, and nearly five miles in breadth,
comprising 15,000 acres, of which almost 6000 are arable, 3500 woodland and plantations, and the remainder,
of which 1500 are capable of improvement, moorland
pasture and waste. The surface is divided into three
wide valleys by ranges of hills of great extent and various degrees of elevation; and at the eastern boundary
is the hill of Fare, which rises to a height of 1800 feet
above the level of the sea, forming a well-known landmark to vessels navigating the eastern coast. The hill
of Learney, which is a continuation of Fare, abounds
with peat, furnishing a plentiful supply of fuel for the
inhabitants; and most of the other hills in the parish
are either cultivated, or clothed with wood, to their very
summits. The river Dee is here seventy yards in width,
and, about two miles below the village, is crossed by an
elegant bridge of granite, erected in 1812, at a cost of
£3500, of which one-half was paid by government, and
the other raised by subscription. Salmon are found in
the Dee, frequently in great abundance, and are generally taken with the rod, affording excellent sport to the
angler; but very few trout are seen in the stream, and
even the numbers of salmon have greatly diminished
within the last few years. The only other stream of
any importance in the parish is the burn of Belty, which
rises among the hills at its north-western boundary,
and, flowing in a south-eastern direction through the
central valley, which it divides into two nearly equal
portions, falls into the Dee in the parish of Banchory-Ternan. Though a very inconsiderable stream, it frequently, after rains, swells into an impetuous torrent,
and inundates the level valley through which it passes,
doing much injury to the crops: in 1829, it carried away
two bridges, and greatly damaged three others. Some
trout, but of very small size, are found in this river.
The soil along the banks of the Dee is light; in the
valley of the Belty, much deeper, and of richer quality,
resting on a subsoil of clay; and in the higher parts of
the parish, heathy moorland, with large tracts of peatmoss. The crops are, oats, bear, barley, potatoes, and
turnips, with the usual grasses; the system of husbandry has for many years been steadily advancing,
and is at present in a highly improved state. Large
portions of the waste grounds have been reclaimed, and
brought under profitable cultivation, both by the proprietors and tenants. The lands have been inclosed
with stone fences; substantial and commodious farmbuildings have been erected, many of which are roofed
with slate; and on almost every farm, threshing-mills
of good construction are found. Great attention is
paid to the improvement of the breed of horses, blackcattle, and sheep, and to the management of the dairyfarms; and large quantities of butter of excellent quality, with a moderate proportion of cheese, and eggs
and poultry, are sent to the Aberdeen market, whither,
also, considerable numbers of fat-cattle are forwarded,
to be shipped for London. The plantations, which are
of great extent, consist chiefly of larch and Scotch firs,
for both of which, especially for the former, the soil is
well adapted; oak and ash have recently been tried
with success, and birch seems to be indigenous along
the banks of the river Dee. The principal substrata
are whinstone and sandstone; and there is also abundance of granite of very excellent quality, which occurs
in large masses, from some of which have been cut
blocks seventeen feet in length. There is, however,
neither slate nor limestone in the parish; nor are there
quarries of any kind in regular operation. The rateable
annual value of Kincardine O'Neil is £7018.
Craigmile, the seat of the principal heritor, a handsome mansion to which additions have been made by the
present proprietor, is well situated in a richly-planted
demesne. The house of Learney, which was destroyed
by an accidental fire some few years since, has been
rebuilt in an elegant modern style; and Campfield,
Kincardine Lodge, and Stranduff, are also pleasant residences. The village, which is on the turnpike-road
from Ballater to Aberdeen, is neatly built; it has a rural
aspect, and is frequented during the summer months by
invalids for the benefit of their health. An excellent
inn has been erected of late years by Mr. Gordon; and
a circulating library, containing a well-assorted collection, has been established. There are no manufactures
carried on here; but many of the women are employed
in knitting stockings for the Aberdeen houses. The
post-office has a daily delivery; and the mail passes
regularly through the village. Fairs for black-cattle,
sheep, and horses, are held in May and September, in
the village; and during the winter months, markets for
agricultural produce of every kind are held monthly at
Tomavern, in the northern district of the parish. The
ecclesiastical affairs are under the superintendence
of the presbytery of Kincardine O'Neil and synod of
Aberdeen. The minister's stipend is £232. 4., with a
manse, and a glebe valued at £12 per annum; patron,
Sir John Forbes, Bart. The church is an ancient structure, of which the date is unknown. The roof was destroyed by fire in 1733, and only the walls, which are
built of small stones imbedded in lime, left standing:
the edifice was, however, restored immediately, has
since been repaired, and is now in good condition, affording accommodation for a congregation of 640 persons.
The members of the Free Church have a place of worship. There are three parochial schools, in the three
divisions of the parish; the masters have salaries of
£25 each, with a house, and the original master has also
a garden. They all partake of the Dick bequest, and
the fees average to each about £20 per annum.
Kincardineshire
KINCARDINESHIRE, or The Mearns, a maritime county, in the east of Scotland, bounded on the
north-west by the river Dee and part of Aberdeenshire,
on the east and south-east by the German Ocean, and
on the south-west by the county of Forfar. It lies
between 56° 46' and 57° 7' (N. Lat.) and 2° 1' and
2° 45' (W. Lon.), and is about thirty-two miles in
length, and twenty-four in extreme breadth; comprising
an area of 380 square miles, or 243,444 acres; 7620
houses, of which 7304 are inhabited; and containing a
population of 33,075, of whom 15,829 are males, and
17,246 females. The county is supposed by some to
have derived the name Mearns, which is proper only to
a particular portion of it, from Mernia, brother of Kenneth II., but, with greater probability, others deduce it
from the Vernicones, by whom the district was inhabited
in the time of Ptolemy. Few events of historical importance are recorded, though it is conjectured that the
battle between the Caledonians under Galgacus and the
Romans under Agricola took place here. Prior to the
Reformation, the county was included partly within the
archdiocese of St. Andrew's, and partly within the
dioceses of Aberdeen and Brechin; it is at present
chiefly in the synod of Angus and Mearns, and comprises the presbytery of Fordoun, in that synod, and
part of the presbyteries of Kincardine O'Neil and Aberdeen, in the synod of Aberdeen. For civil government
it is undivided, and for session purposes is associated
with the counties of Aberdeen and Banff, in the former
of which the courts are held; it contains Stonehaven,
which is the county town, and the towns and villages of
Bervie, Gourdon, Johnshaven, Laurencekirk, Fettercairn, and Auchinblae. Under the act of the 2nd of
William IV., the county returns one member to the
imperial parliament. The number of parishes is nineteen.
The surface near the coast is tolerably level, though
varying in elevation. The Grampians occupy the central, western, and northern parts of the county; and
from their base the land subsides towards the south-east,
into what is generally called the Howe of the Mearns,
forming a continuation of the vale of Strathmore, and
between which and the sea there is a tract of swelling
ground. The Howe is a beautiful tract of champaign
country, about fifty square miles in extent, richly cultivated, embellished with plantations, and defended from
the colder winds by the Grampians, and by the hills of
Garvock and Arbuthnott, which are from 500 to 800
feet high. The principal mountains are, the Strath
Fenella, detached from the Grampian range by a narrow
vale from which it takes its name, and about 1500 feet
in height; Cairn-a-Mount, which is 2500 feet; the
hill of Fare, 1800 feet; Clachnabane, which has an elevation of 2370 feet, and is crowned with a mass of rock,
rising perpendicularly almost one hundred feet above
the main surface, and resembling an old fortress; and
Mount Battoch, the highest point of the Grampian
range in the county, and which has an elevation of
3465 feet. The principal river is the Dee, which has
its source in Aberdeenshire, and, after intersecting this
county for about eight miles in a course from west to
east, forms its northern boundary for fourteen miles,
and falls into the sea at Aberdeen. The other rivers
are, the North Esk, which rises in the sequestered vale of
Glen-Esk, on the confines of Forfarshire, and, after forming the boundary between the Mearns and that county
for above ten miles, falls into the sea three miles to the
north of Montrose; the Bervie; the Cowie; and several
smaller streams. The chief lakes are, Drum, which is
partly in the county of Aberdeen, and Loch Leys; each
is about three miles in circumference, and the latter has
a small artificial island containing the remains of an
ancient edifice of which there are no authentic notices.
About one-third of the land is arable, and in good
cultivation; one-eighth capable of being cultivated with
advantage, one-twelfth woodland and plantations, and the
remainder rough mountain pasture. The soil varies from
the most sterile to the most fertile; the district of the
Howe of the Mearns is extremely rich, and the system of agriculture in a high state of improvement.
Great attention is paid to the rearing of live stock. The
number of cattle, which are generally the Angus black,
is on an average 25,000, of which 5000 are milch-cows;
and the number of sheep is about 24,000, of various
breeds, but chiefly the black-faced. There are no minerals of any importance: limestone is quarried in some
places, and there is an abundance of granite in the
northern, and of red sandstone in the southern, section
of the county. Various gems are found in the mountains
and in the rocks, of which the principal are the topaz or
Cairngorm. The seats are, Arbuthnott House, Dunnottar, Fetteresso, Fettercairn, Crathes, Blackhall, Kirkton Hill, Tilquhilly, Inch Marlo, Thornton, Drumtochty
Castle, Durris, Ury, Glenbervie, Muchalls, Mount Cyrus,
Inglismaldie, Lauriston, Fasque, Johnston, and others.
The manufactures are neither important nor extensive;
they are chiefly of canvass and coarse linens, with
some trifling branches of the cotton manufacture.
At Laurencekirk, the highly-esteemed snuff-boxes of
wood are made. Facility of communication is afforded
by good roads in various directions, of which some are
turnpike; and a road over the Grampian hills has been
made, and is kept in good repair. The rateable annual
value of real property in the county is £134,341, including £3858 for fisheries. There are numerous remains of antiquity, of which the chief are those of Kincardine Castle, once a royal residence, and of Dunnottar
Castle, the ancient seat of the Keiths, earls-marischal of
Scotland, romantically situated on the summit of a lofty
rock boldly projecting into the sea.
Kinclaven
KINCLAVEN, a parish, in the county of Perth,
5 miles (S. by W.) from Blairgowrie; containing 880
inhabitants. This place, of which the name, of Celtic
origin, is descriptive of the situation of its church, is
bounded on the north by the river Tay, which separates
it from Caputh; and on the east and south by the
same river, which divides it from the parish of Cargill.
It is about five miles in length and two miles in average
breadth, comprising an area of ten square miles. The
ancient castle, now in ruins, is said to have been built
by Malcolm Canmore, and to have been for many centuries an occasional residence of the kings of Scotland,
from which several of their charters are dated. During
the wars that arose, from the contested succession to
the throne, between Bruce and Baliol, the castle was
occupied by an English garrison, which, being at an
unguarded moment surprised by Sir William Wallace,
was taken and dismantled so far as to render it no
longer tenable as a place of strength. It is the property
of Baroness Keith, who pays to the Duke of Atholl,
annually, a small sum as its hereditary constable. The
parish comprises about 6400 acres, of which 3900 are
arable, 1500 woodland and plantations, 800 moorland
pasture, and the remainder moss, water, and waste.
The surface is broken by an elevated ridge, extending
across the centre of the parish from north-east to southwest, and from which the lands slope in a gentle declivity to the Tay on the north and south. The scenery,
enlivened by the windings of the Tay, and enriched
with woods and plantations, has a very pleasing appearance. The river Isla, descending from the lower Grampian range, flows through the vale of Strathmore, and
falls into the Tay at the eastern extremity of the parish;
and there are several small lakes, in which pike, perch,
and eels of large size are found.
The soil, though various, is generally fertile, producing good crops of wheat, barley, oats, turnips, and
potatoes, of which last great quantities are raised for
the London market. The state of agriculture is much
improved; the rotation plan of husbandry is in use, and
carefully adapted to the different soils. The lands have
been well drained; several tracts of moorland have
been brought into profitable cultivation, and the various
farm-buildings are substantial and commodious, and
some of them highly ornamental. The cattle are of a
mixed breed, and great attention is paid to their improvement; Ayrshire cows, and bulls of the Teeswater
breed, have been introduced; and the horses, previously
of small size, are now improved by the introduction of
the Clydesdale breed. The plantations are chiefly larch
and common fir, of which, however, the former are not
in a very thriving state; and there are numerous coppices of oak, which are generally felled when they have
attained twenty-five years' growth. The rateable annual value of the parish is £4537. There were formerly
several small villages, of which at present the sites are
only to be distinguished by some of the ancient trees
yet standing. The village of Arntully (which see), though
much reduced in extent and population, is still remaining. The roads from the ferries at Caputh, Kinclaven,
and others over the Tay, intersect the parish, and afford
facilities of communication; the post-town is Perth, to
which, and also to Dunkeld, a sub-office has been established at Stanley. The ecclesiastical affairs are
under the superintendence of the presbytery of Dunkeld and synod of Perth and Stirling. The minister's
stipend is £276. 11. 5., with a manse, and a glebe valued
at £18 per annum; patrons, the family of Richardson.
The church, inconveniently situated at the eastern extremity of the parish, contains 320 sittings, all of which
are free; at the east end is a large monument to the
memory of Alexander Campbell, Bishop of Brechin, who
is styled "Laird of Kerco, in this parish," and who died
in 1608. The church is in a very indifferent state of
repair; and it is expected that another will be soon
built on a more convenient site. There is a place of
worship for members of the United Secession. The
parochial school is attended by about sixty children;
the master has a salary of £34, with a good house and
garden, and the fees, &c., average £24 per annum. There
is also a school in connexion with the Seceding congregation, supported by subscription.
Kinfauns
KINFAUNS, a parish, in the county of Perth, 1½
mile (E. by S.) from Perth; containing 720 inhabitants.
This place, of which the name, in the Celtic language,
is descriptive of its situation at the head of a narrow
valley inclosed with hills, and opening into the Carse of
Gowrie, was anciently the seat of the Charteris family,
of whom Thomas Charteris de Longueville, a native of
France, having killed a nobleman of the court of Philip
le Bel in a duel, was compelled to make his escape, and
for some time subsisted by piracy on the open seas.
Charteris, called, from the colour of his flag, the Red
Reaver, was encountered and taken prisoner by Sir
William Wallace, on that hero's route to France,
where, making intercession with the French monarch,
Sir William obtained for his captive a full pardon and
the honour of knighthood. Sir Thomas Charteris now
became the zealous friend and adherent of Wallace,
whom he accompanied to Scotland; and on Wallace
being betrayed into the hands of Edward, King of
England, he retired to Lochmaben till Bruce asserted
his claim to the crown. He was a companion of Bruce at
the taking of Perth, in 1313, and, in reward of his services, obtained a grant of the lands of Kinfauns, which
remained for many years in the possession of his descendants. The lands passed afterwards to the Carnegies, a branch of the Northesk family, and subsequently
to the Blairs, whose sole heiress conveyed them by marriage to John Lord Gray, grandfather of the present
Lord Gray, of Kinfauns Castle.
The parish, which forms the western portion of the
Carse of Gowrie, is bounded on the south by the river
Tay; it is about five miles in length and one mile and a
half in average breadth, comprising an area of 4800 acres,
of which 2380 are arable, 240 meadow and pasture, and
the remainder woodland and plantations. The surface,
towards the river, is level, and thence rises, by a gradual and easy ascent, to the base of a ridge of hills
which traverses the parish in a line from east to west.
Of these hills the highest is the hill of Kinnoull, which
is but partly in this parish, and has an elevation of 632
feet above the level of the Tay, presenting to the south
an abruptly-precipitous mass of rock, covered for nearly
three-fourths of its height with trees, and thence bare
to its summit. On the east of this hill, the ground has
a gentle declivity; and in a level spot here, at a considerable height above the Tay, is the castle of Kinfauns. Still farther east, the ground again rises abruptly,
forming the western acclivity of the hill of Binn, or the
Tower Hill, so called from a tower on its summit, built
within the last forty years by the late Lord Gray, for an
observatory. To the east of this hill the land slopes
gradually till it subsides into a deep ravine, on the opposite side of which is another hill, and, farther off, a
fourth, the latter commanding from its summit a varied and extensive view of the whole carse, the tower
of Dundee, Broughty Castle, and of the course of the
Tay from a mile below Perth to its influx into the German Ocean: to the south is a fine view over the vale of
Strathearn. Beyond these hills, which are mostly
wooded to their summit, rise various others towards the
north, in gentle undulations, and gradually subsiding in
the vale of Strathmore, of which they form the southern
boundary. The Tay, which bounds the parish for more
than three miles, is the only river of importance; but
three small streamlets, rising among the hills, intersect
the parish from north to south. The Tay abounds with
salmon and different kinds of trout; pike are numerous,
and sturgeon are found occasionally.
The soil is various; near the Tay, a rich loamy clay
producing excellent crops of wheat, barley, oats, beans,
peas, potatoes, and turnips, with the usual grasses; and
for a considerable height on the acclivities of the hills,
a light, but deep and fertile, black mould. The system
of agriculture is improved; the farms vary from 125 to
300 acres in extent; the farm-buildings are substantial
and well arranged, and most of them of modern erection. The lands have been well drained, chiefly with
tiles, for the making of which good clay is found; and
on the estate of Kinfauns, an embankment has been
formed, connecting an island in the river with the main
land. The cattle are of a mixed breed, with the exception of cows for the dairy, which are generally the Ayrshire. Sheep are kept only upon one farm; they are
of the pure Leicestershire breed, and not more than 300
in number. The plantations are, oak, ash, elm, beech,
and Scotch fir, with larch and spruce intermixed; birch
and mountain-ash are scarce. In the grounds of the
mansions, sycamore, lime, poplar, Spanish and horse
chesnut, and silver fir attain a luxuriant growth. The
substratum is principally whinstone, of which the hills
are all composed; and there are several quarries in
operation, producing excellent materials for the roads.
The rateable annual value of the parish is £8882.
Kinfauns Castle, seated on an eminence overlooking
the Tay, is of modern character, erected between 1819
and 1826, after a design by Smirke: here is preserved
the two-handed sword of Sir Thomas Charteris, besides
a variety of pictures and a superb library. Seggieden House is finely situated near the margin of the
river. Glendoick House is a good mansion, built by
Robert Craigie, lord president of the court of session,
and grandfather of the present proprietor; and Glencarse House is also a handsome modern mansion. There
are no villages, and the largest hamlet contains only
twelve families: the turnpike-road from Perth to Dundee passes through the parish. It was proposed to form
a railway through this place from Dundee, by Perth, to
Crieff, and the ground was surveyed for that purpose;
but the proposal has not been carried into effect. The
Tay is navigable to Perth for vessels of 200 tons. The
salmon-fisheries in the parish produce a rental of £3366,
of which about £2200 belong to Lord Gray, £766 to the
city of Perth, and £400 to Mr. Hay, of Seggieden; the
number of men employed is 104. There is a branch
post-office in the parish; steam-boats ply daily in the
river between Perth and Dundee; and there are piers
at this place for the landing of passengers and goods, at
which, also, potatoes and grain are shipped, chiefly for
London. The ecclesiastical affairs are under the
superintendence of the presbytery of Perth and synod
of Perth and Stirling. The minister's stipend is
£242. 11.6., with a manse, and a glebe valued at £20
per annum; patron, the Crown. The church, which is
well situated, has been built at various times; the nave
is very ancient, and the aisles of comparatively modern
date. It is in substantial repair, and contains 416 sittings, the whole of which are free. A parochial library
was established in 1826, by donations of books from
the heritors, and is supported by small quarterly subscriptions. The parochial school is attended by about
seventy children; the master has a salary of £34, with
a house and garden, and the fees average £13 per annum. There is another school in the parish, attended
principally by children from Kinnoull and Kilspindie,
supported chiefly by the fees. On the side of the hill
of Kinnoull is a cave called the Dragon Hole, the hidingplace of Sir William Wallace; and on the lands of Glendoick is an old house in which Prince Charles Edward
passed a night after his defeat at Culloden.
Kingarth
KINGARTH, a parish, in the county of Bute,
8 miles (S. by E.) from Rothesay; containing, with the
villages of Kilchattan-Bay, Kerrycroy, and Piperhall,
931 inhabitants. This parish takes its name from the
promontory of Garroch Head, forming its extreme point
to the south, and called in Gaelic Ceann Garbh, which
signifies "stormy head." Very little is known concerning the ancient history of the place; but there are
traditions of its having been of considerable importance.
Christianity was early introduced here. The name of
Saint Catan, or Cathanus, has been transmitted in the
appellation of a bay called Kilchattan, "the cell or
burial-place of Catan." St. Blane, also, is said to
have been born here, and to have been the founder of
the original church of Kingarth, of which the ruins,
still remaining, are designated by his name, as is a
hill ascending from Garroch Head. The parish was
anciently the scene, too, of some military conflicts. On
the south-west shore is the fort of Dunagoil, "the fortified hill of the Lowlanders," commanding nearly the
best landing-place on the whole coast, and having a
view of the passage from the western seas by Kilbrannan
sound, and of the entrance into the Frith of Clyde from
the south. Its origin is not known; but it has frequently been attributed to the Danes. The lands of the
district were formerly held by several proprietors called
Barons, who are at present represented by only four
owners of small portions of ground, the larger part of
the parish being the property of the Marquess of Bute.
Kingarth is six and a half miles in length, from north
to south, and two and a half in mean breadth, containing
8325 acres. It is situated in the Isle of Bute, and is
bounded on the north-west by the loch of Ascog, a
part of Loch Fad, and Quien loch, which separate it
from the parish of Rothesay; and on the east, south,
and south-west by the Frith of Clyde. Its figure is
irregular. The shore is indented by several small bays;
and the parish is marked by a gradual narrowing from
its north-western boundary till it becomes an isthmus a
mile and a half in breadth, beyond which is a peninsula
two miles in length, terminating in the promontory of
Garroch Head. The coast on the east and south is
rocky and precipitous; on the south-west it rises more
gently. It is marked by the bays of Ascog, Scoulag,
and Kilchattan, to the east; and of Scalpsie, Stravanan,
and Dunagoil, to the south-west. The frith is eight
miles wide between Scoulag bay and the nearest point of
Ayrshire at Largs, and nine miles wide between Dunagoil
bay and the nearest part of the island of Arran; it is
ninety fathoms deep between Garroch Head and Little
Cumbray, where its depth is greatest. The land in
general is considerably elevated above the level of the
sea: the principal hills are Suidhe-Chatain, "the seat
of Catan," 520 feet high, and Saint Blane's hill, 486
feet high. The loch of Ascog, Quien loch, and Loch
Fad cover respectively seventy-five, sixty-nine, and 170
acres. The climate, though moist, is mild and salubrious.
The soil in general is light and gravelly, though in
some places loam and clay are to be found. About
3936 acres are occasionally under tillage; 3071 are
moor and pasture; and 940 acres are under wood, both
natural and planted, the latter consisting of spruce,
larch, Scotch fir, oak, and other hard-woods. All kinds
of grain, and the usual green crops, are grown. The
cattle are chiefly of the Ayrshire breed, to the rearing
of which great attention has been recently paid: the
sheep, also, are tolerably numerous. The modern system
of husbandry is followed, and the improvements in
every department have been rapidly advancing for the
last ten or twelve years: most of the farm-houses have
been rebuilt, and the grounds inclosed chiefly with
thorn-hedges. The prevailing rock is the old red sandstone, with conglomerate, and numerous veins and beds
of trap: coal exists, but is not wrought, and some limeworks are in operation. The rateable annual value of
the parish is £3954. The mansion-house of Mountstuart, built by James, second earl of Bute, in 1718,
is surrounded by beautiful and extensive plantations,
and is particularly famed for its choice flower-garden.
On the east coast stands Ascog House, with several
ornamental villas recently erected. In the year 1703,
the first earl of Bute obtained a charter from the crown
for the erection of a burgh of regality, to be named
Mountstuart, with the privilege of holding a weekly
market, exercising handicraft trades, and having three
annual fairs. The provisions of this charter, however,
were never carried into effect, the thriving burgh of
Rothesay, with which the parish chiefly communicates,
superseding the necessity. The roads are in good order,
and the bridges sufficient for general convenience.
There is a wharf at Kilchattan-Bay, and another at
Scoulag bay, adapted for small craft. The shipping
belonging to the parish does not exceed fifty tons; but
craft of considerable burthen from other parts frequent the ports for the purposes of importation and
exportation. The fisheries are productive.
The ecclesiastical affairs are subject to the presbytery of Dunoon and synod of Argyll; patron, the
Marquess of Bute. The stipend is £197, with a good
manse and offices, and a glebe of nearly eleven acres,
worth about £12 per annum. The church was built in
1826, and contains 600 sittings, all of which are free.
The members of the Free Church have a place of worship. The parochial school affords instruction in Latin
and Greek, with the usual branches; the master has
the legal accommodations, with the minimum salary, and
£24 fees. The antiquities of the parish consist of two
barrows or tumuli, a Druidical circle, the fort of Dunagoil,
and the ruin of the church of St. Blane, who flourished
about the close of the tenth century. The last stands on
an artificial elevation, which is inclosed by a wall of
massive stones piled one over another, 500 feet in circumference, the whole of the space having mason-work
underneath at a distance of two feet from the surface.
A considerable portion of the walls of the church still
remains, and displays architecture of great antiquity.
This parish confers the titles of Viscount Kingarth and
Baron Mountstuart upon the Marquess of Bute.
King-Edward
KING-EDWARD, a parish, in the district of Turriff, county of Aberdeen, 5 miles (S. S. E.) from
Banff; containing, with the village of Newbyth, 2492 inhabitants. This place, originally Kin-Edart, of which the
present name is an obvious corruption, is of some antiquity,
and appears to have formed part of the possessions of
the family of the Cumyns, earls of Buchan. There are
still some remains of their baronial residence, now called
King-Edward Castle, situated on a rocky eminence to
the south-east of the church, and also of Eden Castle and
others; but nothing which can throw any light upon the
early history of these fortresses has been recorded. The
parish, which is bounded on the west by the river Doveran, is about eleven miles in length, and varies from two
to five miles in breadth, comprising 17,500 acres, of which
nearly 9500 are arable, 1800 woodland and plantations,
and the remainder pasture and meadow, with large
portions of moss and waste. The surface is boldly undulated, rising in some parts into considerable elevation,
and in others subsiding into low valleys; but there are
no hills, properly so called, which attain any remarkable
height. The principal river is the Doveran, which for
some miles forms the boundary of the parish, and falls
into the sea at Banff; it abounds with salmon of excellent
quality, and the fisheries produce a good rental to their
proprietor. A copious stream called King-Edward
burn, of which the chief source is in the parish of
Gamrie, intersects this parish from east to west, and
flows into the Doveran about a mile to the west of the
church.
The soil is very various. The higher grounds are in
general mossy, resting on a bed of clay or gravel; in
the low grounds, and especially along the banks of
the Doveran, the soil is principally alluvial, and very
fertile; in other parts is a black loam, resting on
beds of rock or gravel. The chief crops are, oats,
barley, potatoes, and turnips, with the usual grasses;
very little wheat is raised. The system of husbandry
has been greatly improved; and a due rotation of crops
is observed, according to the nature of the soil. Trenchploughing and surface-draining have been for some
years in practice, by which the lands have been rendered
much more productive; the fields have been inclosed;
and the fences, partly of stone and partly of thorn, are
kept in good repair. The farm-buildings, also, have
been made more comfortable and commodious; and all
the more recent improvements in the construction of agricultural implements have been generally adopted. The
cattle are of the Aberdeenshire or Buchan breed, with
a few of the Teeswater, and some of the short-horned
breed from Yorkshire, recently introduced; the sheep
are of the Highland and Leicestershire breeds, and
great attention is paid to them. The plantations consist of Scotch fir, interspersed with spruce fir, larch,
ash, beech, oak, plane, and chesnut; they are of considerable extent, and in a thriving state. The principal
substrata are, red sandstone, greywacke, and clayslate; and iron-ore is supposed to exist. The greywacke and the red sandstone are both quarried; and
the latter, which is found in the eastern parts, is in
extensive operation. The rateable annual value of KingEdward is £6103. The mansions are, Montcoffer House,
the property of the Earl of Fife, a handsome modern
building, beautifully situated near his lordship's park
of Duff, which is partly in this parish; Eden House
and Byth House, also modern mansions, finely situated;
and Craigston Castle, a venerable ancient structure,
seated in grounds tastefully embellished. The village of
Newbyth, which is separately described, is at the southeastern extremity of the parish. Facility of communication is maintained by excellent roads, of which the
turnpike-road from Aberdeen to Banff intersects the
western portion of the parish; and by bridges over the
various streams, kept in good repair.
The ecclesiastical affairs are under the superintendence of the presbytery of Turriff and synod of Aberdeen. The minister's stipend is £204. 7. 10., with a
manse, and a glebe valued at £15 per annum; patron,
the Crown. The church, a plain structure built in
1621, contains 550 sittings. A chapel of ease in connexion with the Established Church has been erected in
the village of Newbyth; it is a neat structure containing 400 sittings. There is a place of worship in the
parish for Independents. The parochial school is well
attended; the master has a salary of £34, with a house
and garden, and the fees average about £10 per annum:
he has also a portion of the Dick bequest. With the
exception of the ruins of King-Edward Castle, there are
no relies of antiquity of any historical importance. In a
semicircular arch on the north wall of the church, is a
monument inscribed to the memory of his mother by
John Urquhart, tutor of Cromarty in 1599; and in the
Craigston aisle of the church, are monuments to the same
John Urquhart and others of the Urquhart family.
The distinguished characters connected with KingEdward have been, Dr. William Guild, minister of the
parish, and afterwards principal of King's College,
Aberdeen, and the founder of an hospital in that city
for the incorporated trades; Sir Thomas Urquhart,
author of the Jewel, who, jointly with Dr. Guild, presented a service of communion plate to the church;
and Sir Whitelaw Ainslie, author of Materia Indica.

Burgh Seal.
Kinghorn
KINGHORN, a royal
burgh and a parish, in the
district of Kirkcaldy,
county of Fife; containing,
with the village of West
Bridge, and the island of
Inch-Keith, 2935 inhabitants, of whom 1389 are in
the burgh, 3 miles (S. by W.)
from Kirkcaldy, and 9 (N.)
from Edinburgh. This place,
at a very early period, was
one of the residences of the
Scottish kings; and till within the last few years, there
were to be traced the remains of an ancient castle, situated
on rising ground near the town, and commanding a view of
the whole of the Frith of Forth. This castle, of which
the portion lately existing was called Glammis Tower,
was probably selected as a temporary residence for the
diversion of hunting in the extensive forest which lay
immediately behind it; and the town is fancifully said
to have derived its name from the frequent soundings of
the horn during the royal sports of the chase; the true
derivation being from the Gaelic terms Kean or Kin, a
"chief or headland," and Gorn, "green." The date of the
foundation of the town cannot be precisely ascertained,
though, if not at an earlier period the abode of fishermen,
whom its advantageous situation might have attracted to
settle on the coast, it would naturally have arisen from the
proximity of the castle. Whatever its origin, it appears
to have attained such a degree of importance in the reign
of David I. as induced that monarch to confer upon it
the privileges of a royal burgh. This grant was confirmed by Alexander III., who, some time afterwards,
returning to Kinghorn Castle from a hunting excursion
late in the evening, by a road winding along some precipitous cliffs, was thrown, with his horse, about half a
mile to the west of the town, and killed on the spot, on
the 16th of March, 1285. A cross was erected at the
place where the king fell, and remained till the reign of
James II.; but no vestiges of it can now be traced.
The castle of Glammis, with the lordship of Kinghorn,
was granted by Robert II., as a marriage portion with
his daughter, Janet, to Sir John Lyon, whose successors
were invested by James VI. with the title of earls of
Kinghorn, which in the reign of Charles II. was merged
in that of the earls of Strathmore.
The town is situated on the shore of the Frith of
Forth, directly opposite to the port of Leith, and on the
great road from Edinburgh to Dundee; it is built on
the slope of some gently rising ground which, towards
the north-west, attains a considerable elevation. The
principal street has lately been much improved, and
many of the houses have been rebuilt in better style;
but the inferior streets have a very indifferent appearance. There are two public libraries, supported by subscription; but the reading-rooms, supplied with the leading journals, have just been discontinued. The chief
trade carried on here is the spinning of flax, for which
there are three extensive mills; the machinery is partly
impelled by steam, and partly by water-power, the latter
derived from the loch of Kinghorn, about half a mile
from the town. In these mills 470 persons are employed, of whom more than 300 are females. There
is also a bleachfield, in which about seventy persons
are generally engaged; and a considerable number of
the inhabitants are occupied in hand-loom weaving.
A harbour which, from its situation near the church,
was called the Kirk harbour, is now in a ruinous condition;
but it is in contemplation to restore it, for which an estimate of the expense has been made, amounting to from
£20,000 to £30,000. At present, it gives accommodation
only to a few fishing-boats; but a considerable traffic
is maintained by another harbour, Pettycur, half a mile
west of the town, and which is one of the principal
ferries between Fife and Mid Lothian. The quay at
Pettycur affords convenient opportunities of landing
passengers, goods, and cattle, when the state of the tide
will permit vessels to approach. The harbour and anchorage dues produce to the town a revenue of about £180
per annum.

Second Seal of the Burgh.
The burgh was formerly
governed by a provost, two
bailies, a treasurer, and a
council comprising thirteen
merchants, sailors, and brewers, and the deacons of the
five trades. The magistrates
held their various courts,
and exercised, both in civil
and criminal cases, all the
jurisdiction of a royal burgh.
The incorporated trades consisted of the hammermen,
weavers, shoemakers, tailors, and bakers, all possessing exclusive privileges. This state of things continued,
with little alteration, till the year 1841, when, on the day
fixed for the election of the corporation officers, a quorum of the council could not be mustered, and the burgh
was consequently disfranchised. Application, under these
circumstances, was made to the court of session; but
nothing could be done beyond the appointment of three
resident managers to preside over the affairs, without
being invested with any judicial authority; and the peace
of the town is now under the superintendence of the
county police. The town-hall, to which a gaol is attached, is a handsome building in the Elizabethan style,
standing in the centre of the town, and erected in 1826,
at an expense of about £2400, under the direction of
Mr. Hamilton, of Edinburgh, who designed the new
High School, and other edifices in that city. The postoffice has a good delivery; and facility of communication
with Edinburgh is maintained by the ferry, and with the
neighbouring towns by roads, kept in excellent order.
Four public coaches pass daily, as well as the mail, between
Edinburgh and Dundee. The burgh is associated with
those of Kirkcaldy, Dysart, and Burntisland, in returning
a member to the imperial parliament.
The parish is about four miles in length and three
and a half in extreme breadth, comprising an area of
5440 acres, of which 4800 are arable, 250 woodland and
plantations, and the remainder meadow, pasture, and
waste. The surface is beautifully varied, rising in some
places gradually, and in others more abruptly, from
the frith; and is intersected with narrow straths,
watered by small rivulets, and stretching from the shore
to the hill of Glassmount, which has an elevation of
601 feet above the level of the sea. To the north-west
of this hill, the surface undulates gently, and with occasional tracts of table-land. The coast is bold, and in
some parts precipitous. Near Burntisland, to the west,
is the projecting cliff memorable for the death of Alexander III., whence, towards the harbour of Pettycur,
the shore is a level sand, terminating in a rock of
columnar basalt, forming the headland of Kinghorn ness.
From this the bay of Kinghorn curves towards the north,
terminating in the Kirkcraig, a mass of rock near the
church, projecting for a considerable way into the sea,
and constituting a natural breakwater to the Kirk harbour.
The low lands are watered by numerous copious springs,
issuing from the declivities of the higher grounds, and
to the west is the loch of Kinghorn, covering about
twenty acres, and affording an abundant supply of water
for the town, to which it is conveyed by pipes.
The soil along the shore, for a considerable distance,
is a deep black loam of great fertility; towards the hills,
of lighter quality; and still further in the direction of
the north-west, more variable, and inclining to clay.
The crops are, oats, barley, wheat, turnips, and potatoes. The system of agriculture is in an advanced state;
the lands have been well drained and inclosed; the
farm-buildings are generally substantial and well arranged, and the various recent improvements in agricultural implements have been adopted. The cattle, of
which few are reared in the parish, are of the Fifeshire
and short-horned breeds; great numbers are annually
bought, and fattened for the markets, in which they sell
at from £20 to £30 per head. A considerable number
of sheep are also pastured, chiefly of the half Cheviot
breed. The rateable annual value of the parish is £7410.
The whole parish lies within the coal basin of the
Forth; but the coalfields are so disturbed by the trap
rocks bursting through them, and overlaying them,
that, with the exception of a few acres on which the
town stands, and about a hundred acres near Auchtertool
village, the substratum appears to be formed of trap.
Indeed, the soil, which is remarkable for fertility, seems
as if entirely composed of the decayed portions of this
species of rock. The bearing of the stratified rocks,
where they are least disarranged, is northward; and the
coal-bed is the lowermost one of the coalfield which
stretches from this parish eastward to Largo. Carboniferous or mountain limestone is obtained at Invertiel; it lies immediately under the coal strata, and has
been extensively quarried for many years, both for building and agricultural porposes. Coal was formerly
wrought; but the works have been discontinued. There
are two annual fairs, and a weekly market is held on
Thursdays, under a charter; the former are for cattle,
horses, &c., and the latter for butter, cheese, and other
country produce; but both are very ill attended, and for
the last thirty years have been falling into disuse. Abden, the property of R. Stocks, Esq., is an ancient mansion originally belonging to the Bishops of St. Andrew's;
and in the charters granting the lands to the predecessors of the present proprietor, is a distinct reservation that the king, in crossing the ferry to Kinghorn,
should have lodging and hospitality in the house of
Abden. The building is a plain structure on the north
of the town, commanding a fine view over the Frith.
Balmuto, the seat of John Boswell, Esq., in whose family
it has been for more than four centuries, is an ancient
mansion consisting of a square tower to which repeated
modern additions have been made; it is finely situated
in a demesne richly planted, and the gardens and pleasure-grounds are laid out with exquisite taste. Grangehill is also one of the chief mansions in the parish.
The ecclesiastical affairs are under the superintendence of the presbytery of Kirkcaldy and synod of
Fife. The minister's stipend is £245. 19. 7., with a
manse, and a glebe valued at £19 per annum; patron,
the Earl of Strathmore. The parish church, which is
near the old harbour, was rebuilt in 1774; it is a very
plain structure, and contains 700 sittings. A church
has recently been built on the eastern boundary of the
parish, bordering upon Abbotshall, to which a quoad
sacra district was until lately annexed, including portions of each of the two parishes. There are places of
worship for members of the Free Church and the United
Secession. Until 1830 there was no parochial school.
In that year, Mr. Barclay, the town-clerk, applied to the
burgh and the heritors to found a school; and he built
premises for it, on an acre of waste ground, at his own
risk. They have since repaid him, by subscriptions and
donations, above £500 of his expenditure, £800; and
they give the minimum salary to the master, who also
receives £50 a year from the fund of the late Mr. Philp,
for teaching fifty children, and £10 annually for teaching a Sunday school. A wide range of instruction
is provided, in the usual branches, together with French,
Latin, and Greek; and an infant school and a drawing
school are maintained, by subscription, within the building. There is also an apartment appropriated to an extensive geological collection, and a small collection of other
objects in natural history, and to a library consisting of
about 800 volumes on historical and scientific subjects.
In the grounds around the school-house is a shrubbery,
where are arranged in regular order more than 250
plants; and the portion allotted to play-ground contains
gymnastic apparatus. In the village of Invertiel is
a good school, where the elementary branches are
taught, and of which the master has a house, and the
fees. The late Robert Philp, Esq., of Edenshead, left
his property for the endowment of schools. One-eighth
of the fund it produces is apportioned for the instruction and clothing of fifty children, now educated at the
parochial school; and the residue is given to the children, on leaving school, in such portions as the managers
of the fund deem proper. The Rev. Henry James, late
minister of the parish, left £300 to aid in supporting a
scholar for four years in his philosophical studies at the
united college of St. Salvador and St. Leonard, in the
university of St. Andrew's; it yields £15 per annum,
and the appointment is vested in the Kirk Session of
Kinghorn, the presbytery of Kirkcaldy, and the town-council of the burgh. An old chapel called St. Leonard's,
of exquisite Saxon architecture, in which the courts
were once held, having been struck by lightning, and
being likely to fall, was removed by order of the Supreme
Court, to make way for the present town-hall. William Kirkaldy, of Grange, who flourished in the reign of
Mary; and Patie Birnie, a famous comic character,
musician, and song-writer, immortalized by Allan Ramsay in his poems, were natives of this place.
Kinglassie
KINGLASSIE, a parish, in the district of Kirkcaldy, county of Fife; containing 1155 inhabitants,
of whom 421 are in the village of Kinglassie, 7 miles
(N. W.) from Kirkcaldy. The name of this place is
supposed to have been derived from a Gaelic term signifying marshy or grey land, from the ancient appearance of the surface; and near the village there is still
some portion of land which retains that character.
The parish is about five miles in length, and varies from
one to three miles and a half in breadth, comprising a
very irregular area of 7260 acres, of which 6250 are
arable and in good cultivation, 450 woodland and plantations, and 300 pasture and waste. The surface is
uneven, rising into several steep ridges, and in some
places forming gentle acclivities interspersed with hills.
The river Leven, which issues from the loch of that
name, washes the northern part of the parish; and the
river Lochty flows through the village, and receives the
streamlet called the Sauchie in its immediate vicinity.
The Orr, which rises in the parish of Ballingry, intersects the southern portion of this parish, and, together
with the Lochty, falls into the Leven at a short distance
from its eastern extremity. The soil is various, consisting of loam, clay, and gravel, which in parts are
found in combination; the greater portion is a stiff clay,
and in some places are tracts of moss and sand. The
principal crops are, oats, barley, and wheat, with potatoes, turnips, and the usual green crops: flax, the cultivation of which was for some years discontinued, is
also raised in considerable quantities. The system of
husbandry is very much advanced; iron ploughs are in
general use, and the most recent improvements in agricultural implements have been adopted. Draining has
been extensively practised; and much waste land has
been reclaimed, and brought into cultivation, under the
auspices of an agricultural association consisting of
practical farmers and the principal landed proprietors,
who hold an annual meeting in the village in August.
Attached to most of the farms are threshing-mills; three
are put in motion by water, and one by a steam-engine
of seven-horse power. Great attention is paid to the rearing of cattle, which are of the pure Fifeshire breed; the
number of calves annually reared is about 300. The
plantations consist chiefly of larch, ash, spruce, and
Scotch fir; and in one, are some fine specimens of oak
and beech: they are generally well managed. The substratum is mostly whinstone; and limestone, coal, and
ironstone are found in several places. Coal was formerly
wrought, but for some years the working of it has been
discontinued; limestone has also been worked, and some
quarries of freestone have been opened, and are at present in operation. The rateable annual value of the
parish is £7457. Inchdairnie is an ancient mansion to
which a handsome addition has been made within the
last thirty years.
The village is inhabited chiefly by weavers, and persons employed in the different trades requisite for the
supply of the parish; the number of looms is twentyfour. There is a public ale and porter brewery, which
is carried on extensively; and fairs, chiefly for cattle,
horses, and shoes, are held on the third Wednesday in
May, O. S., and the Thursday before Michaelmas-day,
O. S. Facility of communication with Kirkcaldy and
the neighbouring towns is afforded by good roads, of
which one, from Kirkcaldy to Cupar, traverses the eastern
portion of the parish, giving also means of intercourse
between Edinburgh and Dundee. The parish is in the
presbytery of Kirkcaldy and synod of Fife, and patronage
of Lord Rothes; the minister's stipend is £223. 4. 4.,
with a manse, and a glebe valued at £18 per annum.
The church, an ancient edifice, was, with the exception
of the eastern gable and part of the side walls, rebuilt
in 1773, and within the last twenty years has been repaired, and adapted for a congregation of 346 persons.
The parochial school affords education to about 100
pupils: the master has a salary of £34, with £30 fees,
and a good house and garden; also six bolls of oats
annually, the gift of an old proprietor. There is in the
village a female school, in which knitting and sewing are
taught on very moderate terms; and on the southern
boundary of the parish is a school erected by Mr. Ferguson, of Raith, who gives the master a salary, with a
house and garden rent-free. A Sabbath school is maintained in the village; and a parochial subscription
library has been established. The poor possess land
situated in the parish of Abernethy, in the county of
Perth, and producing a rental of £100 per annum, but
subject to a considerable drawback for the payment of
improvements previously made on the estate. On the
farm of Dogtown is a pillar of hewn stone, sculptured
with some allegorical devices, which are much mutilated.
It is by some supposed to have been erected by the
Danes, to commemorate the fall of some of their chieftains
in their hostile irruption into the county in the reign of
Constantine II., and by others to have been raised by
the Scots as a memorial of their having defeated and
repulsed the Danes, who had encamped on the shores
of the river Leven. The height in this parish called
Goats Milk Hill is thought to have been one of the chain
of Danish forts which were thrown up between Fifeness
and Stirling, and during the occupation of which, a mill
was built on the bank of the river Leven, which is still
called Mill-Danes. Some workmen recently employed
in deepening the bed of that river discovered a Roman
sword and battle-axe, and several heads of iron spears;
and on reopening a well on a farm in the parish, which
had been closed for several centuries, an antique dagger,
with a handle of wood inlaid with brass, was found.
Kingoldrum
KINGOLDRUM, a parish, in the county of Forfar,
4 miles (W. by N.) from Kirriemuir; containing 440
inhabitants. The name of this place is compounded of
three Gaelic words signifying "the head of the burn of
the drums, or low hills." The lands were bestowed
upon the abbey of Aberbrothock by a charter of William
the Lion, which grant was confirmed by Alexander III.,
and afterwards by Robert Bruce; and Alexander also
issued a proclamation prohibiting every one from cutting
wood, destroying game, or hunting, without consent of
the abbots, in the forest of Kingoldrum. Of this description of land, however, no traces now remain. The parish,
which is of very irregular figure, stretches along the base
of the Grampian mountains, and is situated in the
district called the Braes of Angus. It is about seven
miles in length, and between two and three in breadth,
comprising 12,800 acres, of which nearly 4000 are under
tillage, 1500 in natural wood and in plantations, and
the remainder waste, consisting of moor, moss, bog,
and pasture. The surface is everywhere undulated, and
marked principally by three ranges of low hills, the
intervening spaces being occupied by considerable tracts
of level ground. Much of the scenery is interesting;
and from the summit of Catlaw, the highest hill, elevated 2264 feet above the level of the sea, extensive and
beautiful prospects may be obtained. These embrace
the German Ocean from Montrose round to the Frith of
Forth, part of the coast of Fife, the Bell-rock lighthouse, Berwick law, some of the highest mountains in
the Western Highlands, and, on the north, the loftiest
eminences of the Grampians. The streams of Prosen,
Carrity, and Melgum, all abounding in trout, enliven
the lands in different directions; and the last, in its
course through a deep, narrow, and winding channel,
forms a series of beautiful waterfalls, called the Loups
of Kenny. The burn of Crombie, after passing the
village, falls into the Melgum; and in several places
are copious springs, some of them supplying abundance
of excellent water.
The soil is, to a great extent, alluvial and deep, but in
some parts very thin. It rests frequently on a subsoil
intermixed with the debris of the red sandstone rocks;
in some places it is sandy, and in others moorish, loamy,
or clayey. Husbandry has much improved within
these few years; the farms are generally cultivated under the six-shift course; considerable portions of waste
land have been reclaimed, and furrow-draining has been
practised with great advantage. From 1200 to 1500
sheep are kept, chiefly the black-faced; and the cattle,
which are the black Angus, are excellent. The geological
features of the parish are highly interesting, and afford
a large field of observation to the scientific enquirer.
The rocks lie chiefly in parallel ridges, each containing
a distinct formation, and comprise conglomerate, sandstone, trap, and a dyke of serpentine. A great variety
of other beds, and boulders of rocks, are to be met with,
embracing almost every species; and quarries of sandstone are in operation. Peat-mosses are common;
and marl, procured from the loch of Kinnordy, partly
in this parish, has been used by the farmers with great
benefit. The plantations are principally larch and Scotch
fir, all in a thriving condition, with the exception of
some of the larches, which, after a growth of twenty or
thirty years, rapidly decay. The mansion-house of Baldovie, pleasantly situated in the midst of fertile lands,
derives considerable interest from its ornamental wood.
That of Pearsie, also, from some points breaking suddenly
on the view, has around it fine clusters of natural birch,
oak, and alder. The rateable annual value of Kingoldrum is £3695.
The population of the parish, which is almost entirely
agricultural, has been gradually diminishing during the
present century, mainly through the abolition of small
farms and of the croft system. Indeed, about fifty
cottages, besides several small hamlets, have wholly
disappeared, the only collection of houses now entitled
to the appellation of village being in the neighbourhood
of the church. Peat and wood at present constitute the
chief fuel; but Scotch and English coal, obtained from
the Newtyle, Glammis, and Forfar railway depôts, about
six miles distant, is coming much into use. The public
road from Kirriemuir to Glenisla and Glenshee passes
through the parish. The inhabitants dispose of their
produce partly at Kirriemuir, the nearest market-town,
and partly at Forfar, Dundee, and some of the places in
the vicinity: many cattle fattened here are sent to
London, Edinburgh, and Glasgow. The parish is in
the presbytery of Meigle and synod of Angus and
Mearns, and in the patronage of the Crown. The minister's stipend is £159, with a manse, and a glebe of four
acres of excellent land, and twelve of grass land. The
church is a small neat edifice, erected in 1840, and accommodating 240 persons with sittings. The living was
originally a parsonage belonging to the abbey of Arbroath; but, after the erection of that abbacy into a
temporal lordship, the payment of the minister devolved
on the titular of the tithes; and by the "decreet of provisions" dated in the year 1635, a considerable part of
the stipend was charged upon abbey lands in the neighbourhood of Arbroath, from which it continues to be
payable. The parochial school affords instruction in
the usual branches; the master has a salary of £28,
including the value of six and a half bolls of oats, and
receives £16 fees. There is a circulating library of religious books. Upon the top of the Catlaw hill is a large
cairn of stones; but the chief relic of antiquity in the
parish is the ruin of the castle of Balfour, built by
Cardinal Beaton, and which has long been dismantled.
On taking down the old church, among numerous stones
with curious devices, two were found wrought into the
building, marked with finely-carved crosses and hieroglyphics.
Kingoodie
KINGOODIE, a village, in the parish of Longforgan, county of Perth, 1½ mile (E. by S.) from
Longforgan; containing 263 inhabitants. This village,
which is on the banks of the river Tay, is chiefly inhabited
by persons employed in the extensive quarries of freestone situated here, and which have been in operation
for five or six centuries. The stone of these quarries is
of a blueish colour, and exceedingly compact and durable, though consequently difficult to work; it is
susceptible of a very high polish. The tower of Dundee,
which was built towards the close of the twelfth century,
and at present exhibits no symptoms of decay, and
Castle-Huntly, built in the fifteenth century, were both
erected with stone from these quarries. Considerable
quantities of it are raised for various buildings in the
vicinity, and for exportation to Aberdeen, Perth, and
Dundee, where it has been used in the construction of
docks, piers, and other works. The rock in some parts
is more than seventy feet in depth; and immensely
large blocks are obtained entire, some of which are more
than ten tons in weight. The lessees of the quarries
have constructed a small harbour here for the boats
employed, of which there are two of thirty and one of
fifty tons' burthen, the former confined chiefly to the
navigation of the river, and the latter occupied in the
conveyance of the stone to more distant ports. At this
small port, lime and coal are landed from Sunderland,
for the supply of the neighbourhood; and grain and
potatoes are shipped for the London market. Facility
of intercourse is maintained with the other parts of the
parish by good roads, kept in repair by statute labour;
and from the high road by the coast to Aberdeen, a line
branches off at Longforgan to the quarries of this place.
Kingsbarns
KINGSBARNS, a parish, in the district of St. Andrew's, county of Fife; containing 968 inhabitants, of
whom 529 are in the village, 3 miles (N. N. W.) from
Crail, and 6 (S. E. by E.) from St. Andrew's. This place
derived its name from its having been appropriated as
a granary by the kings of Scotland, to whom it belonged,
as part of their private estate, during their residence at
Falkland; and near the village are vestiges of an ancient
building, said to have been, a castle, though in all probability its strength and fortifications were intended
only for the protection and security of the grain deposited there for the use of the royal household. The
remains of this building, situated on the beach, and
consisting only of the foundations, were removed by the
tenant a few years since, and from their small extent,
showed no indications of the edifice having ever been
occupied either as a royal or baronial residence. The
parish is situated on the coast, between the friths of
Forth and Tay, and is bounded on the east by the German Ocean; it is nearly equal in length and breadth,
and comprises about 3860 acres, of which 3650 are
arable, 199 woodland and plantations, and the remainder rocky land along the shore. The surface, though
sloping gradually from the sea, is tolerably even, attaining no considerable degree of elevation; the shore
is low, and interspersed with rocks, which form somewhat of a barrier against the encroachment of the waves,
which make considerable inroads. The soil in the
lower portion of the parish, towards the sea, is rather
light and sandy, and farther inland a deep black loam,
in some parts inclining to clay; both, under proper
management, are rendered fertile and productive. The
rotation system of husbandry is prevalent; the crops
are, barley, oats, wheat, and potatoes, with beans and
the usual green crops. The prevailing breed of cattle is
the Fifeshire; the Teeswater breed was introduced by
the late Earl of Kellie, but it has not been found so well
adapted to the land, or so profitable to the farmer.
About 150 head of cattle are on the average annually
fattened for the market; sheep are kept only for home
use. The woods are chiefly forest trees; but the plantations, mostly around the houses of the resident gentry,
consist only of shrubberies and evergreens. The farm
houses and offices are substantially built, and conveniently arranged; and considerable improvements have
been made in draining and fencing the lands. The
rateable annual value of the parish is £7849.
The substratum is generally limestone and freestone,
interspersed in parts with boulders of granite. Coal
appears to have been worked formerly in some places;
and at present, where it occasionally crops up, it is
quarried by some of the poor; but from the quantity of
water to be drained off, it would require a considerable
effort and an extensive capital to render the coal-beds
available to the supply of the parish. Lime is burnt on
the lands of Cambo, for the use of the tenants; but no
regular quarries have been opened, though both the
quantity and quality of the limestone would amply
remunerate the expense of working it on a more extensive scale. Ironstone is found near the shore, and a
few persons are employed in procuring it by digging;
what is thus obtained is usually shipped to Newcastle,
and exchanged for coal. The gentlemen's seats are
Cambo and Pitmilly, both ancient mansions of handsome appearance. The village has been greatly improved
within the last few years; the streets have been levelled,
and many of the old houses have been taken down, and
replaced by others of larger dimensions, with neat
flower-gardens in the front. The appearance is lively
and cheerful; and the village has become a pleasant
place of residence. Many of the inhabitants are engaged in weaving with hand-looms at their own dwellings;
the general articles manufactured are, linens for domestic
use, dowlas, and Osnaburgs. About twenty looms are
constantly employed, and on an average 50,000 yards
of these fabrics are produced annually. A subscription
library has been for some time established in the village;
a savings' bank has also been opened. There are fairs
in July and October, but little business is transacted
except the sale of pedlery. The parish is in the presbytery of St. Andrew's and synod of Fife, and patronage of
the Earl of Glasgow; the minister's stipend is £251. 18.,
with a manse, and a glebe valued at £30 per annum.
The church is a neat structure in the later English style,
thoroughly repaired in 1811. The parochial school
affords a liberal course of instruction; the master has a
salary of £34, with £30 fees, and a dwelling-house and
garden. There is also a Sabbath evening school. In
levelling the coast, several stone coffins containing human bones were found; and in one instance, some of
the bones had the appearance of having been burnt.
Kingston
KINGSTON, lately a quoad sacra parish, consisting
of part of the parish of Govan, in the Upper ward of the
county of Renfrew, but chiefly of part of the parish of
Gorbals, in the suburbs of the city of Glasgow, county
of Lanark; the whole containing 2882 inhabitants.
This place, which is situated on the south bank of the
river Clyde, and to the west of Tradeston, to which it
forms an appendage, consists of several well-formed
streets; the houses are handsomely built, generally
three or four stories in height, and attached to them are
spacious courts and garden-grounds. The town is pleasantly situated, commanding a fine view of the Clyde,
and of the port of Broomielaw, on the opposite bank of
the river. The population are chiefly employed in the
various manufactures connected with the city of Glasgow and vicinity; and there are several shops for the
supply of the inhabitants with various articles of merchandise. The Glasgow and Paisley canal, and the
Glasgow, Greenock, and Ayr railway skirt the parish on
the north for nearly a mile. The late quoad sacra
parish was separated in 1839, by act of the General
Assembly. The church was erected at an expense of
£3000, raised by subscription, chiefly by the friends of
the Rev. James Gibson, the minister, as a public testimony of their esteem; it is a handsome structure in
the later English style, with a light and well-proportioned spire 120 feet in height, and contains more than
1000 sittings. The members of the Free Church have a
place of worship.
Kingston-Port
KINGSTON-PORT, a village, in the parish of Speymouth, county of Elgin, 4½ miles (N. by W.) from
Fochabers; containing 396 inhabitants. This village is
seated at the mouth of the Spey, and, with the exception of a few houses, has been built within the last
forty years. The original dwellings were mostly of
wood, and were erected for the accommodation of the
workmen of Messrs. Dodsworth and Osbourne, timbermerchants and ship-builders, by whom the place was
named Kingston-Port, after Kingston-upon-Hull, in the
county of York. These gentlemen, having purchased
the forest of Glenmore from the Duke of Gordon, about
the year 1784, commenced building numerous vessels
here, several of them of the burthen of 500, 600, and
700 tons; and various other builders, following their
example, have since launched as many as 150 vessels
at this place, of from thirty to 200 tons each. The
trade in timber has latterly very much declined, the
forest having been exhausted about thirty years ago;
but the commerce of the port is still considerable. In
a recent year 200 vessels sailed hence, of which onefourth were loaded with grain, chiefly wheat and oats,
for the southern parts of Scotland and for England;
and in the same year were imported forty cargoes of
Scotch coal, and twenty of English coal from Sunderland. The harbour suffered very severely from the
memorable flood on the 4th of August, 1829; and
as the channel is shifted by the occasional heavy action
of the sea, and the gravelly nature of the soil renders it
impracticable to obtain a secure foundation for a pier,
the improvement of the port is difficult. The village of
Garmouth closely adjoins Kingston.
Kingussie
KINGUSSIE, a parish, in the Mainland district of
the county of Inverness, ½ a mile (E. by N.) from
Pitmain; containing, with part of the late quoad sacra
parish of Insh, the villages of Kingussie and Newtonmore, and the hamlet of Ralia, 2047 inhabitants, of
whom 460 are in the village of Kingussie. This place,
which is of remote antiquity, derives its name, in the
Celtic language Ceannghiubhsaiche, from the situation of
its ancient church at the head of a wood of firs, of
which that term is significant. The whole of the lordship of Badenoch, in the centre of which this parish
lies, originally belonged to the Cumyns, earls of Badenoch and Buchan, of whom John, the first lord of
Badenoch, laid claim to the throne of Scotland on the
death of Alexander III. in 1285. As superior baron
of the kingdom, he was summoned by Edward I. of
England to attend him in his wars in Gascony. Upon
his death, he was succeeded by his son, John, who,
after a continued struggle to maintain the independence
of his country, in which he obtained a victory over the
English at Roslin, was compelled, subsequently to the
battle of Stirling, to yield to the superior power of
Edward. At the succession of Bruce to the crown of
Scotland in 1306, the lord of Badenoch became a victim
to the resentment of that king; and the lordship was
included among the lands which Bruce erected into the
earldom of Moray in 1314, and bestowed upon his
nephew, Randolph. The earldom continued in the possession of that family till the year 1371, about which
time it became the property of the Stuarts, of whom
Robert, the first Stuart who ascended the throne of
Scotland, conferred it on his son, Alexander, in whose
favour he revived the title of lord of Badenoch. Alexander, who, from the ferocity of his character, was
styled the Wolf of Badenoch, resided chiefly in the
castle of Ruthven, in this parish, the ancient seat of the
Cumyns, a strong fortress situated on the banks of the
river Spey. Here, in perfect security, and presuming
upon his connexion with the crown, he exercised despotic
tyranny over his vassals, and spread terror and dismay
throughout the adjacent districts. Upon his death,
about the year 1394, the lordship descended to his son,
who was the last of the family of the Stuarts connected
with the earldom of Moray, which subsequently passed
to the first earl of Huntly, upon whom the lordship of
Badenoch was conferred by James II., in reward of his
services at the battle of Brechin in 1452. The site of
the castle of Ruthven, the seat of the lords of Badenoch,
was occupied by barracks erected soon after the rebellion in 1715, to keep the inhabitants in check; and in
1745, the garrison stationed here, with the exception of
a serjeant and twelve privates who were left for the
protection of the buildings, accompanied Sir John Cope
on his march to the battle of Prestonpans. During
their absence the barracks were defended by this small
party against a body of 200 insurgents; and in the
following year, they sustained a violent assault for three
days from 300 of the rebels, under Gordon, of Glenbucket, to whom the force surrendered on terms of
honourable capitulation. The barracks were soon afterwards burnt by the insurgents, and are now a heap of
ruins.
The parish, which is bounded on the south by the
Grampian hills, is about twenty-one miles in length,
from east to west, and nearly eighteen miles in breadth;
but, from the extreme irregularity of its form, and the
great inequality of the surface, it has been found impossible to ascertain its superficial extent with any
degree of accuracy. The surface is strikingly varied,
and even the lowest grounds have an elevation of 850
feet above the level of the sea. In the northern portion,
the mountains of Monadhliadh stretch for a considerable
distance along the boundary; and from their base the
lands gradually subside into an extensive vale, beyond
which they as gradually ascend towards the Grampians
on the south. The principal river is the Spey, which
has its source in a small lake of that name in the parish
of Laggan, and, winding in an easterly course through
the open and fertile valley previously noticed, for more
than seven miles, flows into Loch Insh at the eastern
extremity of the parish, whence, taking a more northerly
direction, it falls into the Moray Frith at Garmouth.
The river Truim, which forms part of the western boundary of the parish, has its source in the forest of
Drumuachter, near the Grampians, and, flowing northward through the parish, joins the Spey not far from
Laggan. The Tromie, which separates this parish from
that of Insh, on the east, rises to the south of the parish,
and, running northward through the glen to which it
gives name, falls into the Spey near Old Milton. The
Calder, which has its source in the mountains to the
north, and the Gynag, which issues from a small lake
of that name, both take a southern course, and flow
into the Spey. There are also numerous lakes; but
few exceed a mile and a half in length and three-quarters
of a mile in width. In Loch Gynag is a small island,
on which may still be traced the vestiges of what is
supposed to have been a castle: nothing, however, of
its history is recorded. About six miles of Loch
Ericht are likewise within the boundaries of the parish;
but the shores are altogether destitute of beauty or
variety, with the exception of a small portion near the
southern extremity of the parish, where the banks are
rather steep, and in some parts fringed with trees.
Salmon, and char for some weeks in October, are found
in the Spey; and trout and pike in the smaller rivers
and lakes. The forest of Gaick, though almost destitute
of wood, abounds with numerous herds of deer, and is
much frequented by sportsmen.
The soil in the meadows, and along the banks of the
Spey and its tributaries, is deep and fertile. The valley
through which the Spey flows is especially rich, and in
good cultivation, constituting almost the only arable
land in the parish, the hills and uplands being generally
heathy, adapted only for pasture, and portioned out in
sheep-walks. The chief crops are oats and barley, with
other kinds of grain; but not more grain is raised than
is sufficient for the supply of the parish. The system
of husbandry is improved, and a due rotation of crops
is regularly observed; considerable portions of waste
land have been reclaimed by draining and embanking,
and the farm-buildings of the larger holders are substantial and commodious. The sheep reared are of the
black-faced breed, with a few of the Cheviot on the
lower lands; the cattle, with the exception of some of
the Ayrshire on the dairy-farms, are all of the common
Highland breed, to the improvement of which the
greatest attention is paid. Though formerly the face of
the country was covered with wood, and a very extensive forest of fir reached almost to the village, there
are but small remains of ancient timber. The plantations, which are chiefly of recent growth, consist of fir
and larch, interspersed with mountain-ash and oak, for
which the soil is well adapted; and alder, hazel, and
birch appear to be indigenous, especially the last, with
which the rising grounds on the south bank of the
Spey are extensively covered. The prevailing rocks
throughout the parish are, quartz, felspar, and micaslate: there are neither mines nor quarries in operation.
Specimens of silver and lead ore have been found in the
river Gynag, but in very small quantity; and some
years since, silver-ore was discovered at no great distance from the village, the working of which has, however, long been discontinued. The rateable annual value
of the parish is £4626. Belleville House, pleasantly
situated to the east of the village, near Loch Insh, and
formerly the residence of Macpherson, translator of the
poems of Ossian, is in the parish of Alvie.
The village of Kingussie is on the north bank of the
river Spey; the inhabitants are chiefly employed in the
handicraft trades requisite for the supply of the neighbourhood, and there are several shops amply stored
with various kinds of merchandise. A public library
is supported by subscription, and has a collection of
about 300 volumes on history and general literature.
The post-office has a delivery each day in the week, both
from the north and south parts of the kingdom; and
facility of communication is maintained by good roads,
of which the great Highland road from Perth to Inverness passes for sixteen miles through the parish; and
by bridges over the various rivers, kept in excellent
repair. Fairs, chiefly for cattle and for hiring servants,
are held in the village, on the last Tuesday in May, the
Friday in the week after the Falkirk tryst in September,
and the Friday before the Falkirk tryst in October;
and markets for cattle and for general business are held
monthly, on Tuesday, from April to November. A
building was erected in the village in 1806, which contains a neat court-room for the meetings of the magistrates for the district, and a small prison for the temporary confinement of offenders till their commitment
to the county gaol. The ecclesiastical affairs are
under the superintendence of the presbytery of Abernethy and synod of Moray. The minister's stipend is
£269. 18., with an allowance of £50 in lieu of a manse;
and the glebe, which has been greatly improved by the
present incumbent, is valued at £50 per annum: patron,
the Duke of Richmond. The church, which is situated
on a wooded eminence in the village, was built in 1792,
and contains 900 sittings: being in a state of dilapidation, it was very fully repaired a few years ago.
The members of the Free Church have a place of worship. The parochial school is well attended; the master
has a salary of £34, with a good house, and an allowance in lieu of garden, and the fees average about £20.
There are some slight remains of Druidical circles,
and vestiges of a Roman camp: in clearing the ground
near the latter, a Roman urn containing burnt ashes,
and a tripod, were found a few years since, and both
are carefully preserved. There are also vestiges of an
ancient building said to have been a priory, and a
monastery once existed in the parish; but little of the
history of either is known.