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      CLAN BOYD INTERNATIONAL
                                Richard G. Boyd

           The Origins of Kilmarnock, Scotland

                      (excerpted from the book)

    History of Kilmarnock, 1864, 3rd ed. Archibald M'Kay
 

The origin of Kilmarnock, like that of many other towns of real im-
portance, is involved in considerable obscurity, and scarcely any
thing illustrative of its ancient history can be gathered from the
various statistical works in which it is mentioned. That it is a
place of great antiquity, however, seems to be the general opinion.
It is stated by some writers that, so far back as the year 322, it
was the residence of a St Mernoc or Marnock. Here, according to
tradition, he founded a church, and hence, in all likelihood, the
origin of the town; for those who were seeking or had enjoyed his
holy instructions would naturally incline to settle at or near the
hallowed scene of his labors. It is also said that he is interred
here within the precincts of the ground he had consecrated. From the
same Saint the town has evidently derived its name, which, as shown
by the Celtic word Kil, signifies the cell, the church, or the
burial-place of Marnock.

The very early date, however, assigned to the time of St Marnock is
doubtful; and it is more probable that he settled here about the end
of the sixth or the beginning of the seventh century, when some of
the early teachers of Christianity, who had been educated at I-colmm-
kill, under St Columba, established places of religious worship in
different parts of our island.(1) But there is no account, we
believe, on which reliance can be placed, regarding the Church of
Kilmarnock prior to the twelfth century. The author of Caledonia,
whom we shall afterwards quote on the subject, states that it
belonged of old to the monastery of Kilwinning, which was then
founded; and Pont, who seems to have perused the records of that
monastery, says "it was bulte by the Locartts, (2) Lords of it
(meaning a barony), and dedicat to a holy man, Mernock, as witness
ye records of Kilvinin Abbay."

To trace the course of the progress of Kilmarnock, even from this
time, would be almost impossible. The Town Books extend no farther
back than 1686, and, consequently, throw no light on the subject.(3)
We may infer, however, that besides the Church of the good old Saint
the many natural advantages of the place, such as its somewhat
sheltered, yet healthy situation, together with the stream of the
Marnock gliding through it, and the Irvine meandering at a short
distance, would all tend to make it a favorite place of residence, as
the more peaceful arts began to be cultivated. Regarding the
particular site of the first houses of the town we are left to
uncertainty. The most likely supposition is, that they were scattered
around the ancient Chapel dedicated to St. Marnock, which was no
doubt situated near to or on the identical spot now occupied by the
Low Parish Church.  The  narrow  lane  in the immediate neighborhood,

1. See Dr. Smith's Life of St. Columba.

2. The Loccarts here mentioned are supposed to have been vassals of
Hugh de Morville, an Anglo-Norman Baron, who founded the Monastery of
Kilwinning, and who "obtained a grant of the extensive and valuable
bailiwick, or great Barony of Cunningham" -- See notes on Pont's
Cunningham, by John Fullarton, Esq. of Overton.

3. The first entry in the Register of Baptisms is dated 6 Feb 1644.
 

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called College Wynd, is, or rather, lately was, one of the most
antiquated streets of the town, and derives its name, we believe,
from being the site of some Educational Institution in the olden
time; one of its old-fashioned tenements is still pointed out by aged
persons as having been a school-house of some importance.(1) In the
same lane is another building, said to have been the Manse, and
behind it is what was called the Glebe Land. The first Bank, too, of
which the town could boast, and which was a branch of the Bank of
Scotland, was in the adjoining alley, called Low Church Lane;(2) and,
assuming these statements to be true, it is not improbable that this
now unfashionable quarter was the nucleous of Kilmarnock. Grange
Street, which is near to College Wynd, and which at one time was
called the Clay Mugs, from the circumstance of a pottery having been
in the place, is also, we believe, one of the ancient neuks of Auld
Killie. Strand Street, in close proximity to the Church, has likewise
the appearance of considerable antiquity, and in all probability, was
one of the earliest streets of the town. Though now chiefly occupied
by the poorer classes, it was the residence of some of the more
wealthy families during the last century. We may suppose, too, that
the Cross, where stood the corn mill of the parish till the year
1703, would be partly occupied with houses at a comparatively remote
period; its appearance, so late as the beginning of the present
century, before King Street and Portland Street were formed, was old
and antiquated in the extreme. But of this afterwards.

The first notice of any consequence which we have of Kilmarnock, and
more especially of the extent of its population, at an early date, is
in a document, given in Chapter X, respecting the appointment of a
priest or clerk for the parish in the year 1547. The parishioners who
took part in that election amounted to about three hundred; and as
they, in all likeihood, comprised the whole, or nearly the whole, of
the heads of families at that time in the parish, it may be inferred
that the population was little more than fourteen hundred -- a number
which appears very small when we consider that the parish of Fenwick
was then included in that of Kilmarnock.

1. Since the above was written, we have been favored with extracts
from various letters respecting Kilmarnock in past times, written by
William Gregory, Esq., Virginia, to his brother here, James S.
Gregory, Esq., Registrar. One of these extracts corroborates the
above statement regarding the name College Wynd. Mr Gregory says: "At
the north end of the Wynd, and the north-west corner of the Kirk-
yard, stood an old house (it may be standing yet), the walls of which
belonged to the College, and in it were probably educated some of
your west country worthies--Boyd of Troch-rigg, and perhaps, his
kinsman, Zachary Boyd, and others. The College was burnt down about
the middle of the last century. My father attended there at the time,
but was too young to be examined regarding the fire; however, I have
heard him say that John Glen (whom I remember) was brought before the
Bailies and examined as to what he knew about the fire. John answered
that he "kent naething about it, as he and Rab Elshender were making
clay men in the Kirk-yard at the time." The Collegians used the
Church-yard at that time as a play ground." It is said that the name
of the last teacher in the College Wynd School was Mushat. As
coroborative of Mr Gregory's conjecture respecting Zachary Boyd we
may state that, according to Chambers Encyclopedia, that eminent
divine was educated at Kilmarnock.
 

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Of course the document furnishes us with no idea of the aspect of the
town in regard to its streets or buildings; but it is worthy of
remark, that the most of the names attached to it, though different
in their orthography, are such as are common amongst us at the
present day. The following are the various surnames from the document
mentioned; and as the number of each is also given, it will be
observed that the prevailing names were Brown, Smith, Boyd and Adam.

Adam......... 11           Fulton...............10               Nevine...........3
Allan............3            Gemyll................6               Norvell... .......3
Andro...........4           Gilmure...............5               Nychole.........1
Angus...........1            Gray..................2                Pally..............4
Arnot............2            Halkill................1                Pawtoun........12
Auchenloss....6            Harbartsoune.....1               Patrick....   .....1
Bar........    ...1            Harper...............8               Quhyte.......  ...6
Blakwod.......2            Hillhouss............3                Rankyne.........1
Black........  .1            Hobkyn.............1                Robisone........1
Boill.............1             Howay..............1                 Ross...........  .4
Boyd.........15              Holmes.............1                Schaw........... 2
Borland.......3              Hog..................7                Smyth.......... 16
Brokat........1              Kendy...............1                Steele..........   6
Brown........20            Kirkland............1                Stesen.........  .1
Calderwood....1          Launchland.......4                Stevinsone......1
Campbell....  ..1          Lowdoun..........3                Strauchand......1
Chalmer....  ...1           Lowry...............3                Tailzeour.......  8
Cochrane.....  .1          Lymburnat.........4                Tanathill.......   9
Craig.....   ......2           Lyndsay............4                Tempeltoun......1
Craufurd.........2           Masoun............2                Thomson......... 3
Credy............2            Miller...............8                 Tod.............    1
Crux..............7            Mure...............2                  Torrence....... .1
Cunynham......5            Mychell...........1                 Wallace.........   8
Curry.............5             Myll................1                Warnock........  3
Cuthbertsoune.1           Nasmyth..........1                Wilsoun........   .2
Dickey...........5             Neill................2                Wright.........    .1
Duncane.........2                                                      Wylie..........    .6
Findlay...........4

Timothy Pont, about  sixty years after the time spoken of, namely, in
1609, visited the town when making a survey of Cunningham, and, in
his own quaint manner, thus describes it: "Kilmernock-toune and Kirk
is a large village and of grate repaire. It hath in it a veekly
market, it hath a faire stone bridge over the river Marnock vich
glydes hard by the said toune, till it falles in the river Irving. It
hath a pretty church from vich ye village, castell and lordshipe
takes its name.... The Lord Boyd is now Lord of it, to quhose
predicessors it hath belonged for maney generations. In tis church ar
divers of ye Lord Boydes progenitors buried, amongs quhome ther is
one tombe or stone, bearing this inscription and coate, Hic jacet
Thomas Boyde Dominus de Kilmarnock qui obiit Septimo die mensis Julii
1432, and Johanna de Montgomery eius spousa. Orate pro iis.(1)

1. In the books of the Irvine Presbytery, the following notice occurs
regarding Lord Boyd's tomb: "At a visitation at Kilmarnock, 19th June
1649, anent ane superstitious image that was upon my Lord Boyd his
tomb, it was the Presbiterie's mynd that his Lordship sould be
written to that he wold be pleased to demolish and ding it doun, and
if he should refuse, that then the Presbiterie was to take a further
course." This appears to have been in accordance with an act of
Parliament, passed a few years previously, for "abolishing monuments
of Idolatrie."

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In another old work, entitled Northern Memoirs, written by Richard
Franck,(1) in the year 1658, we have an interesting glimpse of the
town as it then appeared. We suspect, however, that the picture is
rather extravagantly drawn; at all events, it reflects no great
credit, in some respects, on the memory of our ancestors. After de-
scribing the town as :an ancient corporation, crowded with mechanicks
and brew-houses," and as a place, "through the midst of whose crazy,
tottering ports, there runs a river replenished with trout," the
writer says: "step into her dirty streets, that are seldom clean but
on a sun-shiny day, or at other times, when great rains melt all the
muck, and forcibly drive it down their cadaverous channels into the
river Marr, whose streams are so sullied then, that the river loses
its natural brightness, till the stains are washed out, and so become
invisible. All which to examine. is enough to convince you that the
influence of planets is their best scavenger..... These inhabitants,
he proceeds, "dwell in such ugly houses, as, in my opinion, are
little better than huts; and generally of a size, all built so low,
that their eaves hang dangling to touch the earth......  And that
which is worse than all the rest, is their unproportionate, ill
contrivance.... Not one good structure is to be found in Kilmarnock;
nor do I remember any wall it has, but a river there is, as I
formerly told you of, that runs through the town; over which there
stood a bridge so wretchedly antient, that it's unworthy of our
commendations.(2) Regarding the skill of the inhabitants in
mechanical pursuits our tourist speaks more favourably. "Part of
their manu-facture," he remarks, "is knitting of bonnets, and
spinning [weaving] of Scottish cloth, which turns to very good
account. Then, for their tempers of metals, they are without compeer-
-- Scotland has not better; and as they are artizans in dirks, so are
they artists in fuddling, as if there were some rule in drinking, so
that, to me, it represents as if art and ale were inseparable
companions. Moreover, their wives are sociable comers [kimmers], too,
yet not to compare with those of Dumblain, who pawn their petticoats
to pay their reckoning. Here is a jolly crew of ale-men, but very few
anglers, crowded together in the small compass of a little
corporation, curiously compacted."

From these scanty quotations a faint idea may be formed of the
appearance of the town two hundred years ago. The mean condition in
which Franck represents it is not to be wondered at; for it was then
but a mere village, with no Magistracy or Town Council, (3) with

1. Franck as a native of Cambridge, and is supposed to have served as
a Captain in a cavalry regiment, under Cromwell. Like old Izaak
Walton, he was a devoted angler: and he was making a fishing tour
through Scotland when he visited Kilmarnock. A limited edition of his
memoirs was published in 1821, with notes by Sir Walter Scott.

2. It is a curious that neither the Church nor the Dean Castle are
noticed by our author. The former, he perhaps, considered too humble
an edifice for particular description; and the latter, being somewhat
distant from the town, might escape his observation.

3. The first magistrates were appointed in 1695; and for upwards of a
hundred years prior to that time, the Burgh was governed by a baron-
bailie, nominated by the Boyd family. There is still a baron-bailie
appointed by the superior, and in virtue of his office he has a seat
at the Board of Commissioners of Police.


 
 

                                Page 5

little commerce, and, consequently, with few of the comforts and con-
veniences of life. It appears from his statement that the men of
Kilmarnock were peculiarly skilled in the art of cutlery; and this is
somewhat corroborated by another old book, (1) in which the town is
noticed  as "famous for all kinds of cutler's ware." We have found no
other evidence, however, of such a trade having been ever carried on
in the town to any very great extent; and we have seen only one
instance of the word cutler being mentioned in the early Records of
the Burgh. The minute in which it occurs is rather curious: 13th
July, 1686.-- The quhilk day James Thomson, ane of the dragoons of
horse,  Adam Black's  companie,  was decerned to pay John Tod, cutler
in Kilmarnock, the sum of 3s 4d Scots, and the said John Tod to give
up to James Thomson his wyffis body cott, quhilk was pandit for
threepence, and paid to the said James." That the inhabitants were
artists in fuddling," as Franck expresses it, we can more readily
believe, for the Council, in by-gones times, were often under the
necessity of making enactments for the suppression of drunkenness. In
1695, for example, it was enacted that "no ale be sold by vintners
after ten o'clock on Saturday nights;" and in 1702, a proclamation
was issued, "strickly requiring all vintners, taverners, and other
retaillers of Liquors, to shutt their doors nightly at the tolling of
the bells at ten hours throw the week, and at the tolling of the nine
hours bell at the Saturday's and Sabbath's night, and to allow none
to drink in their houses after the Said times, under penalty of six
shillings Scots, for each person, to be payed by the master or
mistresse of the house." In the same proclamation all persons were
also prohibited from "walking upon the streets unnecessarily, and
from bringing in water, or carrying of burdens upon the Lord's day."
The following extract from the minutes of the Kirk Session shows that
special efforts were also made by that body to abate the social
irregularities noted by Franck:

"Sessions, Debr 12th, 1689.-- The qlk day the Sess. appoints the
Elders in their respective quarters to go through and search the
several ale-houses and other suspect places therein each Saturdays
night, immediatelie after nine o'clock, and that they take notice of
such as they find drinking there, after the sd hour, or any way
deboshing, and make delation thereof to the Sess. from time to time.
"It is also appointed, that the Elders, who collect the charitie at
the Kirk doors, do, immediatelie after the publick worship is begun,
go through the town, and search for such as absent themselves from
publick ordinances, or are drinking, or otherwyse profaneing the
Lords day: And that in the afternoon, after the publick worship is
over and ended, they take notice of such as, by straying up and down
the town or through the fields, or by idle discourse in companys
together, or by drinking and otherwise, do profane the Sabbath; and
that they make delation thereof accordinglie."

The principle architectural erections in the town and its immediate
neighborhood, at the beginning of the seventeenth century, were the
Bridge, the Church, and the Castle; at least no other is mentioned by
Pont.

The Bridge to which he alludes was no doubt situated on the same site
which the Old Bridge, leading from Cheapside to Sandbed Street, now
occupies, and was probably the one spoken of by the "piscatorian"

1. A Journey through Scotland: London, 1723.
 

                                Page 6

traveler", Franck, as "unworthy commendations." According to the
Towns Books it underwent some alteration in 1753, in order that it
might be made "more safe for all sorts of traffic;" and about 1762,
it was rebuilt in  consequence of having been much injured by floods.
The present structure, we believe, is the one then erected.

Of the Church no trace now remains save the steeple, which still
stands attached to the present Parish Church.(1) About thirty years
ago the date, 1410, was inscribed on it--a date which some old people
had recollected seeing on the lintel of one of the doors. That it
belongs to that, if not an earlier period, its venerable appearance
would seem to testify. In 1770 it was considerably repaired, as shown
by the following notice in the Town Treasurer's Books: "1770. Nov 22-
-N.B. This day, the roof of the Parish Steeple was finished by John
Reid, Plumer in Ayr. He agreed to take down the old roof, & find a
new one compleat, for L52 Sterling. The Heritors to pay the one half,
and the Town Council the other." It was also furnished, in August
1853 with a finely-toned new bell, weighing twelve hundredweight,
which cost about L100 sterling. The old bell, which weighed nearly
four hundredweight, bore this inscription: BLESSED IS THE PEOPLE THAT
KNOW THE IOYFULL SOVND, PS. 89, 15, NVM. 10, 10. ALBERT
DANIEL, CELI ME FECERVNT, KILLMARNOCK, AN.DOM., 1697.(2)
It may be added, thatthere is a tradition that the lower part of the steeple was
used as aprison in the time of the Covenanters, and that some of them were
therein incarcerated.

The Castle spoken of by Pont still exists, though in ruins, and is
now known by the name of the Dean. It is, perhaps, the oldest
building in the locality, and was long the stronghold of the ancient
barons of Kilmarnock, whose names are closely interwoven with the
early annals of the Burgh. We shall, therefore, give a brief des-
cription of it before entering more fully into other historical
details.

1. "When the old Church was taken down (1802), and the west side of
the steeple laid bare, there were brought to view three niches in the
wall, some five or six feet above the floor, and perhaps some six or
seven feet in height, before which the altar stood, and the priest
officiated in Popish times. These niches were arched at the top of a
gothic shape." Letter of W. Gregory, Virginia.

2. The old bell was purchased for a church in Stewarton, and still
does good service in that ancient village.

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Clan Boyd International
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