George Douglas of Parkhead, (died 1602), was a Scottish landowner, mining entrepreneur, Provost of Edinburgh, and Keeper of Edinburgh Castle.
Career
George Douglas was a son of George Douglas of Pittendreich, the name of his mother is unknown. His half-sister, Elizabeth, daughter of Lady Dundas, married Smeton Richeson. He married Marioun Douglas, heiress of Parkhead or Parkheid, and so became known as George Douglas of Parkhead. Parkhead is close to the Lanarkshire town of Douglas. He was later Provost of Edinburgh.[1]
Refortification of Edinburgh Castle
After Edinburgh Castle was recovered from William Kirkcaldy of Grange in May 1573, George Douglas was appointed its Captain or keeper by his half-brother Regent Morton.[2] George Douglas supervised the rebuilding of part of the back wall and other repairs, buying lime, sand, slate and glass.[3] Part of the running expenses, or "sustenation" of the castle was paid to Douglas from the customs of Edinburgh town by Robert Gourlay.[4]
Parkhead is credited with building the half-moon battery at Edinburgh castle, the Historie of King James the Sext records that Regent Morton appointed him captain, and caused "masonis to begin to redd (clear away) the bruisit wallis, and to repaire the foirwark to the forme of ane bulwark, platt and braid above, for the resett and ryving (receiving) of many canonis."[5] Some building accounts from this work survive.[6]
Parkhead wrote to Francis Walsingham in June 1582 to thank him for hospitality in England, mentioning his friend John Selby of the garrison of Berwick-upon-Tweed. He had written to Selby in May 1582 describing a rumour that James VI would be sent to France.[12]
In August 1584 George Douglas and his sons James and George were declared traitors and their goods and lands forfeited for their role "art and part" in the Raid of Stirling in April 1584.[13]
Norway
James VI of Scotland sailed to Norway to meet his bride Anna of Denmark in October 1589. George Douglas of Parkhead was one of his companions. He wrote from Oslo to the Earl of Morton on 30 November 1589. The king had decided to stay over winter at the Danish court, and the Earl's son Archibald Douglas had decided to go travelling. He had asked Parkhead to go with him.[14]
Another of Marion Douglas's letters concerns the lead mines.[16] On 6 August 1592 she wrote from Parkhead to Lord Menmuir asking for his decision about the mining concessions between Eustachius Roche and her husband. She had been obliged to order her miners to suspend working, putting them to other work or laying them off.[17]
On 20 December 1593 George Douglas and his son James made over some of their lead mining rights in Glengonnar to the goldsmith and financier Thomas Foulis.[18]
An English prospector Stephen Atkinson writing in 1619 stated that "George Parkhead" was killed by a landslide in wet weather at a mine working at "Short-clough brayes". It took three days to dig him out.[19] The Shortcleuch water joins the Elvan and falls into the Clyde.[20] Some sources suggest the victim of this accident was a son of George Douglas of Parkhead, and it occurred in 1586 while he was prospecting for gold.[21]
George Douglas of Parkhead's will was registered in Edinburgh in 1602. It mentions oats stored in the barn yard of "Auld Foulden".
Family
The children of George Douglas and Marion Douglas included;[22]
James Douglas of Parkhead (d. 1608), who married Elizabeth Carlyle, daughter of William, Master of Carlyle. She was an heiress and the marriage was probably arranged by Regent Morton. It was said that he was cruel to her. On 2 November 1596 James Douglas of Parkhead and his accomplices killed his father's enemy, James Stewart, former Earl of Arran at Symington. They claimed that Stewart was technically a rebel, "at the horn".[23] As his tombstone at Holyrood Abbey mentions, James Douglas was killed on the Royal Mile Edinburgh on 14 July 1608, by Captain William Stewart, son of William Stewart of Monkton and a nephew of Arran. Elizabeth Carlyle then married William Sinclair of Blaas.[24]
The children of James Douglas and Elizabeth Carlyle included; James Douglas, who married (1) Elizabeth Gordon of Lochinvar, (2) Anne Saltonstall, daughter of Richard Saltonstall, Lord Mayor of London.
^George R. Hewitt, Scotland Under Morton, 1572-80 (Edinburgh: John Donald, 1982), p. 37: David Reid, David Hume of Godscroft's History of the House of Angus, vol. 1 (Edinburgh: STS, Edinburgh, 2005), p. 129.
^Margaret H. B. Sanderson, A Kindly Place? Living in Sixteenth-Century Scotland (East Linton: Tuckwell, 2002), p. 152 citing NRS GD90/2/34: Rosalind K. Marshall, Virgins and Viragos: A History of Women in Scotland (Collins, 1983), p. 147.
^Robert William Cochran-Patrick, Early Records Relating to Mining in Scotland (Edinburgh, 1878), p. 92: Margaret H. B. Sanderson, A Kindly Place? (East Linton: Tuckwell, 2002), p. 153.
^Robert William Cochran-Patrick, Early Records Relating to Mining in Scotland (Edinburgh, 1878), pp. 97-8.
^George Vere Irving, The Upper Ward of Lanarkshire Described and Delineated, vol. 1 (Glasgow, 1864), p. 56.
^Maureen Meikle, The Scottish People 1490-1625 (lulu 2013), p. 77: Robert William Cochran-Patrick, Early Records Relating to Mining in Scotland (Edinburgh, 1878) p. xviii.
^Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 12 (Edinburgh, 1952), p. 360 no. 291.
^Nicholas Carlisle, Collections for a History of the Ancient Family of Carlisle (London, 1822), pp. 108, 111-113.
^Edmund Lodge, Illustrations of British History, vol. 2 (London, 1838), pp. 404-6: Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 11 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 377-8.
^David Laing, Correspondence of the Earls of Ancram and Lothian, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1875), p. vii.
^Mary Elizabeth Cumming Bruce, Family Records of the Bruces and the Cumyns (Edinburgh, 1870), p. 543.
^John Gibson Charles, Lands and lairds of Larbert and Dunipace parishes (Glasgow, 1908), pp. 172-5.
^Nicholas Carlisle, Collections for a History of the Ancient Family of Carlisle (London, 1822), p. 110.
^Mary Elizabeth Cumming Bruce, Family Records of the Bruces and the Cumyns (Edinburgh, 1870), p. 543.
^Nicholas Carlisle, Collections for a History of the Ancient Family of Carlisle (London, 1822), p. 110.