Robert Gilfillan (7 July 1798 – 4 December 1850) was a Scottish poet and songwriter.
Life
He was born in Dunfermline in Fife, Scotland, the son of Robert Gilfillan (died 1834), a master weaver, and his wife, Marion Law. In 1811 the family moved to Leith.[1] Around 1812/13 he was apprenticed as a cooper to John Thomson of Peatnook in Leith.[2] In 1818 he returned to Dunfermline to work as a grocer. He returned to Leith in 1821 and worked in various warehouses and wine stores.[3]
His connection with Dunfermline was by no means severed as it was in the town’s Masonic Lodge, Lodge St. John, No. 26 that he was initiated into Freemasonry in December 1821 and, like Robert Burns, he did so before he became famous.[4]