William Stewart of Caverston and Traquair (died 1605), was a Scottish landowner and Captain of Dumbarton Castle.
Career
He was a brother of Sir John Stewart of Traquair.[1] His lands were at Caverston, or Caberston, sometimes given as "Taberstoun". Caverston was a property of the Traquair Stewarts in Innerleithen parish with a fortified house. No visible traces of Caberston Tower remain.[2]Regent Moray gave William Stewart a charter of the lands of "Caverstoun" in January 1568, which notes that the lands in Peebleshire were formerly held from the Earl of Bothwell and were part of the Barony of Crichton.[3]
In 1580 Stewart captured John Cunningham of Drumquhassil in Edinburgh. Drumquhassil had opposed the delivery of Dumbarton Castle to the king's favourite Esmé Stewart. Drumquhassil surrendered the keeping of Dumbarton to Stewart, with an inventory of the munitions and furnishings. The inventory gives useful information about locations in the castle, including the "chamber between the craigs" that can still be visited today.[7] Stewart and Drumquhassill signed the inventory on 27 August 1580. After this, Stewart was officially the deputy captain of Dumbarton.[8]
Esmé Stewart, Duke of Lennox, rewarded Caverston for his loyalty with the tenancy of the lands of Inzertoun in Dalkeith.[9] When Lennox was threatened by the Raid of Ruthven, he fled to safety at Dumbarton.[10]
In March 1583, Stewart swore an oath of his continuing loyalty and service to James VI as captain of Dumbarton.[11] In May he was asked to open and inspect a locked chest containing Esmé Stewart's letters at Dumbarton with Walter Stewart of Blantyre. They were looking for a copy of the Articles of Association, a scheme to return Mary, Queen of Scots to power in Scotland.[12]
In August 1583, after the fall of the Gowrie Regime, the English ambassador Robert Bowes heard that Stewart would also get the role in the royal wardrobe held by James Murray.[13]
In May 1585 Stewart came to Edinburgh with the king's letter asking the town council for a loan of 1000 merks, for soldiers for the English border.[17]
In 1585 the former royal favourite James Stewart, Earl of Arran was said to have embarked on a boat in Ayrshire carrying royal jewellery including "Kingis Eitche" or "Great H of Scotland".[18] William Stewart of Caverston negotiated the recovery of the royal jewels from the Earl of Arran and his wife Elizabeth Stewart, Lady Lovat, about ship on the Fairlie Roads.[19][20] Stewart delivered the "Great H" into the "king's own hands".[21]
He inherited the lands of Traquair from his older brother John Stewart in 1594, and became known as "William Stewart of Traquair".[24] At the baptism of Prince Henry at Stirling Castle in August 1594 he was of the men appointed to carry the "paill", a red velvet canopy held up with four poles over Prince Henry during the ceremonies.[25]
In 1597 Anne of Denmark arranged a loan for the dowry of her maidens of honour, Jean Stewart, who was marrying Gilbert Kennedy of Bargany and Ardstinchar.[26] She asked William Stewart of Traquair, who was Jean Stewart's brother-in-law, to be a guarantor or cautioner for the loan. Eventually, the Traquair Stewarts became liable for the loan.[27]
William Stewart contributed 8 kids, 15 moor fowls, 2 black cocks, 28 capons and a roe deer to a banquet at Holyrood Palace for Anne of Denmark's brother, Ulrik, Duke of Holstein on 30 April 1598.[28]
William Stewart, a servant of Regent Morton mentioned in Morton's "Confession".[35]
Robert Bowes' letter of 19 September 1583 to Francis Walsingham mentions Arran's brother William Stewart of Monkton, Colonel William Stewart, and William Stewart of Caverston.[36]
References
^Iain MacPhail, Dumbarton Castle (Edinburgh: John Donald, 1979), p. 74.
^A chronicle of the kings of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1830), p. 156: Robert Pitcairn, Historical and genealogical account of the principal families of the name of Kennedy (Edinburgh, 1830), p. 24.
^HMC Report on the manuscripts of Colonel David Milne Home of Wedderburn Castle (London, 1892), pp. 68-9.
^Walter Scott, Border Antiquities of England and Scotland, vol. 2 (London, 1817), p. 195.
^David Stevenson, Scotland's Last Royal Wedding (Edinburgh, 1997), p. 121.
^Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020) p. 50.
^Annie I. Cameron, Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1593-1595, vol. 11 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 196-7.
^Calendar State Papers Scotland, 13:1 (Edinburgh, 1969), pp. 345-7, TNA SP 52/63/68.