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Thomas Douglas, 5th Earl of Selkirk
Thomas
Douglas, Baron Daer and Shortcleugh, 5th Earl of Selkirk, (20 June 1771 - 8
April 1820) was a colonizer and author. He was born on St Mary’s Isle (near
Kirkcudbright), Scotland, the son of
Dunbar
Hamilton, later Douglas, 4th Earl of Selkirk and Helen Hamilton.
On 24 Nov. 1807, he married Jean Wedderburn
(d 10.06.1871) in Inveresk, Scotland, and they had three children.
Thomas Douglas was the seventh son of the 4th Earl of Selkirk, and though
two of his brothers had died in infancy he had no prospect of inheriting the
title until his mid twenties. Then, between 1794 and 1797, all four of his
remaining brothers died, two of yellow fever in the Caribbean and the others of
tuberculosis. In 1799, on the death of his father, Thomas Douglas became earl at
28 years of age.
As a boy Douglas had been quiet and not strong, but he
was apparently well liked at the University of Edinburgh which he entered at the
age of 14. There he followed a general course in the humanities with some
studies in law. He belonged to a lively group which included Walter Scott, who
in later years remembered him as “one of the most generous and disinterested of
men”; and there were many to testify to his charm of manner and winning smile
though he remained reserved and laconic. His education was filled out in 1792
with some months of travel in the Highlands of Scotland, an experience which was
to influence the course of his life decisively. This journey was followed by a
period of travel in Europe until 1794. Two other matters seem to have been of
particular importance in his growing-up years. The first was a raid on St Mary’s
Isle by the American privateer John Paul Jones in 1778, when young Tommy was
only seven. Though there was no bloodshed or brutality the boy found it a
frightening experience, and in later years he believed it had left him with a
dislike of Americans that he never wholly overcame. Secondly, though he inclined
toward intellectual pursuits, in 1796 he took up the working of one of his
father’s farms to learn what a landowner must know.
Douglas never lost
interest in the Highlands after his travels there, and he studied Highland
affairs and learned some Gaelic. He had been shocked by the effect of the
clearances with their callous, if inevitable, uprooting of helpless people who
obviously were capable and deserving of a better life. Though he had not been in
a position to help he had begun to develop a theory of emigration that might
both restore hope to dispossessed people and strengthen Britain overseas. An
opportunity to apply his theories arose even as he came into his title and
fortune. In 1798 a rebellion in Ireland brought on by starvation and rack-rents
had been put down harshly. The young earl spent some months in 1801 travelling
there to study conditions at first hand. Everything he saw tended to confirm his
views, and in the winter of 1801–2 he put forward to the Colonial Office a
“radical cure” for Ireland’s troubles. He believed the same qualities that had
made men leaders in rebellion could be of value in a different setting. To
provide real opportunities and new challenges would change the whole thrust of
an oppressed society.
Selkirk advanced these arguments repeatedly and
with enthusiasm to the Colonial Office, but they met with little favour. The
Irish were regarded as intractable, and hopeless prospects as colonists;
moreover the government was opposed to large-scale emigration. In this long and
wearing correspondence all Selkirk’s qualities appeared: his capacity for
imaginative planning, his energy, and a stubborn determination so intense as to
become self-defeating. Finally recognizing that the government would not
countenance the resettlement of Irish rebels, Selkirk proposed the emigration of
Highlanders instead. By the summer of 1802 he was thinking of “the Falls of St.
Mary” (Sault Ste Marie, Ont.) as a site and, since the government was hinting at
cooperation if he selected a “maritime situation,” he offered to combine his
efforts in Upper Canada with colonization on Prince Edward Island as well. As
his plans for the Upper Canadian venture went forward it became clear that costs
would be higher than he had anticipated. The government, influenced by the
strength of anti-emigration sentiment in Britain, informed him in February 1803
that it was unwilling to grant him special assistance. He was therefore obliged
to turn to Prince Edward Island, since he had already recruited a number of
Highland emigrants and contracted for ships and supplies. By July 1803, when the
expedition set out, it had been delayed too long for much clearing of land or
planting in the first year. Selkirk’s ship, the Dykes, reached the Island on 9
August, two days after the Polly; the Oughton would arrive on the 27th. Despite
the lateness of the season, hindrances from local government, and disputes over
land claims and preferences among the settlers, the colony was from the first a
success to match Selkirk’s dreams and support his arguments. By the time he left
in late September 1803 his people were well on the way to being happily
established, mainly on lots 57, 58, 60, and 62.
Selkirk gave his next
year to travel in the United States and the Canadas, tirelessly observing,
questioning, and taking notes. He informed himself about the terrain, crop
expectations and prices, conditions of trade, and local government. Above all he
was interested in the degree and speed of adaptation by immigrants, especially
those from the Highlands. Though he found great variations in progress as a
result of differing effort and ability, he concluded that all were better off
than they would have been at home. He had prepared himself as well as was
possible through study for his Prince Edward Island venture, but now he had the
added benefit of on-the-spot reconnaissance and of discussion in depth. It all
went down in a diary written in the evenings by candle-light or when bad weather
prevented travel by day. He was determined to be an expert on the problem he had
made his own.
Having started his travels in Halifax, N.S., he went to
Boston, Mass., then across New York State to Newark (Niagara-on-the-Lake), and
on to York (Toronto), capital of Upper Canada. He stayed there from 20 Nov. 1803
to 4 Jan. 1804, becoming well known and well liked. Part of his time was spent
in studying maps of the western part of the province in search of a site for
another colony. His efforts were encouraged by Lieutenant Governor Peter Hunter,
who had received instructions from the Colonial Office telling him to grant
Selkirk 1,200 acres plus land for his settlers in any township of the earl’s
choice that had not already been claimed. Selkirk chose his site – to be called
Baldoon after an ancestral estate – near the junction of Lake St Clair and the
Detroit River. Then in January he left York by sleigh for Montreal. The trip
down Lake Ontario and the St Lawrence tended to confirm his view that unless the
border area was filled up rapidly by British immigrants it would inevitably be
absorbed by the United States.
In Upper Canada he had seen and heard much
about the fur trade. In Montreal he learned more of its importance, its glamour,
and its power. Here were the great houses of the Montreal agents and partners –
led by William McGillivray – who lived in considerable comfort and state as
became the “Lords of the North.” They were nearly all fellow Scots, glad to
welcome an eminent compatriot and to make his stay among them pleasant.
Characteristically he was full of questions about the country and about the fur
trade, which they were happy to answer at the time but later considered to have
been an indication of sinister designs by Selkirk on their business.
By
late spring 1804 he was back in York, where he engaged Alexander McDonell (Collachie),
sheriff of the Home District, as manager of the Baldoon project. Travelling
toward the site, the two men agreed on elaborate and ambitious building plans,
and construction started on their arrival in early June. The first small group
of settlers was already on the way. On 9 July Selkirk turned for home, stopping
some weeks in Prince Edward Island where his settlement was already well rooted
and prospering in little more than a year.
In Scotland he prepared
Observations on the present state of the Highlands of Scotland, with a view of
the causes and probable consequences of emigration (London, 1805), advancing his
theories in the face of opposition from the Royal Highland and Agricultural
Society of Scotland and the Colonial Office and using the success in Prince
Edward Island to support his claims. The fact that there had already been
warnings of disaster at Baldoon was largely ignored. Located on swampy ground
and suffering from mismanagement, that colony was becoming a tragic and costly
failure [see William Burn], although despite sickness, death, and bad crops
settlers would remain in the area.
His rank and wealth had made Selkirk
prominent; the book, clearly and persuasively written, made him a celebrity.
Other books, both to challenge and to support his arguments, were rushed out. In
February 1806 he was invited to go as British minister to Washington. Although
he accepted, in the end the appointment was not made. In the spring of 1806 he
applied for an immense grant of 300,000 acres in New Brunswick but attached
conditions that could not be accepted. Turning his back on his North American
interests he flung himself into domestic affairs with characteristic energy. On
4 Dec. 1806 he was elected to the House of Lords as one of 16 representative
peers for Scotland. He became involved in the abolition of the slave trade, the
problem of national defence, and parliamentary reform. On national defence he
made himself something of an expert, and when in 1808 he published a proposal
for national service his ideas were respectfully received. On parliamentary
reform he was cautious and conservative, having been horrified by the excesses
of the French revolution and disappointed in the working of democracy in the
United States.
His efforts as parliamentarian, colonizer, and author were
bringing Selkirk some of the pleasant rewards of prominence and service. In 1807
he was made lord lieutenant of the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright; he was shortly to
be elected a fellow of the Royal Society of London and to become a member of the
prestigious Alfred Club in that city. And in 1807 came the greatest reward of
all. The shy, rich, and distinguished bachelor of 36 was married to Jean
Wedderburn, aged 21. His attractive, intelligent, and courageous wife was to be
the source of most of his future happiness and an unfailing and invaluable
support in the troubles that lay ahead. The marriage also brought him two strong
future allies, Andrew Wedderburn, Jean’s brother, and John Halkett, her cousin,
who was later to marry Selkirk’s favourite sister, Katherine. Though with his
marriage and involvement in government Selkirk appeared to have put aside any
interest in the emigration question, he probably never entirely lost sight of
it. But the most obvious area, Upper Canada, seemed closed to him; the failure
of Baldoon and the attitude of the ruling clique made it hopeless to try further
in that province. There remained Red River, which he had proposed back in April
1802 for an Irish settlement. He had been told then that it could not be
discussed as a site since it was in the territory of the Hudson’s Bay Company.
By 1808, however, the loss of free markets in Europe due to the Napoleonic Wars
had seriously reduced the value of HBC shares, and this devaluation seems to
have revived his hope of colonizing Red River, since it provided a favourable
opportunity for him to secure an interest that would get him a hearing. In July
he began to buy HBC stock on his own, and also jointly with Sir Alexander
Mackenzie, whose objective – though Selkirk could not have known it at the time
– was to gain influence for the rival North West Company. In the next year
Wedderburn and Halkett also began to buy the stock at its attractive price, and
at about this time Wedderburn became a member of the HBC’s governing committee.
Thus Selkirk and his allies, although they never came close to a controlling
interest in the company, gained a strong voice.
The idea of the company’s
developing an agricultural settlement at Red River as a refuge for retired fur
traders and a source of food that had otherwise to be brought from England had
already been discussed by the committee and had some support. It was against
this background that Selkirk early in 1811 put forward his plan, which called
for a large grant of land anchored to a substantial settlement. When news of the
proposal reached the NWC the partners did not take the settlement idea very
seriously but considered that if it should succeed it might destroy their trade,
for the site was astride their route to Athabasca and they were already in
financial difficulty through loss of markets and rising costs. (And indeed the
HBC had recently considered a proposal by former NWC partner Colin Robertson
that it should initiate serious competition via Montreal for the rich Athabasca
trade.) Too late the NWC attempted to block the grant. In June 1811 agreements
were signed by Selkirk and the HBC under which, in return for founding an
agricultural settlement and some other considerations, he was to have some
116,000 square miles – an area five times the size of Scotland and much of it
magnificent land – for 10 shillings. Lady Selkirk would later call it, with
playful bitterness, his Kingdom of Red River.
The Red River colony, if
not absolutely ill-conceived, as the Nor’Westers asserted, was born under an
unlucky star. For ten years it was to be the focus of the mounting struggle
between the two great fur-trading companies, a struggle that cost many lives,
ruined the NWC, destroyed Selkirk’s great fortune, and contributed to his early
death.
During his earlier tour of Upper Canada Selkirk had met Miles
Macdonell, brother-in-law of Alexander McDonell, and now the earl chose him to
superintend operations in the Red River colony. The HBC officially named him the
first governor of Assiniboia in June 1811, and he arrived with the first
colonists late in the summer of 1812. Both Selkirk and Macdonell had been warned
that the Nor’Westers would not tolerate the settlement, but its initial crises
came from natural causes: lack of adequate shelter and of a stable food supply.
When Macdonell, to meet the food crisis, forbad the taking out of provisions
from the grant, which had traditionally provided most of the pemmican for the
fur brigades, the Nor’Westers regarded the measure as the declaration of war
they had been expecting. Though in 1814, the first year of the ban, a mutually
creditable compromise was reached with John McDonald* of Garth, a leading
winterer, senior NWC partners such as William McGillivray considered compromise
beneath their dignity, and there were to be no more reasonable dealings at Red
River.
Selkirk had from the first planned to visit the colony once it was
established, and he had even led Macdonell to believe that he would appear in
1813 at the head of a force of soldiers – to protect the settlement against the
Americans, with whom Britain was at war. Although in the first three years there
seemed to have been little to show for his enormous expense, by the autumn of
1814 the earl felt the worst was over. But in a letter written from Montreal at
that time Colin Robertson, whose plan for competition in the Athabasca country
had now been approved, advised him that the senior NWC partners were openly
rousing natives against the settlement. Selkirk asked the Colonial Office to
provide protection for the settlers and made arrangements to go out himself in
September 1815. The government refused its support, and when he reached New York
in late October he heard that the colony had been destroyed. The Nor’Westers had
frightened or seduced 140 of the settlers from their loyalty to Selkirk and
carried them down to Upper Canada. The remainder were driven away, their crops
and houses destroyed. Macdonell, who had given himself up on a promise of
amnesty for the settlement, was arrested on a dubious warrant and taken as a
prisoner to Lower Canada. With his wife Selkirk went directly to Montreal to
challenge the Nor’Westers on their own ground. Through the autumn and winter of
1815 he gathered information on the events and prepared to go to Red River
himself, strongly supported and with the powers of a justice of the peace for
the Indian Territory, in the spring of 1816. He also found time to complete a
book entitled A sketch of the British fur trade in North America; with
observations relative to the North-West Company of Montreal (London, 1816). The
work was an indictment of Nor’Wester methods that was never answered. In the end
it may have harmed Selkirk more than the NWC since it revealed little that had
not been well known, and officially overlooked, for a long time; but it did
suggest a more active concern with the fur trade than was consistent with
Selkirk’s professed aims as a disinterested colonizer. In fact Selkirk, whom the
Nor’Westers took to calling the Trading Lord, did have an official capacity in
the trade, being authorized by the HBC to open negotiations for amalgamation
with the NWC. The talks were to be confidential and conducted through a third
party, but since each company argued from a fixed position unacceptable to the
other, the negotiations served only to sharpen existing tensions; and they were
soon common knowledge in Montreal, bearing an interpretation injurious to both
Selkirk and the HBC.
In March 1816 came astounding news. A messenger from
Colin Robertson at Red River – Jean-Baptiste Lagimonière – had come 1,800 miles
on foot in the depth of winter to report that the colony had been restored.
Robertson had met the fleeing settlers and led them back to Red River; and
Robert Semple, the new governor, had arrived with another group of settlers. The
colony was as strong as before and more determined than ever to survive. The
news presumably sharpened North West resolve even as it raised Selkirk’s
spirits. Both parties seem to have concluded that this summer would be decisive
for the settlement. Because of Colonial Office direction and threats against
Selkirk’s life the acting governor, Sir George Gordon Drummond, provided him
with a small force of regular soldiers, and Selkirk recruited an additional 90
men from the disbanded De Meuron’s Regiment.
The departure of the NWC
spring brigade from Montreal for Fort William (Thunder Bay, Ont.) was an annual
event. In 1816 a larger party than usual left, and advance elements had gone
ahead with clear instructions to finish off the settlement, preferably with a
front of Indians, but by storming the fort if necessary. Close behind the main
body of Nor’Westers came Selkirk’s flotilla of soldiers with 12 boatloads of
supplies and arms for the colony. But they were already too late.
At
Sault Ste Marie on 25 July Selkirk learned that the colony had been broken up by
the Métis [see Cuthbert Grant*]. Governor Semple and about 20 colonists had been
killed at Seven Oaks (Winnipeg) and the rest driven away, except for a few who
were prisoners at Fort William. Selkirk, roused to passionate anger, led his
force straight to Fort William, risking a pitched battle, and in mid August
arrested nine of the NWC partners after a preliminary hearing. He then decided
to occupy their fort for the winter, impounded their furs, and sent the partners
off as prisoners to Montreal, including William McGillivray himself. A search of
the fort under warrant disclosed the NWC’s complicity in the crimes at Red
River. Until this point Selkirk’s steps had been at least correct in form; the
law had formed the basis of all his arguments and of his instructions to Miles
Macdonell. Reckless of opinion he now entered into a dubious transaction with
the one remaining partner at the fort, Daniel McKenzie, a notorious drunkard.
Under it he bought the company’s furs and all the supplies at the fort in return
for a distant and non-liquid asset, one of his estates in Scotland. He was later
to refer to his “ill judged conduct” at Fort William, and certainly it lost him
sympathy and further impugned the purity of his motives as a colonizer.
More serious, though more understandable, he twice refused obedience to warrants
for his arrest which reached Fort William from Upper Canada in the late autumn.
The one he believed to be spurious and the other no longer valid; he compounded
the offence by locking up a constable who sought to use force. He undoubtedly
was also influenced in his refusals by hearing that Owen Keveny, one of his
agents, had been murdered after submitting to an NWC warrant. However justified
his refusals may have been, they were to be given more weight in Quebec and in
London than all the tragic acts in the mounting dispute.
Meanwhile, the
course of events had caused the new governor-in-chief at Quebec, Sir John Coape
Sherbrooke, to appoint commissioners of inquiry in October. Their task was to
represent the crown in the Indian Territory and “to quiet the existing
disturbances.” Selkirk had been asking for such a commission repeatedly but he
was to find the Nor’Westers claiming the credit for it. In the spring of 1817
the NWC came west in force, including the partners released on bail. They found
Fort William intact, and the supplies purchased from McKenzie left behind under
caretakers, whom they promptly arrested and sent to Montreal under guard. Lord
Selkirk had left for Red River on 1 May. Behind the Nor’Westers came the
commissioners with a small detachment of troops, and behind them a further
detachment of De Meuron’s along with more supplies for the colony.
Mail
which reached Selkirk on his way chilled his optimism. The tone of Sherbrooke’s
letters and even more that of a proclamation in the name of the Prince Regent
made him apprehensive. The latter called for a cessation of hostilities and a
restitution of property. It assumed throughout that the struggle was purely a
trade war in which the parties were equally guilty; it took no notice of Selkirk
or the settlement as special factors.
At first Selkirk believed that the
senior commissioner, William Bacheler Coltman, would prove wise and just, but
Coltman’s conduct fulfilled the letter and followed the spirit of the Prince
Regent’s proclamation. Moreover, he expressed the gravest doubts of the validity
of the HBC charter though prominent lawyers re-examined and confirmed its
soundness in 1811. If the charter was not valid neither was the grant to
Selkirk, and the acts of Miles Macdonell as governor were of doubtful legality.
To this assessment Coltman added doubts about the feasibility of the settlement,
since like many he had accepted NWC propaganda about the unsuitability of the
soil for crops. And if the settlement was not feasible its creation could only
have been a tactical move in a fur-trade war.
Though there was much
satisfaction for Selkirk in the weeks at Red River, and though his settlers
returned to fine crops and felt at last secure in his presence among them, the
future was full of uncertainty. A purchase of land from the Indians had been
arranged, but Selkirk could not give clear title to the settlers. Too much
depended on Coltman’s report.
In his hope for justice from the commission
Selkirk was frustrated and bitterly disappointed. He himself was charged for his
actions at Fort William, but the obvious instigators of the killing at Seven
Oaks, Archibald Norman McLeod and Alexander Greenfield Macdonell, were allowed
time to get out of reach before Coltman saw fit to charge them. When Selkirk
announced his intention of returning to Montreal through the United States, for
a variety of reasons including fear of assassination, Coltman angrily imposed
£6,000 bail for his appearance in court in Lower Canada. The Nor’Westers spread
the word that the Trading Lord had escaped justice and would not again be seen
in the Canadas.
Selkirk made an immense circuit through the United
States; he arrived at York on 10 Jan. 1818 and then went on to the assizes at
Sandwich (Windsor), Upper Canada, to answer the warrants he had originally
resisted. In these proceedings and in all that followed he felt himself
hopelessly entangled in a web of perjury, postponements, and manipulation of
justice that was both maddeningly frustrating and deeply shocking. The trip to
Sandwich saw no trials completed but he was bailed for £250 on the same offences
for which Coltman had imposed bail of £6,000. During the winter and spring,
preliminary hearings at Quebec on offences by the Nor’Westers found true bills
in nearly all cases to do with the murders of settlers and destruction of
Selkirk’s settlement. But a dozen prisoners and key witnesses escaped or jumped
bail and slipped away to the Indian Territory, among them Cuthbert Grant, leader
of the Métis at Seven Oaks.
Selkirk, whose health had been robust under
the rigours of a year and a half of hard living and travel, now sickened under
months of the law’s delays. In February 1818 it was decided that all the cases
from Quebec would be moved to York for trial at the request of the NWC partners,
on the plea that Lower Canadian juries would be hostile. In York, still a small
village, there was some doubt that a competent jury could be empanelled. In
August Selkirk went the 700 miles to Sandwich from Montreal for his own trials.
There, after a bitter wrangle, just as he and his lawyer, Samuel Gale, believed
he was about to be acquitted, Chief Justice William Dummer Powell adjourned the
court sine die. At that moment a local newspaper carried word that for the first
time since 1806 he had not been elected as a representative Scottish peer; this
news would certainly be interpreted in the Canadas as a loss of favour with the
British government. He was sick of justice in the Canadas, and having seen by
accident Colonial Secretary Lord Bathurst’s letter of 11 Feb. 1817 that had
resulted in his official persecution, he determined to return to England to
confront the Colonial Office.
Leaving his clever and courageous wife to
watch his interests from Montreal, he returned to London. Though now seriously
ill he continued the fight from his sick-bed, informing and arousing his
friends. The whole miserable controversy was set out in what was to be his last
book, A letter to the Earl of Liverpool . . . ([London], 1819). In addition he
kept a watch over the affairs of his settlements at Prince Edward Island and Red
River, adjudicating disputes and forwarding supplies, though his own finances
were approaching ruin. His health at first improved but the stress was too great
and at last produced a dangerous haemorrhage. By mid May 1819 it was reported
that he was “far advanced in a deep consumption”; by August this news was known
at Red River and beyond, to the grief and dismay of his supporters and the
undisguised glee of the Nor’Westers.
Nevertheless, his efforts were at
last having some success. His brother-in-law, Sir James Montgomery, had won in
February 1819 a motion in parliament asking for papers on the Red River
controversy. When presented they contained Coltman’s report along with Colonial
Office correspondence and amounted to a massive exposure of NWC methods. It was
a vindication of sorts, but only a few friends and enemies were much interested,
and Selkirk was no longer able to follow up effectively.
In June his
family returned from Montreal and plans were made for a journey to a warmer
climate in search of health. By mid September preparations were complete, and
what Selkirk referred to as their “caravan” wound its way toward the south of
France. Early in October they reached Pau, found it charming, and settled in for
the winter. Though it was not the right climate for a chest complaint Lord
Selkirk’s health appeared to improve. There was a constant stream of news from
England, and word of a probable amalgamation of the fur companies, both of which
were now in serious financial trouble. There was a tempting NWC offer for
Selkirk’s HBC stock, a sale that would have helped his desperate financial
affairs. But he would countenance no arrangement that would not provide for the
well-being of his settlers. Selkirk’s health was now steadily declining. He
still wrote on Red River affairs, and spoke sadly of the colony as the place
“where we had the prospect of doing so much good.”
On 8 April 1820 he
died in Pau, and he was buried in the Protestant cemetery at nearby Orthez.
Selkirk did not live to see the amalgamation of the HBC and the NWC, only a
year away; nor would such a controversial figure have a place in the memory of
the new company, though to his supporters he remained a hero, and to his
settlers a noble legend. Lady Selkirk, in a letter to his sister Katherine,
wrote, “I feel confident if we have patience he will have ample justice, and
when the North West Company are forgotten his name and character will be revered
as they ought.” The Montreal Gazette of 8 June reported his death and commented:
“It may be said of this nobleman that the endowments of his mind as well as his
other qualifications made him be as much respected as the exalted rank he
inherited from his ancestors. . . . Perhaps some people would deduct something
from his worth on account of his rage for colonization.”
A flat monument at ground level commemorates the life of Thomas Douglas, the
Fifth Earl of Selkirk, who settled in the Eldon area of Prince Edward Island
with Scottish settlers in 1803. The monument is situated at the entrance of Lord
Selkirk Provincial Park.
1817 Mary Wedderburn [b. 1786 in Jamaica,2nd d. of John Wedderburn of 'Spring
Garden' Jamaica, & Wedderburn & Co., London & Mary Wisdom Bedward,
m. 1782 in Jamaica] m. on 7/6/1817, at Marylebone parish church, the Rev. John
Wellings, M.D., chaplain to the Countess of Selkirk (née Jean Wedderburn, d. of
James W. 'of Inveresk', who m. Thomas 5th Earl of Selkirk in 1807. - W.B. p.
307) Mary & her husband (who was a doctor before he took Holy Orders) had
'by this marriage' an only child, Katharine Mary Wellings (b. in London on
27/12/1818) who m. her first cousin, John Stirling of Kippendavie (b. 19/8/1811)
the e.s. of Mary's younger sister, Catherine Georgina, & her husband Patrick
Stirling (m. 1810, q.v.).]
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