2. | Sir Alexander (10th Laird of Drum) Irvine was born in 1596 in Drum Castle, Aberdeen, Scotland (son of Alexander (9th of Drum) Irvine and Marion (of Buchan) Douglas); died in May 1658 in Drum Castle, Aberdeen, Scotland. Notes:
Alexander Irvine, eldest son of the 9th Laird of Drum and Marion Douglas, was born in 1594, and died in February 1657. He was buried in Drum's Aisle, at St. Nicholas Church, Aberdeen, Scotland. He became the 10th Laird when his father died in January 1630. Alexander was knighted at some point, probably just before the middle of 1617, for after that date he was referred to as "Sir Alexander Irvine," or various spellings thereof, in all public records.
Sir Alexander married Magdalene Scrymgeour, eldest daughter of Sir John Scrymgeour and Margaret Seton, in July 1617, and they had ten children.
Alexander and his sons were caught in a period of great turmoil and unrest in Scotland. While the old Laird tried to be neutral in the struggle between the Covenanters and the Catholics, he couldn't hide the fact that he was a staunch Royalist and supporter of King Charles I.By remaining loyal to King Charles he lost most of his fortune (but not his land holdings).
Text Box: Drum Castle, Near AberdeenDrum Castle was a royalist stronghold in a predominantly Covenant district, and was thus an obvious target. In June 1640, during one of the Laird's absences (perhaps in prison), a strong force led by Robert Munro of the Clan Munro (Munroe) surrounded the castle. Even though the attackers had artillery, Lady Irvine and her people defended the castle for two days before finally surrendering. The castle was then looted. Although there were casualties Lady Magdalene was not harmed.
Drum Castle was again sacked on May 2, 1644 by Clan Campbell (A chair with Drum symbols on it is now in the Scottish Museum in Edinburgh, and is believed to have been taken from Drum by the Campbells during the raid).Soon after Drum was sacked and looted for a third time.
Alexander, 10th Laird of Drum, his brother Robert Irvine of Fedderet, and as well as his two oldest sons, Alexander and Robert, were imprisoned at Edinburgh Castle several times. Robert died in the dungeons. He had escaped the Covenanters in Scotland by going to County Antrim in Ulster, and while there married Elizabeth Wylie. A few months later he returned to Scotland to join the forces being raised in support of the King by Alexander, his older brother. Robert was soon capturedby the Covenanters, however, and died on February 4,1645 in Tolbooth Prison in Edinburgh (torn down in 1817). David, his son, was born while he was in prison, but he never saw him.
The Laird's eldest son Alexander, near death, was set free after Montrose's victory over the Covenanters at the Battle of Kilsyth in August 1645. Tradition has it that after he recovered he joined Montrose's army and continued the fight against the Covenanters. He survived the war and married Lady Mary Gordon in 1643. He succeeded his father as the eleventh Laird of Drum when the elder died in 1657.
Robert's son David married Sophia Gault and had a son named Robert who married Margaret Wylie. Robert and Margaret had ten children:Margaret who married Ephraim McDowell;Mary who married her cousin John Wylie; Thomas who married and settledin Cushendal, Ireland; and Alexander, George, David, William, Robert, James, and Samuel. The last seven came to America on the ship George and Anne. It sailed from Londonderry May 9, 1729, and landed at Philadelphia.
Many of the immigrants who arrived in Pennsylvania in the1720s and 1730s moved down the Shenandoah Valley into Virginia where less expensive land was being opened for settlement. The seven brothers, who descended from Robert,joined this migration, and settled in Augusta County, Virginia. The McElroy family from the same ship did likewise, as did the family of the Reverend John Irvine, thought to be cousins of the seven brothers.
Borden's Grant, comprising about one hundred thousand acres, and designated Beverly Manor, was what drew many of the settlers down the Valley of Virginia to the area that became Augustus County. Beginning in 1737, numerous family units of Irvines/Irwins/Erwins settled in what was called "A Scotch-Irish Settlement."
Alexander married Margaret\Magdalene (of Dudhope) Scrimgeour on 2 Jul 1617. Margaret\Magdalene (daughter of John (1st Viscount Dudhope) Scrimgeour and Margaret (of Parbroath) Seton) and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
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