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Donald
Mackintosh
and the Mackintosh Library
Another
Gaelic scholar in addition to Jerome Stone, Master of the Royal
School, who had a connection with Dunkeld, was the Revd. Donald
Mackintosh. In the buildings occupied by the Royal School, both
former and present, was a room devoted to a collection of books
named the Mackintosh Library. Through carelessness and neglect
in bygone years, the ponderous old volumes gradually have become,
many of them, torn and dilapidated, whilst others have been
lost. On the transference of the school from the old building
near the Cathedral to Culloden House, the books were also removed
thither.
In
this library are still many interesting and valuable volumes,
if not to the general reader, certainly so to the student and
scholar.
The
collection was gifted to the Cathedral City of Dunkeld by the
Revd. Donald Mackintosh, Episcopal Minister of Strathtay, who
claimed to be the last non-juring priest in Scotland. He was
one of that body of ecclesiastics who refused to acknowledge
the Kingship of the House of Hanover, protesting against the
Foreign Succession and the Whiggish principles of a British
Hierarchy. It will therefore be easily granted that from the
firm but solitary nature of his stand, this minister was no
ordinary person, but a man of strong will and opinions, even
to obstinacy, an account of his life and work confirming this
view.
The
following particulars concerning this non-juring priest are
quoted, by permission, from an interesting and scholarly pamphlet
written by the Revd. W. M. Tuke, formerly incumbent of St. Marys
Episcopal Church, Birnam. In this pamphlet indebtedness is acknowledged
to an article which appeared in Stephens Episcopal Magazine
for July, 1836. and to a biography, compiled by one Alexander
Campbell, who had personal knowledge of Mackintosh and various
members of the family to which he belonged.
Donald
Mackintosh was born in 1743, near Killiecrankie, his father
being a farmer on the Urrard Estate. ( Map
)
He must have received a fairly good education at the nearest
village school, for he went to Edinburgh and there felt qualified
to seek success as a teacher. His efforts in this line were
not satisfactory, or he may have desired a change, but, whatever
the reason, at the age of 31, he was employed as a postman.
A private individual, Williamson by name, had proved himself
a pioneer of the penny post and established an institution of
that kind in Edinburgh. He employed a number of men to collect
and deliver letters and of these Donald Mackintosh was one,
wearing a uniform cap on which was printed in gilt letters "Williamsons
Penny Post."
However,
his ambition was scotched, not killed! It had only lain dormant;
and he endeavoured to woo fame in the guise of literature, after
he had been successful in receiving several good appointments
in another line. Becoming tutor in the family of Sir George
Stewart of Grandtully, he was,well remunerated. He made a tour
through Lochaber, and began to gather material for a work which
he afterwards published, "Gaelic Proverbs," a copy
of which may be found in the Library of the Perth Literary and
Antiquarian Museum. As he was considered a good Gaelic scholar,
the work is of recognised value. Interested as he was in the
Legends and Melodies of the Highlands, he collected many of
them. He was fortunate in having various friends who were able
and willing to assist him, amongst them Henry Mackenzie, author
of "Man of Feeling," and after the publication, in
1785, of his Proverbs, he was offered a situation as clerk in
the office of an Edinburgh lawyer, which appointment he held
for several years.
Still
he was not content. His ambition lay in another direction. He
sought ordination and received it, being afterwards regarded
by various Jacobite families as the only true Pastor or Priest
left in Scotland. He has some claim to that distinction when
the reasons offered from a Jacobite standpoint are studied.
On
the death of Prince Charles Edward Stewart, the Protestant Jacobites
found themselves in a curious predicament. The successor to
the throne, from their point of view, was his brother Henry,
a Cardinal of the Church of Rome. Thereupon many Jacobites at
last transferred their allegiance to the reigning house and
joined in the prayers for King George. Notwithstanding their
prejudice against a Hanoverian king, they preferred him to the
Pope of Rome. A few still remained staunch to the House of Stewart.
Of these, Bishop Rose of Dunblane and James Brown, Presbyter
at Montrose, were the only two clergymen who refused to acknowledge
the Headship of Hanover over the Scottish Episcopal Church.
Bishop Rose had consecrated Brown to the Episcopate and Brown
had ordained Donald Mackintosh to the Deaconate and Priesthood,
he being the only non-juring priest ordained as such in Scotland.
The validity of their ordination has been questioned, but Mackintosh
himself had no doubt on the subject and alluded to himself as
"The Revd. Donald Mackintosh, a Priest of the Old Scots
Episcopal Church, and last of the non-jurant clergy in Scotland."
He
was highly esteemed by these valiant old Jacobites, who never
swerved from their belief that he was the only true Priest left
in Scotland.
He
had a wide pastoral district, stretching from Edinburgh to Loch
Katrine, thence to lone Glentilt, on to bonnie Glenshee, and
north-east to Banff, a range altogether of more than a hundred
miles. Still he found time to gather the large collection of
books he afterwards bequeathed to the "Cathedral City of
Dunkeld."
His
latter days were spent in comparative comfort, several legacies
falling his way and, in addition, he had received a good appointment
as Translator of the Gaelic language and Keeper of the Gaelic
Records to the Royal Highland Society of Scotland. In 1808,
his health failed and he was unable to undertake his yearly
journey throughout his pastorate.
Shortly
after, he died and was buried in Greyfriars, Edinburgh, but
no stone records his death or marks his grave.
In
this collection or library there are many curious and interesting
volumes; some of them are rare, but unfortunately several valuable
works are now missing, lost or destroyed. There are numerous
theological works, as might be expected, and old histories,
such as Holinsheds Scottish Chronicle. Translations of
Ossian abound, and copies of the Poems of Gavin Douglas, and
Blind Harrys Wallace. A copy of Allan Ramsay s Poems
is thus proudly annotated on the fly-leaf,
"Given
to me by the poets own hand."
Jacobite
pamphlets, too, are numerous and interesting, as well as treatises
Presbyterial and Episcopal; Calvin, of course, is represented
and John Knox.
The
catalogue drawn up in 1823 by Dr MCulloch, Rector of the
Royal School, who acted as Librarian, is still in existence.
In
his will Mackintosh appointed Curators to administer the affairs,
two of whom were to be in perpetuity, the Minister of Dunkeld
and the nearest Episcopal Minister to the City of Dunkeld.
The
readers of a former age boldly attacked bulky volumes, heavy
both in matter and weight. The Mackintosh Library is not the
only example of a. solid collection in the district. The Minutes
of a Reading Society formed in Inshewan (Birnam) have been preserved
and are of interest to the curious. The title page is beautifully
transcribed by hand, and would adorn any age.
The
Inshewan Reading Society was proposed in 1796 by some persons
in the three Inshewans, Easter, Wester and Middle. The Rules
and Regulations are carefully drawn up and very rigid, if enforced.
One reads rather strangely, "If any member resides twenty
miles from the seat of the society he shall no more be considered
a member; but he shall have it in his power to transfer his
share of the Library to his son, or his brother or his son-in-law
providing he is of good moral character."
The
books purchased and read eagerly, as the Minutes reveal, are
no light reading. One Minute records how the members met and
balloted for the privilege of reading, in rotation, Dean Prideaux'
"Connections." Another records a proposal to remove
the books from the house of Mr Wm Harris, where they had at
first been housed, as a larger room was required. "The
members will meet and carry the Books to William Stewarts
in Western Inshewan. Mr William MAra was appointed Chaplain
to walk in Front of the Procession carrying Dr. Doddridges
Family Expositor, and to consecrate the books after being placed
in the New Library with a Prayer." When the removal did
take place, it is related that, "The Meeting adjourned
to Birnam Inn . . . and after partaking of a plentiful dinner
resumed the business of the Society..." Business concluded,
"then the country beverage, Whisky Toddy, was ordered and
the members continued together till a late hour. Many appropriate
toasts were drunk in course of the evening and the members inspired
by the enlivening spirit of genuine Glenlivat sung many national
airs with real Scotch glee."
This
Society was wound up in 1864, but it is interesting to know
that a bookcase containing the books is still in the possession
of a descendant of one of the founders. In the Reading Room
of the Birnam Institute is a good modern Library and the same
is also found in the Dunkeld Reading Room, where the Rural Libraries
Committee, under the administration of the Perthshire Education
Authority, keep up a good supply of books in connection with
the Carnegie Trust.
Dunkeld
an Ancient City
Elizabeth Stewart
Dunkeld, 1926
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to Dunkeld History
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