George Wishart of Drymme was a Scottish landowner, lawyer, and a financial administrator for Mary, Queen of Scots.
Family background
editGeorge Wishart was kinsman of John Wishart of Pitarrow. His lands were at "Drynne", "Drymmie" or Drymme, also known as "Drum", in Maryton parish near Montrose in Angus, Scotland.[1] A different property called Drymme or Drum was located nearby at Stracathro, close to the confluence of the North Esk and the Cruik Water, and this has sometimes been identified as the home of Wisharts.[citation needed]
Sub-collector of the Thirds of Benefices
editIn March 1562 John Wishart of Pitarrow became the comptroller of the exchequer and "collector-general of teinds", the collector of the tax for church incomes calculated on the value of farms and incomes. John Wishart gave his kinsman George Wishart a job as a sub-collector of these royal incomes. An account made by George Wishart of the crown income (charge) and the expenditure (discharge) in 1564/5 is held by the National Records of Scotland.[2] From the teinds, the "thirds of benefices", contributed to the expenses of the household of Mary, Queen of Scots.[3]
Another member of the family, John Wishart's older brother, Alexander Wishart of Cairnbeg in Fordoun, was involved as collector of the thirds of Coupar Angus Abbey, and chamberlain of Badenoch. George Wishart collected a few payments from neighbours, including Walter Wood of Balbegno north of Brechin for lands at Fettercairn, and from Ninian Guthrie of Kingennie near Dundee, as Sheriff of Angus.[4]
Some of the material in Wishart's account, especially regarding payments for the Royal Guard, Captain Anstruther, and the fortress island of Inchkeith, appears in other manuscript accounts and has been published.[5]
The historian Gordon Donaldson highlighted payments by Wishart to household officers, including David Rizzio, who appears as "David Rischo, Italiane", and payments to the Kirk minister John Knox, as part of his stipend and also sums of money given to two of his servants, Margaret Fowlis and John Reid. Another payment for Knox was given to Robert Watson, a merchant in Edinburgh.[6][7]
John Wishart of Pitarrow supported the Earl of Moray during the Chaseabout Raid and lost his job. No more is heard of George Wishart at the exchequer. The date of his death is unknown.[citation needed]
Marriage and children
editSomething is known of George Wishart's family. He married Elizabeth Guthrie (d. 1583), the widow of James Mylne of Dundee. She was a grandmother of a more well-known Dundee merchant David Wedderburn.[8] Their daughter Eufame Wishart married Archibald Campbell of Clavers.[9] Elizabeth Guthrie left a will which mentions the farmstock at Drymme with the plough oxen, work horses, and the sheep they grazed beside the Montrose Basin.[10][citation needed]
His son, also George Wishart, succeeded him as Laird of Drynnie or Drymme, before June 1605.[11] He married Elizabeth Erskine, a daughter of Robert Erskine (d. 1590) from the nearby House of Dun, and a granddaughter of the Reformer, John Erskine of Dun.[12] In 1609 George Wishart of Drymme and his son George, the feuar of Drymme, owed 2000 merks to a London-based tailor, Andrew Balfour.[13]
References
edit- ^ Alex. J. Warden, Angus or Forfarshire, The Land and its People, vol. 4 (Dundee, 1884), p. 312.
- ^ Gordon Donaldson, Scotland's History: Approaches and Reflections (Scottish Academic Press, 1995), p. 63: The account call number is National Records of Scotland, E30/11, and the account has been digitized as a "virtual volume".
- ^ Gordon Donaldson, Thirds of Benefices, 1561-1572 (SHS: Edinburgh, 1949).
- ^ Gordon Donaldson, Thirds of Benefices, p. 174: Exchequer Rolls, XIX, p. 268.
- ^ Gordon Donaldson, Thirds of Benefices (SHS, Edinburgh, 1949), pp. 172-181: 'Archearis of Soverane Ladyis Gaird' in Maitland Club Miscellany, vol. 1 part 1 (Edinburgh, 1833), pp. 33-5.
- ^ Jane Dawson, John Knox (Yale, 2015), p. 222: Gordon Donaldson, Scotland's History: Approaches and Reflections (Scottish Academic Press, 1995), pp. 63-4.
- ^ Charles Rogers cited George Wishart of Drymme's account for Rizzio's salary, apparently from a copy in the papers of George Chalmers in the Laing manuscripts at the University of Edinburgh, see History of the Chapel Royal of Scotland (London, 1882), p. lxiv: George Chalmers used Wishart's account for courtiers' salaries, see The Life of Mary, Queen of Scots, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1818), p. 75.
- ^ A. H. Millar, Compt Buik of David Wedderburne (SHS: Edinburgh, 1898), p. 11.
- ^ Alexander Wedderburn, Wedderburn Book (1898), p. 104.
- ^ [[National Records of Scotland', "Guthrie, Elizabeth", Will reference CC8/8/13, p. 375.
- ^ Patrick Chalmers, Registrum episcopatus Brechinensis (Edinburgh, 1856), p. 292 David Wishart, Genealogical History of the Wisharts of Pitarrow and Logie Wishart (Perth, 1914).
- ^ Violet Jacob, The Lairds of Dun (London, 1931), p. 138.
- ^ David Masson, Register of the Privy Council, 1610-1613, vol. 9 (Edinburgh, 1889), p. 52.