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Grand Masters of Scotland - Onondaga and Oswego Masonic ...

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late Mr. Dixon <strong>of</strong> Belleisle, <strong>and</strong> there he acquired a thorough knowledge <strong>of</strong> finance <strong>and</strong> accounts, <strong>and</strong> also a practical knowledge <strong>of</strong><br />

the coal <strong>and</strong> iron businesses. On the death <strong>of</strong> his father, who for several years had carried on the business <strong>of</strong> an iron <strong>and</strong> coal<br />

master at Omoa on the estate <strong>of</strong> Clel<strong>and</strong>, belonging to the family <strong>of</strong> Stair, Mr. Stewart reconstructed the works, <strong>and</strong> having acquired<br />

in lease an extensive mineral field, which was found to contain an excellent seam <strong>of</strong> blackb<strong>and</strong> ironstone, he in the course <strong>of</strong> a few<br />

years acquired a considerable fortune, to which after years <strong>of</strong> great success were to make great additions. Notwithst<strong>and</strong>ing the<br />

claims which his business had upon him, he found that he had sufficient time to devote to municipal affairs, <strong>and</strong> accordingly he<br />

became a member <strong>of</strong> the Town Council in 1842 as one <strong>of</strong> the representatives <strong>of</strong> what was then known as the second ward, the ward<br />

in which his own Mansion House <strong>of</strong> Parson's Green was situated.<br />

In 1843, <strong>and</strong> when he had been only one year in the Town Council, he was appointed to the <strong>of</strong>fice <strong>of</strong> River Bailie, in immediate<br />

succession to the late Mr. Alex<strong>and</strong>er Baird, <strong>of</strong> Gartsherrie fame. In 1845 he was elected as one <strong>of</strong> the ordinary magistrates; <strong>and</strong> in<br />

1847 he attained the <strong>of</strong>fice <strong>of</strong> senior bailie, or acting chief magistrate. In the autumn <strong>of</strong> that year Mr. Hastie, the then Lord Provost,<br />

was elected as one <strong>of</strong> the two representatives <strong>of</strong> the city in Parliament, one result <strong>of</strong> which was that he was resident chiefly in<br />

London, <strong>and</strong> another, that the duties which, had he been resident in Glasgow, he would have required to discharge personally, were<br />

devolved upon, <strong>and</strong> had to be performed by Mr. Stewart, as acting chief magistrate.<br />

In the early part <strong>of</strong> 1848 trade was, in consequence <strong>of</strong> the mercantile depression which began in the course <strong>of</strong> the previous year, in<br />

a wretchedly bad condition, <strong>and</strong> vast numbers <strong>of</strong> the population were out <strong>of</strong> employment, <strong>and</strong> consequently in a state bordering<br />

upon starvation. Moreover, a few weeks previously another revolution had overthrown the Government <strong>of</strong> Louis Philippe; <strong>and</strong> the<br />

whole <strong>of</strong> Europe was in a state <strong>of</strong> excitement <strong>and</strong> discontent. It is not to be wondered at that in such circumstances there was in this<br />

populous district a strong tendency to disturbances, <strong>and</strong>, indeed, disturbances did ensue, not, it is to be added, without some loss <strong>of</strong><br />

life <strong>and</strong> also some destruction <strong>of</strong> property. Of course Mr. Stewart had to play a prominent part as the actual head <strong>of</strong> the magistracy,<br />

<strong>and</strong> that he performed his part well was universally admitted.<br />

When the Colonel <strong>of</strong> the regiment <strong>of</strong> cavalry which had been called out to assist in the suppression <strong>of</strong> the disturbances appeared on<br />

the scene with a squadron, Mr. Stewart, who by the way was an excellent horseman, mounted the horse <strong>of</strong> an orderly dragoon, rode<br />

with the Colonel <strong>and</strong> his men into the very thick <strong>of</strong> the fray, <strong>and</strong> acted with great decision <strong>and</strong> promptitude; <strong>and</strong> the disturbances<br />

were speedily suppressed. Indeed, under a man <strong>of</strong> less courage, less judgment, <strong>and</strong> less force <strong>of</strong> character the loss <strong>of</strong> life would<br />

have been very serious <strong>and</strong> the injury to property immense, to say nothing <strong>of</strong> the effect which a successful riot would have had on<br />

the working population <strong>of</strong> all the adjacent mining <strong>and</strong> manufacturing districts. In 1851, on the expiration <strong>of</strong> Sir James Anderson's<br />

term <strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong>fice, Mr. Stewart was elected as his successor - many <strong>of</strong> his supporters thus seeking to recognize the very valuable<br />

services rendered by him in the trying scenes <strong>of</strong> 1848.<br />

In 1852 Mr. Stewart was married to Miss Isabella King, one <strong>of</strong> the daughters <strong>of</strong> a well-known <strong>and</strong> highly-esteemed citizen, the late<br />

Mr. King <strong>of</strong> Levernholm Campsie.<br />

Shortly after his elevation to the <strong>of</strong>fice <strong>of</strong> Lord Provost, Mr. Stewart applied himself to the important question <strong>of</strong> a water supply for<br />

Glasgow, a task in which he had the valuable support <strong>of</strong> his esteemed friend the late Bailie James Gourlay, in the memoir <strong>of</strong> whom<br />

will be found a very full <strong>and</strong> most interesting account <strong>of</strong> the violent opposition which the scheme encountered. Suffice it to say here<br />

that the opposition only tended to increase the perseverance <strong>and</strong> the energy <strong>of</strong> Mr. Stewart; <strong>and</strong> ultimately - <strong>and</strong>, as is well known,<br />

to a great extent through the influence which he had with the Prime Minister <strong>of</strong> the day, Lord Palmerston, <strong>of</strong> whom two or three<br />

years previously he had become a personal friend - the Water Bill was carried, the benefit which it conferred being beyond all<br />

question one <strong>of</strong> the greatest boons ever conferred upon the city. When we think <strong>of</strong> the obloquy which was heaped upon Mr. Stewart,<br />

on the virulence with which he was assailed, on the worry to which from first to last he was subjected, <strong>and</strong> on the weeks, nay the<br />

months <strong>of</strong> anxiety which he had to pass through, all in his endeavours to procure for his fellow-citizens a bountiful supply <strong>of</strong> pure<br />

water, we do not feel surprised that his health became affected <strong>and</strong> that the seeds were laid <strong>of</strong> the disease which was destined not<br />

many years afterwards to terminate a career <strong>of</strong> so much worth <strong>and</strong> so much usefulness to the community at large.(1)<br />

In 1856 Mr. Stewart acquired from Mr. Baillie Cochrane, now Lord Lamington, at a cost <strong>of</strong> £55,000, the estate <strong>of</strong> Murdostoun,<br />

situated in the parish <strong>of</strong> Shotts, Lanarkshire, <strong>and</strong> immediately began to improve it upon an extensive scale <strong>and</strong> with great taste.(2)<br />

We should mention that, although his Provostship terminated in 1854, Mr. Stewart remained in the Town Council until the end <strong>of</strong><br />

1855, in order that, as Chairman <strong>of</strong> the Water Scheme, he might give the town the benefit <strong>of</strong> his services in carrying through the Bill.<br />

On retiring from the Council he ceased to take any interest in municipal affairs; but as a county proprietor he took an active part in all<br />

county matters.<br />

Mr. Stewart died suddenly, <strong>of</strong> heart disease, on 12th September, 1866, survived by his wife, by a daughter, <strong>and</strong> by two sons, the<br />

elder <strong>of</strong> whom, Mr. Robert King Stewart, B.A., is proprietor <strong>of</strong> Murdostoun <strong>and</strong> Langbyres, <strong>and</strong> the younger, Mr. William Lindsay<br />

Stewart, is proprietor <strong>of</strong> the l<strong>and</strong>s <strong>of</strong> Stanmore, situate in the upper ward <strong>of</strong> Lanarkshire.<br />

(1) To commemorate Provost Stewart's services to the community a Memorial Fountain has been erected in the West-End Park at<br />

the expense <strong>of</strong> the City.<br />

(2) This property belonged down to the middle <strong>of</strong> the fifteenth century to the Scotts <strong>of</strong> Buccleuch, <strong>and</strong> was then exchanged by them<br />

for part <strong>of</strong> the l<strong>and</strong>s <strong>of</strong> Branxholme in Roxburghshire, belonging to a family <strong>of</strong> the name <strong>of</strong> Inglis. In later times Murdostoun belonged<br />

to James Inglis Hamilton, who comm<strong>and</strong>ed the Scots Greys at Waterloo, <strong>and</strong> who was killed at the head <strong>of</strong> his regiment in the<br />

somewhat reckless charge which our heavy cavalry made on Marshal Ney's "gr<strong>and</strong> battery." It then passed to Admiral the Hon. Sir<br />

Alex<strong>and</strong>er Inglis Cochrane, captor <strong>of</strong> the Danish West India Isl<strong>and</strong>s, <strong>and</strong> next, in 1832, to his son the late Admiral Sir Thomas Inglis<br />

Cochrane, the father <strong>of</strong> Lord Lamington. This estate Mr. Stewart added to in 1865 by the purchase <strong>of</strong> the l<strong>and</strong>s <strong>of</strong> Langbyres, situate<br />

in the vicinity <strong>of</strong> Murdostoun.<br />

Murdostoun Castle, a mansion in Shotts parish, Lanarkshire, near the right bank <strong>of</strong> South Calder Water, 2 miles N <strong>of</strong> Newmains.<br />

Its owner, Robert King Stewart, Esq. (b. 1853; suc. 1866), holds 1760 acres in the shire, valued at £2833 per annum.—Ord. Sur.,<br />

sh. 31, 1867.<br />

132

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