[185] Patten, p. 3.
[186] The following is a copy of the warrant, and affords a specimen, which may be novel to some readers, of the form in which such affairs are couched. The original is still preserved by the present Earl of Newburgh, the descendant of Charles Radcliffe. I am indebted to the courtesy of the Earl of Newburgh for permission to copy this doc.u.ment, and also for several particulars concerning the family of Radcliffe, which I have interwoven with this biography:--
"_James Stanhope, Esq., one of his Majesty"s most Honourable Privy Council, and Princ.i.p.al Secretary of State._
"These are in his Majesty"s name, to authorise and require you, taking a constable to your a.s.sistance, forthwith to make strict and diligent search in such places as you shall have notice, for the Right Honourable James, Earl of Derwent.w.a.ter; and him having found, you are to seize and apprehend for suspicion of Treason, and to bring him, together with his papers, before me to be examined concerning the Premisses, and to be further dealt with according to law: for the due execution whereof, all Mayors, Sheriffs, Justices of the Peace, Constables, and all his Majesty"s officers, Civil and Military, and loving subjects whom it may concern, are to be aiding and a.s.sisting to you as there shall be occasion. And for so doing, this shall be your warrant.
"Given at Whitehall the two-and-twentieth day of September, 1715.
"JAMES STANHOPE."
"To Richard Shorman, John Hutching, and John Turner, three of his Majesty"s Messengers in Ordinary."
[187] His pension was raised for his services from fifty to eighty pounds per annum.--See Caledonian Mercury, 1722.
[188] Patten, p. 19.
[189] Hutchinson"s History of Northumberland, vol. i. p. 131.
[190] State Papers. Domestic, No. 4, 1716.
[191] Life of Charles Radcliffe, p. 15.
[192] Patten, p. 31.
[193] Patten. Smollett.
[194] Parliamentary History, 2 Geo. I. vol. vii. p. 269.
[195] Patten, p. 47.
[196] Id. p. 65.
[197] An instance of this spirit is related by Lord Sunderland in the case of a Mr. Crisp, a Lancashire gentleman, who acted with such zeal for the Government during the Rebellion, that he was never able to live in his native country afterwards.--Lord Mahon"s History of England since the Peace of Utrecht, vol. i. p. 253.
[198] Lord Mahon, vol. i. p. 248.
[199] Patten, p. 79.
[200] Letter from a Scots Prisoner.--See Weekly Journal, or British Gazette, for 1716.
[201] Weekly Journal, p. 354.
[202] Parliamentary History, p. 269.
[203] Life of Charles Radcliffe, p. 23.
[204] Patten.
[205] Patten, p. 96.
[206] Patten, p. 103.
[207] Weekly Journal.
[208] Patten.
[209] Patten.
[210] Caledonian Mercury for 1716.
[211] Earls of Derwent.w.a.ter, Nithisdale, Carnwath, and Wintoun; Viscount Kenmure, and Lords Widdrington and Nairn.
[212] State Trials, vol. xv. p. 762.
[213] Parliamentary History, vol. vii. p. 269.
[214] State Trials.
[215] Caledonian Mercury for 1716.
[216] Beatson"s Political Index.
[217] Douglas"s Peerage of Scotland.
[218] State Trials, vol. xv. p. 802.
[219] Lord Mahon"s History, vol. i. p. 291.
[220] Id.
[221] State Papers, 1716, No. 4; now, for the first time, printed.
[222] Or rather, a piece of red cloth, which is still preserved at Ha.s.sop, the seat of the Earl of Newburgh, the marks of blood being still visible.
[223] From a tradition current in the descendants of this family.
[224] Hogg"s Jacobite Relics, vol. i. p. 31.
[225] See Caledonian Mercury, 1723.
THE MASTER OF SINCLAIR.
John Sinclair, called, in compliance with the custom of Scotland in regard to the eldest sons of Barons, the Master of Sinclair, was descended from the ancient family of Saint Clare, in France, on whom lands were bestowed by Alexander the Third of Scotland. In early times, the t.i.tles of Earls of Orkney and Caithness had been given to the first settlers of the Saint Clares; and the possession of the islands of Orkney and Shetland had been added to certain royal donations, by a marriage with an heiress of the sirname of Speire. One of the Sinclairs had even borne the dignity of Prince of Orkney; but this distinction was lost by an improvident member of the house of Sinclair, called William the Waster; and the prosperity of his descendants was due only to the favour of James the Sixth, who created Henry Sinclair, of Dysart in Fife, a Baron.