At the middle of last century, Scotland was a very poor country.
It consisted
mostly of mountain and moorland; and the little
arable land it contained was badly
cultivated. Agriculture was
almost a lost art. "Except in a few instances," says a
writer in
the 'Farmers' Magazine' of 1803, "Scotland was little better than
a
barren waste." Cattle could with difficulty be kept alive; and
the people in some parts of the country were often on the brink
of
starvation. The people were
hopeless,
miserable, and without
spirit, like the Irish in their very worst times. After the
wreck of the Darien
expedition, there seemed to be neither skill,
enterprise, nor money left in the country. What resources it
contained were
altogether undeveloped. There was little
communication between one place and another, and such roads as
existed were for the greater part of the year simply impassable.
There were various opinions as to the causes of this frightful
state of things. Some thought it was the Union between England
and Scotland; and Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun, "The Patriot," as
he was called, urged its Repeal. In one of his publications, he
endeavoured to show that about one-sixth of the population of
Scotland was in a state of beggary-- two hundred thousand
vagabonds begging from door to door, or robbing and plundering
people as poor as themselves.[1] Fletcher was
accordingly as
great a
repealer as Daniel O'Connell in after times. But he
could not get the people to
combine. There were others who held
a different opinion. They thought that something might be done
by the people themselves to extricate the country from its
miserable condition.
It still possessed some important elements of
prosperity. The
inhabitants of Scotland, though poor, were strong and able to
work. The land, though cold and
sterile, was
capable of
cultivation.
Accordingly, about the middle of last century, some important
steps were taken to improve the general condition of things. A
few public-spirited landowners led the way, and formed themselves
into a society for carrying out improvements in
agriculture.
They granted long leases of farms as a
stimulus to the most
skilled and
industrious, and found it to their interest to give
the farmer a more
permanent interest in his improvements than he
had before enjoyed. Thus stimulated and encouraged, farming made
rapid progress, especially in the Lothians; and the example
spread into other districts. Banks were established for the
storage of capital. Roads were improved, and communications
increased between one part of the country and another. Hence
trade and
commerce arose, by reason of the facilities afforded
for the
interchange of
traffic. The people, being fairly
educated by the
parish schools, were able to take
advantage of
these improvements. Sloth and
idleness gradually disappeared,
before the
energy, activity, and industry which were called into
life by the improved communications.
At the same time, active and powerful minds were occupied in
extending the
domain of knowledge. Black and Robison, of
Glasgow, were the precursors of James Watt, whose
invention of
the condensing
steam-engine was yet to produce a revolution in
industrial operations, the like of which had never before been
known. Watt had hit upon his great idea while experimenting with
an old Newcomen model which belonged to the University of
Glasgow. He was invited by Mr. Roebuck of Kinneil to make a
working
steam-engine for the purpose of pumping water from the
coal-pits at Boroughstoness; but his progress was stopped by want
of capital, as well as by want of experience. It was not until
the brave and
generous Matthew Boulton of Birmingham took up the
machine, and backed Watt with his capital and his spirit, that
Watt's
enterprise had the remotest chance of success. Even after
about twelve years' effort, the condensing
steam-engine was only
beginning, though half-heartedly, to be taken up and employed by
colliery proprietors and cotton manufacturers. In developing its
powers, and extending its uses, the great merits of William
Murdock can never be forgotten. Watt stands first in its
history, as the
inventor; Boulton second, as its
promoter and
supporter; and Murdock third, as its developer and improver.
William Murdock was born on the 21st of August, 1754, at Bellow
Mill, in the
parish of Auchinleck, Ayrshire. His father, John,
was a
miller and millwright, as well as a farmer. His mother's
maiden name was Bruce, and she used to boast of being descended
from Robert Bruce, the
deliverer of Scotland. The Murdocks, or
Murdochs--for the name was spelt in either way--were numerous in
the neighbourhood, and they were nearly all
related to each
other. They are
supposed to have
originally come into the
district from Flanders, between which country and Scotland a
considerableintercourse existed in the middle ages. Some of the
Murdocks took a leading part in the
construction of the abbeys
and cathedrals of the North;[2] others were known as
mechanics;
but the greater number were farmers.
One of the best known members of the family was John Murdock, the
poet Burns' first teacher. Burns went to his school at Alloway
Mill, when he was six years old. There he
learnt to read and
write. When Murdock afterwards set up a school at Ayr, Burns,
who was then fifteen, went to board with him. In a letter to a
correspondent, Murdock said: "In 1773, Robert Burns came to
board and lodge with me, for the purpose of revising his English
grammar, that he might be better qualified to
instruct his
brothers and sisters at home. He was now with me day and night,
in school, at all meals, and in all my walks." The pupil even
shared the teacher's bed at night. Murdock lent the boy books,
and helped the
cultivation of his mind in many ways. Burns soon
revised his English grammar, and
learnt French, as well as a
little Latin. Some time after, Murdock removed to London, and
had the honour of teaching Talleyrand English during his
residence as an
emigrant in this country. He continued to have
the greatest respect for his former pupil, whose poetry
commemorated the beauties of his native district.
It may be mentioned that Bellow Mill is
situated on the Bellow
Water, near where it joins the river Lugar. One of Burns' finest
songs begins:--
"Behind yon hills where Lugar flows."
That was the scene of William Murdock's
boyhood. When a boy, he
herded his father's cows along the banks of the Bellow; and as
there were then no hedges, it was necessary to have some one to
watch the cattle while grazing. The spot is still
pointed out
where the boy, in the intervals of his herding, hewed a square
compartment out of the rock by the water side, and there burnt
the splint coal found on the top of the Black Band ironstone.
That was one of the undeveloped industries of Scotland; for the
Scotch iron trade did not arrive at any
considerable importance
until about a century later.[3] The little
cavern in which
Murdock burnt the splint coal was provided with a
fireplace and
vent, all complete. It is possible that he may have there
derived, from his experiments, the first idea of Gas as an
illuminant.
Murdock is also said to have made a
wooden horse, worked by
mechanical power, which was the wonder of the district. On this
mechanical horse he rode to the village of Cumnock, about two
miles distant. His father's name is, however, associated with
his own in the production of this machine. Old John Murdock had
a
reputation for
intelligence and skill of no ordinary kind.
When at Carron ironworks, in 1760, he had a pinton cast after a
pattern which he had prepared. This is said to have been the
first piece of iron-toothed gearing ever used in mill work. When
I last saw it, the pinton was placed on the lawn in front of
William Murdock's villa at Handsworth.
The young man helped his father in many ways. He worked in the