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John Hutton M.D. and the Dumfries Presbytery Library 1714-1826 PDF

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John Hutton, M.D. and the Dumfries Presbytery Library, 1714-1826 JOHN V. HOWARD, M.A., M.L.A. Abstract: An account of the reassembling of 1,500 volumes dispersed throughoutthestacksofNew CollegeLibrary, Edinburgh, andtheevidence they give ofthe interests and travels ofDr John Hutton, its principal donor. Hutton, born nearDumfries in south-westScotland, became court physician to King William and Queen Mary, and left his library of medicine, history, classics, literature and theology to the ministers of Dumfries. A recordsurvives ofits use as a lending libraryfrom 1732 to 1826. Dumfries, the most important town in south-west Scotland, has a history going back to the Middle Ages, and a population of about 30,000. It is situated about thirty miles from Carlisle across the English border. What follows is an attempt to connect the library of its eighteenth-century Presbyterian ministers with King William’s chiefphysician, and to relate the sequence of events by which most of the books have come to New College Library in Edinburgh. New College Library began as the library of the Free Church of ScotlandCollege in 1843, andgrew largebynineteenth-centurypurchases and donations. It was greatly extended by mergers with the United PresbyterianCollegeLibraryin 1900,theDivinityLibraryoftheUniversity of Edinburgh in 1936, and the Library of the General Assembly of the Church ofScotland in 1958. I was Librarian ofNew College from 1965 to 1986. It was not long after my appointment that I began to notice among the thousands ofolder books, someofthe 16thand 17thcenturies, inoriginal andoftendilapidated leather bindings, with distinctive pressmarks and marks ofprovenance, u usually in the form Ex libris bibliothecaepresbyterii Drumfriesiensis ex dono Joan. Hutton M. D. 1714”, or abbreviations thereof. Many were also distinctive because the edges ofthe leaves, and sometimes the whole 41 book-block, had the consistency ofblotting-paper. There were othersigns offormerdampness such aswater-staining, crumpled end-papers, bindings broken, and stitching and cords visible. These books had been distributed by subject amongst the older books ofthe library in various stackrooms which were at that time all on open access. Then I founda fifty-onepage printedcatalogue ofthe collection-still the only complete copy I have seen-with the imprint “Dumfries, printed by Robert Jackson, 1784”.1 It was arranged in a quasi-alphabetical order. Each abbreviated entry occupies a single line, listing author, title and pressmark. All the authors whose surnames begin with A are together, all the Bs are together and so on. But the sub-arrangement within each initial letter is by pressmark, a baffling sequence until one realizes the principle involved. Itmeansthatthe list is acombinationofshelflistandalphabetical index, without the real virtues ofeither. To the question, “Couldthis catalogue beused as an inventory?”were added several others. Who was the John Hutton who gave so many books to the Dumfries Presbytery in 1714? Howandwhen didthey come toNew College Library? Was it only a theological collection? Had anyone in Dumfrieseverreadthem?Was somedisasterresponsiblefortheircondition? And, most puzzling of all, what was the significance of the two Greek words Ta ’avto [ta ano] written on most ofthe title pages? John Hutton M. D. An article by Gordon Goodwin in the Dictionary ofNational Biography was very informative about Hutton. He is said to have begun life as a herd boy in Caerlaverock, Dumfriesshire, working forthe Episcopalian minister there. Through his master’s kindness he received a good education, and became a physician, graduating M.D. at Padua. He chanced to be the nearest doctor at hand when the Princess Mary ofOrange met with a fall from her horse in Holland, and thus gained the regard of Prince 1 A catalogueofthebooks intheLibraryofthePresbytery’ofDumfries,(Dumfries, printed by Robert Jackson, 1784). 42 William, who on ascending the English throne appointedhim his first physician.2 havenotfoundthe source ofthese anecdotes,buttherecords ofEdinburgh I University now inthe UniversityArchives showthathe was a studenthere in 1672 and graduated M.A. in 1674.3 There is no record ofhis exact age, but he would in those days have probably graduated at about fifteen. To study medicine young Scots went on to Leiden in Holland or Padua in Italy. Huttonhadhis doctoral thesis acceptedattheUniversity ofPaduaon 24 May 1677,4 which was the same year that the Princess Mary, bom 1662, eldest daughter ofthe Duke ofYork, later King James II and VII, married Prince William of Orange. Dr Hutton was probably in the Netherlands or elsewhere on the continent between 1677 and 1687. He certainlywentto Englandwith Williamand MarywhentheybecameKing and Queen in 1688. Another Scot in the train ofWilliam and Mary was Gilbert Burnet, made Bishop ofSalisbury underthe new regime. He relates inhisHistory ofhis Own Times that Dr Hutton attended the King as personal adviser as well as physician, and was with him at the Battle ofthe Boyne on 1 July 1690 inhis campaignagainsttheIrishCatholicswhoweretryingtoreinstate King James.5 On 30 September in the same year Hutton was admitted a Fellow ofthe Royal College ofPhysicians in London6 and on 20 October 1691 he is listed as “Physician-General to the Armies and Land Forces”.7 Four years later he was incorporated M.D. at the University ofOxford, and in November 1697 was elected a Fellow ofthe Royal Society.8 Dictionary ofNational Biography, vol. 28, 356 (London, 1891). Edinburgh University Library, MS Da35. MS Universita di Padova, 282, fos. 1695, 1700, 1703. 5 G. Burnet, History ofhis own time (Oxford, 1823), iv, 103-4. W. Munk, The roll ofthe Royal College ofPhysicians ofLondon (London, 1861), i, 442-3. A. Peterkin,A listofcommissionedofficersoftheArmy ... 1660-1727(Aberdeen 1925), 10. Dictionary ofNational Biography (see n.2, above). 43 Several ofhis books show these connections. William Cockbum, one ofHutton’s youngercolleagues in the team ofroyal physicians, inscribeda copy of his Oeconomia corporis animalis (London:1694) to him [6. 1. 16]. James Wallace, aFellow ofthe Royal Society, presented acopy ofhis father’s authoritative book on his native Orkney Islands (1693) to him, inscribed “for Doctor Hutton, his Majesties first physician at Whythall” [5. 7. 40], Anew editionofthisbookwaspublished in 1700 with aredrawn map “Humblydedicatedto DrHutton, theKing’s firstPhysician” [10.3.3], There is also his own ex-libris with the note “in aula regia archiatorum primi 1693” in volume one of the huge six-volume Walton’s Polyglot [2.3.1]. Hispresence atthe autopsy ofKing William in March 1702 is also recorded, butsadly, patronage seldom survivesthepatron, andQueenAnne appointedDrHutton’spredecessor, DrThomas Lawrence, ashis successor. Indeed, the Presbytery Library also has a copy ofthe 1707 directory The PresentStateofGreatBritain [4.4.4], where HerMajesty’s FirstPhysician is Sir Edward Hannes, at a salary of£400, and Dr Lawrence has moved down in turn to be Second Physician again. Origins ofthe collection Themostrecentaccountofthe origins ofthecollectionis inPaul Kaufman’s Libraries and Their Users (1969) in the chapter entitled “Scotland as the Home ofCommunity Libraries”.9 He says that the Dumfries Presbytery Library had “some 2,350 titles and over 300 MSS”, apparently relying on a local correspondent. Hewasunawarethatanyofthe bookshad survived, althoughhereferstothe accurateaccountofG.W. Shirley inthe Gallovidian Annual, 1932, on “Dumfriesshire Libraries”10 which relates the decision ofthe Presbytery in 1884 to deposit the Library in the General Assembly Library in Edinburgh. Reference to the unpublished Presbytery Minutes confirms all that Shirley says, especially on 23 January 1884, 9 P. Kaufman, Libraries and their users (London, 1969), 140-2, 147. 10 G.W. Shirley, Dumfriesshire libraries (Dumfries, 1933 - reprinted from The Gallovidian Annual, 1932). 44 The Presbytery Officerhavingreportedthatthe roofofthe library was in a dangerous state, the Presbytery inspected itandhaving foundthat the roofwas opento the sky andthe place floodedwater, they ordered all thebooks tobe removed, MrWeirallowingthem to be storedinthe hall below Greyffiars Church." AfterthePresbyteryfailedinits attemptsto enlistthe aidofthemagistrates, the Synod, the Antiquarian Society and the individual congregations, in the repair ofthe Presbytery House, it was reported on 1 July thattheGeneralAssembly’s Library Committeewaswillingtoreceive the books on loan andplace them in a room ofthe Assembly Library. The Presbytery agreedthatthe books shouldbe loaned to the General Assembly’s Library on conditionthatonaresolution ofthe Presbytery to that effect, and within three month’s notice, the Presbytery should be entitledto resume custody ofthe books.12 On3 March 1885 itwas reportedto Presbyterythatthebooks ofthe Library hadbeen sent to Edinburgh and duly received by the Assembly’s Library Committee.13 The General Assembly Library was housed in the building which is now The Hub (of the Edinburgh Festival Society). It was the Tolbooth Church, designed by Gillespie Graham and Pugin, and until the Church Reunion of 1929 it hosted the annual meetings ofthe General Assembly itself. The whole General Assembly Library was transferred in 1958 to New CollegeLibrary, includingapparentlytheDumfriesPresbyteryLibrary, and all the books, new and old, were dispersed by subject amongst the stacks and included in the catalogue ofits new home. In the surviving books ofthe Presbytery Library, there are about 180 thathave Hutton’s signature, and some ofthese have furtherannotations in Dumfries, Ewart Library MS, Church of Scotland Presbytery of Dumfries Minutes, vol. 27, 23 Jan. 1884. 12 Ibid., 1 July 1884. 13 ChurchofScotland,GeneralAssembly,AbridgmentofProceedings, 1 June 1885. 45 his own hand. One ofthe mostinteresting is TheBookeofCommonPrayer and Administration ofthe sacraments, and Other Parts ofthe Divine Servicefor the Use ofthe Church ofScotland(Edinburgh: Robert Young, 1637). This is the famous “Laud’s Liturgy”, the Episcopalian service book imposed onthe Church ofScotlandby Charles Psbishops [1.6.7], Another book to compare with this is The Booke ofthe Common Prayer ... After the Use of the Church of England (Londini: Ex Officina Edoardi Whitchurche, Junii 1549). This copy has Dr. Hutton’s explanation that “This prayer book was the first that was printed in English in the Reformation of King Edward” and is “added to ye other books for ye curiosity ofye reader by Jo Hutton” [2.5.6], Otherbookshave similarcommentsbytheDoctor, such asA Collection ofAll the Proclamations, Declarations, Articles andOrdinances, Passed by His Highness the LordProtector andHis Council.... (London:Henry Hills, 1654) [1.3.6]. This copy of Oliver Cromwell’s Proclamations is inscribed In futurum rei memoriam hie est, which could perhaps be translated “Don’t forgetwhat happened during ourCivil War”which,with theRestorationof1660 andthe Revolutionof1688, were thenwithin living memory. But, for the “curiosity ofthe reader”, before leaving Hutton’s copies of Laud’s Liturgy and King Edward Vi’s First Prayer Book, a brief inspection should be made ofthe binding and lettering. Both have been rebound in polished calf, a nineteenth-century gentleman’s library style, and one thatmarksthem offin appearance from all the olderbindings. The letteringalsobetraysthem: “BookofCommon OrderofChurchofScotland” and“Book ofCommon OrderofChurch ofEngland”. These bindingswith the Presbyterian lettering are undated, but were undoubtedly executed between 1884 and 1958 when, as already mentioned, the collectionwas in the General Assembly Library of the Church of Scotland in Edinburgh. The presence ofthe ownership stamp ofthe burning bush surrounded by the words “Bibliotheca Ecclesiae Scoticanae” confirms this. The Presbytery minutes are also a valuable source ofinformation for the origin ofthe Library. On 4 April 1710 they read: 46 The Presbytery Understanding that Dr John Hutton Physician has a design to bestow upon them some Books to be kept in a Library here, & thought fit to write a Letter to him thanking him for it encouraging & him in that Design; and appointed IVPHill, Robison the Moderator & [John Somervel] to draw the Letter report.14 At almost every subsequent Presbytery meeting from 1710 to 1714, when theywerenotdiscussing cases ofapostasy orfornication, theyweretalking about theircorrespondencewith DrHutton inLondon. The matterdragged on partly because a different minister was appointed to write each time, andpartlybecause theircommitteesproposed interminableregulations for theuseofthebooks, andsuggestedvariousdeputationstotheTownCouncil expecting them to provide a Library Room. On 2 September 1712 after several postponements Mr Vetch [Veitch] Represented to the Presbytery that he has received latelya Letterfrom DoctorHutton showingthathis Books destinat for a Library to the Presbytery are chested and ready to be sent to any person in any place that thy think fit which Letter he read. And they having considered itAppoints MrVetchto write to the Doctorto send the books by sea to Leeth to the care ofone there to be condescended upon by Mr Vetch, Mr Young Comptroller here, and Mr Paterson Merchant,who istobenamedtothe DoctorintheLetter. Andappointed M reVetchandPatonto speaktothe Magistrats andLeadingCouncillors ofthis Burgh forproviding a place for the Library.15 ButtheshippingofthebooksfromLondontoLeithwasputoffinNovember because ofthe risks to sailing ships in winter weather. They wrote to ask the Doctor to send them next April. But on 6 January 1713 Church of Scotland. Presbytery ofDumfries. Minutes, vol. 6, 1 (MS in Ewart Library, Dumfries; microfilm in Edinburgh University Library, Mic M 1116) 15 Ibid., 95. 47 Mr Somervel reported that he wrote not to Doctor Hutton because soon after lastPresbyterie he got Information ofhis death. But that he has received a Letter written by the Doctor a little before his death bearing that he had left to the Presbyterie not only all the books mentioned in the Catalogue, sent formerly, but all the other books of his Library: as also a Letter from Esquire Hutton the Drs Executor showing that the books are ready to be sent to the presbyterie when theyplease.16 Things still moved slowly, for, on 2 June The Commissioners to the Assembly Report that the books for the Library are come to Leith and that they ordered them to be brought to Dumfries: MrPatoun and MrSomervell are appointedtoreceive them and get them carefully lodged when they come to this place.17 Thenextreports showthatthe books did arrive overland invariousbatches in August and September, and that the Presbytery was then concerned to havepresses made forthem, to getthem listed, andto renttwo rooms from James Pagan, merchant, for£24 Scots (anotherlongnegotiation), because the Town Council hadchangedtheirmindandwantedtheirroom forsome otherpurpose. Dr Hutton had died in November 1712, having been since 1710 Member of Parliament for the Burgh of Dumfries.18 A copy of John Mackqueen’s An Essay on Honour (London: 1711) is inscribed “My honoured friend Dr Hutton first Physician to his late Majesty and one of the House of Commons of the Parliament of Great Britain, presented” [10.1.10]. There is no record of his ever having married and he was obviously dispersing some ofhis accumulatedwealth forthe benefitofhis native area. He had contributed to the building ofthe new manse for the minister ofCaerlaverock and already in 1708 had created a mortification, 16 Ibid., 101. 17 Ibid, 109. 18 J. Foster, Members ofParliament, Scotland 1357-1882 (2nd edn., 1882), 191. 48 orendowment, of£1,000 forpoorreliefand education intheparish, which continued as an independent trust till 1935. But Hutton’s library was not the only source of accessions to the Presbytery Library. The Presbytery minutes for 19 July 1715 : MrRobertPatonproduceda listofsome books Leftto thepresbyterie by the Deceased Doctor George Archibald Physician in the Burgh which were appointed to be added to the Library. The presbyterie thought fitto appointMrsPaton, Lin & Bowieto waituponthe Doctors Lady and in the presbyteries name to return thanks for the gift and receive the Books with herConveniencie.19 Like Hutton’s, some are medical and some are on other subjects. One example isaFrenchBible,publishedinGenevain 1588, which has Marot’s metrical Psalms bound with it [9.6.1]. Dr Archibald was a resident of Dumfries, who is recorded in September 1707 as “repaid 1000 marks ... borrowed by Provost Rome towards the building ofthe mill”.20 He was also the burgh’s first historian, his mainly unpublished Account ofthe Curiosities ofDumfries being preserved in the Sibbald manuscript in the National Library ofScotland. A There are also books which belonged to neither of the doctors. small group have accession dates earlier than 1714. The earliest ofthese is Humphrey Baker’s Arithmetick ... Newly Corrected and Enlarged by HenryPhillippes (London:1670) [4.8.3]. Itis inscribed“Thisbookbelongs tothePresby. ofDumff’sLibrary 1708”. The firstvolumeofJosephCaryl’s Exposition ... ofthe Book ofJob, London, 1648, is also inscribed “This book belongs to the Presby. ofDumff’s Library 1709” [10.2.3], Caryl’s Exposition ofJob is an intriguing example of continuity throughout the Commonwealth period and into the Restoration, as the final volume, the 12th, was not published till 1666. Church ofScotland, Presbytery ofDumfries, Minutes, vol. 6, 183. 20 R. Edgar,An introduction to the history ofDumfries [written c. 1746], ed. R. C. Reid (Dumfries, 1915). 49 The most interesting ofthe volumes inscribed as acquired in 1710 is a copy of the Douai Bible, the first Roman Catholic version in English, published in 1609 [6.5.8]. Onlythe firstofthethreevolumes has survived, butthis has anotherinscription saying thatthey werebought on 22 August 1702 by Robert Neilson of Bamcalzie. Bamcalzie is near Crocketford, halfway between Dumfries and Castle Douglas. This does appear to be evidence for a local origin for some ofthe Dumfries Presbytery’s books. Also, when the Hutton books were arriving in August 1713, Mr Robert Paton, who was then the Minister ofthe Second Charge, Dumfries, was instructed “to put the other books belonging to the Presbyterie and in his custodie into the same Room atthe sight ofthe Committee conform to the Catalogue”.21 One further quotation from the Presbytery minutes, unrelated to the Library, shows an unusual tenderness for an opponent’s reputation: 7 Dec 1714. “Itbeingrepresentedthatthere are Lines cutoutuponthe Gravestone of the deceased Robert Neilson of Bamcailie who was excommunicatedbythispresbyterie forhis apostasytopopery, highly vilifying and trampling upon that souldier, It was moved that the presbyterie should apply to the Justices ofthe Peace ofthe Stewartry ofKirkcudbrightfordefacingtheseLinesandthe Moderatorappointed to write a Letter to the Justices for that end.22 Statistics Atthispointitseemshelpfultoturnto aquantitativeaccountofthesurviving volumes. Taking the entries in the 1784 printed catalogue at their face value, there were then 2,052 titles in 2,372 volumes. This figure for titles does not take into account volumes in which many pamphlets are bound, as the brevity ofthe entries fails to reveal this. What is definite is thatthere are now 1,517 volumes, most ofwhich are gatheredtogetheragain intheir original pressmark order. Some 60 volumes, mainly medical titles, were transferred to the main University Library before there was any notion of 21 Church ofScotland, Presbytery ofDumfries, Minutes, vol. 6, 112. 22 Ibid., 154. 50

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