Sir John Clerk, 2nd Baronet

Sir John Clerk, Baronet

John Clerk of Pennycuik, 2nd Baronet by William Aikman, (circa 1725)
Member of Parliament for Scotland
In office
1 May 1707  3 April 1708
Serving with numerous others
Commissioner for Whithorn
In office
1702–1707
Personal details
Born 1676
Died 4 October 1755 (aged 79)
Penicuik House, Midlothian
Political party Whigs
Children George Clerk Maxwell
John Clerk of Eldin
Parents Sir John Clerk, 1st Baronet
Elizabeth Henderson
Alma mater University of Glasgow
Leiden University
Profession Judge, Lawyer, Politician

Sir John Clerk of Penicuik, 2nd Baronet (1676–1755) was a Scottish politician, lawyer, judge and composer.

He was Vice-President of the Philosophical Society of Edinburgh,[1] the pre-eminent learned society of the Scottish Enlightenment.

He was the father of George Clerk Maxwell and John Clerk of Eldin, both of them friends of James Hutton and the great-great-grandfather of the famous physicist James Clerk Maxwell.

Early life

John Clerk was son of Sir John Clerk, 1st Baronet by his first wife Elizabeth, daughter of Henry Henderson of Elvington. [2] He had a legal education first at University of Glasgow and then at Leiden University. During 1697 and 1698 he went on a Grand Tour and in 1700 was admitted to the Scottish Bar.[3]

Parliament

He was a member of the Parliament of Scotland for Whithorn from 1702 to 1707, and a Commissioner for the Union of Parliaments for the Whig Party: he sat in the first Parliament of Great Britain in 1707. He was appointed a Baron of the Exchequer for Scotland on the constitution of the Exchequer Court, 13 May 1708, a position he held for nearly half a century.[4] With Baron Scrope, in 1726, he drew up an Historical View of the Forms and Powers of the Court of Exchequer in Scotland, which was printed at the expense of the Barons of Exchequer for private circulation.[4]

A leading supporter of the Act of Union 1707 with the Kingdom of England, Clerk wrote in his memoirs of English novelist, journalist and secret agent Daniel Defoe: "He was therefor a spy among us, but not known to be such, otherways the Mob of Edinburgh had pull him to pieces".[5][nb 1]

Academic leanings

Of his other treatises, Clerk wrote papers in the Philosophical Transactions: one an Account of the Stylus of the Ancients and their different sorts of Paper, printed in 1731, and the others On the effects of Thunder on Trees and Of a large Deer's Horns found in the heart of an Oak, printed in 1739. He was the author of a tract entitled Dissertatio de quibusdam Monumentis Romanis &c, written in 1730 but not published until 1750. For upwards of twenty years he also carried on a learned correspondence with Roger Gale, the English antiquary, which forms a portion of the Reliquiae Britannica of 1782.[4]

Patron of the arts

Sir John Clerk was one of the friends and patrons of the poet Allan Ramsay who, during his latter years, spent much of his time at Penicuik House. His son, Sir James Clerk, erected at the family seat an obelisk to Ramsay's memory. Sir John was a patron to various other artists and architects, and even dabbled in architecture himself.[4]

Musical talent

Clerk had a musical bent also, and while in Rome may have been tutored by the baroque composer Arcangelo Corelli,[6] but his own work has often been overlooked, primarily since the only record of his composition seems to be his own papers. One of his humorous songs was O merry may the maid be that marries the miller.[4]

Family

Sir John succeeded his father in his title and estates in 1722.[3] He unsuccessfully courted Susanna, daughter of Sir Archibald Kennedy of Culzean, Baronet (ancestor of the Marquess of Ailsa) and that correspondence is in the National Archives. She became the third wife of Alexander, 9th Earl of Eglinton.[4]

He married, firstly, on 23 February 1701, Lady Margaret, eldest daughter of Alexander Stewart, 3rd Earl of Galloway who died in childbirth on 26 December that year. Her son, John, survived, but died unmarried in 1722. Sir John remarried Janet, daughter of Sir John Inglis of Cramond, by whom he had seven sons and six daughters.[7] He died at Penicuik House on 4 October 1755.[8][9]

Notes

Footnotes
  1. the exact wording of the quote varies for example Trevelyan uses "a spy among us, but not known to be such, otherwise the mob of Edinburgh had pulled him to pieces" (Trevelyan, p. 277).
Citations
  1. Waterston, Charles D; Macmillan Shearer, A (July 2006). Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783-2002: Biographical Index (PDF). I. Edinburgh: The Royal Society of Edinburgh. ISBN 978-0-902198-84-5. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
  2. Burk, p. 257
  3. 1 2 Colvin, p. 257
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Anderson, p. 653
  5. Backscheider p. 233
  6. Allsop, p. 58
  7. Anderson, p. 654
  8. Penicuik House Project
  9. Wilson, p. 156

References

Attribution

This article incorporates text from a work in the public domain: The Scottish Nation by William Anderson (1867)

Further reading

Wikiquote has quotations related to: John Clerk of Penicuik
Parliament of Scotland
Preceded by
Patrick Murdoch
Burgh Commissioner for Whithorn
1702–1707
Succeeded by
Parliament of Great Britain
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by
Parliament of Scotland
Member of Parliament for Scotland
1707–1708
With: 44 others
Succeeded by
William Cochrane
(as MP for Wigtown Burghs)
Baronetage of Nova Scotia
Preceded by
John Clerk
Baronet
(of Pennycuik)
1722–1755
Succeeded by
James Clerk
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