Sir Godfrey McCulloch of Ardwell (c.1640-1697)
Coat of Arms of Clansfolk of Clan McCulloch
Last McCulloch Baronet of Nova Scotia
Born circa 1640, Godfrey McCulloch inherited not only
his father's hereditary title of baronet of Nova Scotia
but overwhelming debt forcing him to sell the estates of
Myretoun, Killaser and Ardwell. He carried on the running
feud his father, Sir Alexander of Myretoun (not the one of
the same name 100 years before) had started with the
Gordons of Galloway, and, at the same time, resorted to
every ruse to evade his creditors.
Sir Godfrey took up his residence at Bardarroch, site
of the modern Cardiness House where he and his family
lived until his execution. Sir Godfrey appears to have
taken little part in public life though he was a
Commissioner for Supply for Wigtownshire in 1685 and
represented the Stewartry of Kircudbrightshire in the
Convention of Estates in 1678. Being an anti-Covenanter,
he was appointed a sheriff depute for Stranraer in 1682,
and a commission issued to him, David Graham (brother of
"Bonnie Dundee" Claverhouse) and William Coltran, þfor
tendering the Test to the Gentry and Commons within the
Shire of Wigtown. It is to his credit however that he
refused to have any share in the brutal treatment of the
Wigtown Martyrs.
The McCulloch-Gordon feud came to a head on 2 October
1690 when in the course of a dispute over some cattle, Sir
Godfrey murderedWilliam Gordon. The facts stated in his
indictment tell the tale:
You [Sir Godfrey] did most maliciously and
wickedly and out of long precogtat malice upon the
second day of October or ane or other days of that
month or of the September preceding in the year
sixteen hundred and nyntie years goe to the house of
the deceast William Gordone of Cairdeness who at that
time lived in the Bush of Beele and having caused
call the said William Gordone to come furth and speak
to a man that waited for him the said William at the
time in his own house making ready to go to sermon
which was at that day at the kirk of Anwith and not
apprehending the least hurt or mischeiffe offered to
goe furth and came towards the gate where and when
you, the said Sir Godfrey, did shoot at him with a
gunn charged and by the shott broke his thighbone and
leg and also wounded him in other parts of his body,
soe that he immediately fell to the ground and within
a few hours thereafter dyed of the said shott and
wounds and farder, you was so barbarous and inhumane
in perpetuating the sais slaughter that you insulted
over the said William fallen as said is saying Now
dog I have got myself avenged of you; and you
discharged any from lifting him up but ordered and
commanded such as were there to dryve the nolt over
the dog as you wickedly called him.
On hearing William Gordon had expired, Sir Godfrey
immediately fled abroad and, in 1691, was at Cranstoun in
the Isle of Man whence he wrote to David McCulloch of
Ardwall, þI dessayn to live this ples veray shortly
iff I had any littell munnay and goe for Lundone."
In December 1696, he returned to Scotland and was
apprehended under the alias of Mr Johnstoune living in an
obscure house in Edinburgh. Sir Godfrey was incarcerated
in the Tolbooth Prison, to which he was no stranger,
having been lodged there some years earlier pending the
payment of a fine levied on him in 1668 for his share in
his father's persecution of the Gordons. He was tried on
7 February 1697, duly found guilty and sentenced to be
þtaken to the Mercat Croce (Merchant Cross)
upon Friday the fifth day of March next to come
betwixt two and four o'clock in the afternoon and there to
have his head severed from his body and all his moveable
goods and gear to be escheat and inbrought to His
Majesties use which is pronounced for doom."
Sir Godfrey McCulloch was not actually executed until
26 March and wrote a lengthy Farewell letter to his wife
and children. As he stepped up to the Iron Maiden, the
Scottish version of the guillotine, he was allowed to make
a Farewell speech. It is said four Galloway gentlemen
held the scarlet cloth to receive Sir Godfrey's head - an
honour in those days - one of them being Mr Vance of
Barnbarroch who related afterwards that after McCulloch's
head fell the body stood up and ran for about 100 yards!
A popular tradition, quoted by Sir Walter Scott
(whose brother married a McCulloch) in his The
Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, gives a
different and more pleasing ending to this grim story:
The Keep of Myretoun stands, as may be seen at
this day, on an ancient mote-hill. It is alleged
that Sir Godfrey, in the early days of his
possession, had occasion to cut a drain through this
mound, when a little man in a green coat appeared and
warned him that he was interfering with the þfairiesþ
abode therein. He promised that if Sir Godfrey would
desist, he (the gnome) would some day reward him by a
signal service; but if not, the vengeance of the
fairies would have to be reckoned with. Sir Godfrey
obliged the little man by altering his plan, and the
reward came on the day appointed for his execution,
when the gnome appeared on a white horse, took
McCulloch out of the cart, rode off with him, and
neither of the twain was ever seen again.
Farewell Letter to Wife and Children
Farewell Speech on the Gallows
Back to:
[Scots in New Scotland (Nova Scotia)]
[Scottish Culture & Heritage: Scotland & New Scotland]
[New Scotland (Nova Scotia)]
[Scottish Clan System]
[Scottish Clans]
[Clan MacCulloch Home Page]
[Credits]
Standard Disclaimer
Copyright (C) 1996 * All Rights Reserved
[CCN Culture & Heritage]
[Find]
[Comment]
[CCN Home]