The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Perthshire firebrand became farming giant

Amazing life of James Wylie, once feared by authoritie­s but who became a great reformer

- Mark Mackay

France was awash with blood as executions took place in the streets, aristocrat­s awaited their grisly fate at the hands of revolution­aries and hundreds were drowned on wrecks lowered into the Loire.

The Terror that followed the French Revolution was one of the most indelible events in European history.

As other countries watched fearfully what was transpirin­g, there was genuine fear within the UK’s landed ruling class of a copy-cat uprising.

And in few parts of the country was that more feared than in Perth, where the Government’s spies and agents focused on one key target – James Wylie.

His story – and that of his followers – was told at the latest meeting of West Stormont Historical Society by Perthshire historian Michael Lawrence.

A son of the manse and successful cloth merchant and haberdashe­r in the city, Wylie had gained notoriety in the 1790s and was described by the Lord Advocate as “the most intemperat­e revolution­er in Scotland”.

Wylie was the president of the 1,200strong Friends of the People in Perth and a leading campaigner for parliament­ary and burgh council reform.

He was marked down by the authoritie­s as a trouble-maker who needed a spy on his tail and his mail intercepte­d.

He, like many others across Scotland, had been caught up in a popular campaign for political reform inspired by the American and French Revolution­s and the publicatio­n of Thomas Payne’s The Rights of Man.

Societies grew across the country – though Perthshire was a particular hotbed – and over time they grew more radical, leading to riots and demonstrat­ions in Perth, where huge meetings were held on both Inches.

In the end, the Government’s action was swift. Many of Wylie’s friends and associates were arrested, tried on trumped-up charges of sedition, and transporte­d to Botany Bay in Australia.

Among those treated even more harshly was Robert Watt, from Perth, who was executed for treason.

Through such harsh treatment, Wylie himself somehow survived and remained in Scotland and by the turn of the 19th Century, he was a tenant farmer at Pitlandie, near Luncarty.

The tragic death of his cousin in 1805 changed his life when he inherited Airleywigh­t in the parish of Auchtergav­en and set him on a different path.

Over the next 30 years he transforme­d the estate, created the modern farm structure, built a magnificen­t house, planned and developed the villages of Bankfoot and Waterloo, continued his fight for political change, and played a full part in public life.

When he died, six years after the Great Reform Act, the words used to describe him were very different from those uttered by the Lord Advocate.

His obituary said he was “universall­y respected throughout the county”.

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 ??  ?? The guillotine disposed of many of the moneyed classes in France during the Terror ... a fate feared across Britain by the landed gentry and authoritie­s in the 1790s
The guillotine disposed of many of the moneyed classes in France during the Terror ... a fate feared across Britain by the landed gentry and authoritie­s in the 1790s

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