Haddington, East Lothian Article Index for
Haddington
Limousines in
Haddington
Website Links For
Haddington
 

Information About

Haddington, East Lothian




  scots Name Hadentoun
  population 8,844
  os Grid Reference NT511739
  map Type Scotland
  latitude 55956129
  longitude -2782455
  unitary Scotland East Lothian
  lieutenancy Scotland East Lothian
  constituency Westminster East Lothian
  constituency Scottish Parliament East Lothian
  post Town HADDINGTON
  postcode District EH41
  postcode Area EH
  dial Code 01620


''See also: Haddington (disambiguation) ''

The Royal Burgh of Haddington is a Market Town in East Lothian , Scotland , approximately 20 miles east of Edinburgh . It is today the main administrative centre for East Lothian. It was the first Royal Burgh, created as such sometime in the reign of David I Of Scotland (1124-1153), containing a famous Abbey and monastery.

Although now a small town with a population of less than 9,000, at one time Haddington was the fourth largest city in Scotland, after Aberdeen , Dundee and Edinburgh. At the centre of the town is the Haddington Town House, originally built in 1748 according to a plan by William Adam which consists of a council chamber, gaol and sheriff court, to which assembly rooms were added in 1788, and a new town clock in 1835. Nearby is the Haddington Corn Exchange (1854) and the County Courthouse (1833). Other notable sites include the Jane Welsh Carlyle House, and Mitchell's Close.


COMMERCE


It developed into the fourth largest town in Scotland during the High Middle Ages , and latterly was the centre of the mid 18th-century Scottish Agricultural Revolution . Haddington is located predominantly on the left bank of the River Tyne , and was once famous for its mills. The Abbey Mill, and the Forrest family's Gimmersmills are both well-known parts of local history. Another was the New Mills, which, with the Abbey Mill, became the property of cadets of the Hepburn of Waughton family following the Scottish Reformation . Patrick Hepburn in Stevenson had a charter under the ''Great Seal'' from King James VI of the lands of Newmylnes, at Haddington. In his son George's marriage contract Patrick Hepburn settled upon him a long list of properties, including his patrimony - the New Mills. Also included was the Abbey Mill.

In 1641 an Act was passed by the Scottish Parliament to encourage the production of fine cloth, and numerous financial incentives were given. In 1645 an amendment went through stating that the masters and workers of manufactories would be exempt from military service, and as a result of this factories were established; these included New Mills, or "The Incorporation of the Woollen Manufacture at Newmills in the Shire of Haddington", the promotors of the company being Robert Blackwood, a Director of the Scottish Darien Company and afterwards Master of the Merchant Company of Edinburgh, and Sir James Stanfield, a man of considerable wealth. Stanfield had acquired the Newmills property near Haddington, the superiority of which had formerly belonged to the local monastery. This factory suffered during the Civil War with the loss of its cloth to General Monk. But a new charter was drawn up in May 1681, major capital invested in new machinery, with manufacturing progressing apace. But the New Mills had mixed fortunes, inevitably affected by the lack of protectionism for Scottish manufactured cloth. The ''Scots Courant'' reported in 1712 that New Mills was to be 'rouped' (auctioned). The property was sold on 16 February 1713 and the machinery and plant on March 20. The lands of New Mills were purchased by Colonel Francis Charteris and he changed their name to Amisfield.


COUNTRY HOUSES

In a Haddingtonshire Sasine registered on the 8 August 1792, No.576, Francis Charteris, 7th Earl Of Wemyss was seised in the barony of Newmilns, or Amisfield, Haddingtonshire, plus half of the barony of Morham and its lands, plus the grain mill of the monastery of Haddington called Abbey Mill. His father, however, had already possessed these properties and in 1756 instructed Isaac Ware to construct Amisfield House, described in ''The Buildings of Scotland'' as "the most important building of the orthodox Palladian school in Scotland." John Henderson built the walled garden in 1783, and the castellated stable block in 1785. The park in front of the house, possibly landscaped by James Bowie, is today entirely ploughed. Other parts of the grounds are a golf course. The house was demolished in 1928.

All that remains at Amisfield today are the summer house, walled garden, ice House, Temple, and gates. There is a delightful castellated lodge on the A1 highway.

Lennoxlove House , a mansion based upon a 13th-century Tower House lies in its estate half a mile south of the town. Built by the Giffards of Yester , it was originally named Lethington, as evidenced in a sasine granted by Johanna Giffard in her confirmation to Sir Robert Maitland, knt., of the lands of Lethington, conforming to the charter granted by Hugo de Giffard to the said Sir Robert, dated at Haddington, 1st December, 1399. It was long home to the Maitland family, notably Sir Richard Maitland , and his son Mary Queen Of Scots ' Secretary of State, William Maitland Of Lethington . The Maitlands parted with it in the 17th century. It is now the seat of the Duke Of Hamilton And Brandon


ST MARY'S COLLEGIATE CHURCH


, Haddington]]

The parish church of St Mary's today belongs to the Church Of Scotland , but includes an Episcopalian chapel called the Lauderdale Aisle, containing the mausoleum of the Earls Of Lauderdale . Regarded as one of the three great churches of the Lothians, it is the longest parish church in Scotland and is often used for concerts. It is located next to the massive 12th-century Nungate bridge on a bend of the River Tyne

The Garvald red sandstone building was started in 1375 (an earlier St Mary's Church had been destroyed by the English in 1356) and consecrated in 1410, although it was not finished until 1487. The church was almost destroyed during the 1548-49 siege of Haddington that followed the Rough Wooing of Henry VIII , and on the advice of John Knox , it was restored “frae the tower to the West door”. Thus the nave became the church and the choir and transepts were left ruined until the whole church was restored in the 1970s. The organ was built in 1990.

A set of eight bells hung for full circle ringing was installed for the Millennium.


MILITARY

Lying on the direct route of English invaders from the south, the town was burned by forces from across the border in 1216, 1244 and 1355. The great siege of Haddington, the longest town siege in British history, lasted for 18 months (1547-49) when an occupying English force sent by Henry VIII was besieged by the Scots and their French allies. Robert Lauder of The Bass (d.1576) is on record (Sir James Balfour Of Denmyine 's ''Annals'', vol.1] as taking prisoner Sir James Wilford, the English Governor of Haddington, in 1548, during a sortie with French soldiers from the castle at Dunbar .


SPORT


Football

Haddington is home to the Junior Football club Haddington Athletic .

Rugby

Haddington is also home to Haddington RFC, the current BT Scotland Premiership Division Three champions. Their home pitch is Neilson park.


TWIN TOWNS



MISCELLANEOUS



FAMOUS PEOPLE FROM HADDINGTON



BIBLIOGRAPHY



NOTES AND REFERENCES



EXTERNAL LINKS

Haddington: A historical perspective, drawn from the ''Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland: A Survey of Scottish Topography, Statistical, Biographical and Historical'', edited by Francis H. Groome and originally published in parts by Thomas C. Jack, Grange Publishing Works, Edinburgh between 1882 and 1885.