After the Earlston Fair, Robert Scott had an altercation with two men, Robert Simm and James Aitchison as they made their way home to Greenlaw. They were violently attacked and left for dead. Robert Scott was arrested, tried at Jedburgh Circuit Court, defended by J. G. Lockhart, son in law and biographer of Sir Walter Scott. Different accounts were given of the case of the quarrel, but Robert Scott was found guilty and sentenced to death.
The Scotsman account gives us a description of Robert Scott as:
"Aged 36, six foot in height, thick set and heavily built, with black hair, head and features normal, and nose flat."But the reporter commented sympathetically on the prisoner's demeanour on his journey in procession from Jedburgh Jail to the scaffold near Fans, Earlston - the scene of his crime, with the words:
"Immense crowds in Jed. witnessed his departure. The streets were thronged with immense crowds as the impressive procession left the town for Earlston. Never before was such a spectacle seen in the locality. It was a sad and peculiar scene. The Provost and Magistrates of the burgh dressed in deep mourning, delivered the person of the culprit to the sheriff deputy. The person of the culprit was accompanied in the carriage by the Rev. James Clark of Jedburgh and the Governor of the Castle Jail. After the irons had been cut off, the prisoner appeared firm and composed. Officials from Berwickshire took over at the county boundary.
The Procession moved slowly and silently through Earlston. The greatest decorum was shown by the inhabitants. Thousands of spectators surrounded the scaffold. The prisoner ascended the scaffold in a lively manner. Devotional exercises were engaged in, with the prisoner reciting the Lord's Prayer. He prepared to meet his fate with utmost fortitude. He even untied his own necktie, and for a short time remained in silent prayer. He gave the signal and was instantly dropped into eternity."
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Given the early date of 1823, when communications were limited, it is amazing how the event in a small Berwickshire village was featured in newspapers across the country. A search on British Newspapers Online on the FindMyPast website revealed reports in the:
Aberdeen Press and Journal
Caledonian Mercury, Edinburgh
Cambridge Chronicle and Journal
Durham County Advertiser
Perthshire Courier
Public Ledger and Daily Advertiser, London
Caledonian Mercury, Edinburgh
Cambridge Chronicle and Journal
Durham County Advertiser
Morning Advertiser, London
Morning Chronicle, London
Oxford University and City Herald Morning Chronicle, London
Perthshire Courier
Public Ledger and Daily Advertiser, London
Staffordshire Advertiser
Scots Magazine, Edinburgh
Yorkshire Gazette. York
Earlier blog posts on Robert Scott can be found at:
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Earlier blog posts on Robert Scott can be found at: