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Alexander Colquhoun-Stirling-Murray-Dunlop

Alexander Colquhoun-Stirling-Murray-Dunlop (27 December 1798 – 1 September 1870) was a Scottish church advocate and Liberal Party politician.[3] He was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Greenock from 1852 to 1868. He was a very influential figure in the Disruption of 1843 which led to the formation of the Free Church of Scotland. For that denomination he drafted the Church-State papers: the Claim of Right and the Protest. He became known by the nickname the Member for Scotland.

Alexander Colquhoun-Stirling-Murray-Dunlop
Alexander Murray Dunlop from Disruption Worthies[1]
Personal details
Born
Alexander Dunlop

27 December 1798
Died1 September 1870
MP for Greenock
In office
1852–1868
legal advisor to the Free Church of Scotland
In office
1843–1870[2]
Mr Dunlop and David Welsh by Hill & Adamson
Mr Dunlop by Hill & Adamson
Mr Dunlop by Schenck
"Unknown man" from Glasgow University Collection
Seated Rev. Robert Elder, Rev. Dr Patrck Clason, Alexander Earle Monteith, Robert Cunningham Graham Speirs, Rev. Dr George Muirhead, Rev. Dr Thomas Chalmers, Rev. Dr John Bruce, Rev. Dr James Begg, Rev. Dr Robert Gordon, Rev. Dr Henry Grey; standing, Alexander Dunlop, Rev. Alexander Watson Brown, Patrick Graham, - Murray, two unknown men, Alexander (or William) Fraser, Rev. Dr William Tweedie, Rev. - Foggo, Charles Chalmers, Rev. James Fairbairn

Early life and career edit

 
Disruption brooch showing the graves of Andrew Melville, John Knox, David Welsh, James Renwick, and Alexander Henderson. The names of Chalmers, Dunlop and Candlish are also engraved.[4]

Alexander Murray Dunlop was born in Greenock on 27 December 1798. He was the fifth son of Alexander Dunlop of Keppoch, Dunbartonshire, by Margaret Colquhoun of Kenmure, Lanarkshire. His family had in former times taken much interest in the Scottish church.[3] He was educated at the Grammar School of that town, and at the University of Edinburgh. At university he was a member of The Speculative Society.[5] After the usual attendance on the classes in the faculties of Arts and of Law, Dunlop was called to the bar in 1820, and in his earliest years was an ardent student of his profession.[1] In 1822 he became one of the editors of 'Shaw and Dunlop's Reports', and gave evidence of his legal attainments. At an early period his attention was specially directed to parochial law; in 1825 he published a treatise on the law of Scotland relating to the poor, in 1833 a treatise on the law of patronage, and afterwards his fuller treatise on parochial law.[6][7][8] He later published some of David Welsh's sermons with a (138-page) memoir[9] and a memoir of Alexander Earle Monteith.[10] Welsh had been a private tutor to Dunlop.[11]

Interest in church law edit

The year 1832 saw the beginning of Mr Dunlop's public life. He became really well known and a confidential leader, just when the party in the Church which he supported became dominant in the Assembly. His great knowledge of old Scotch law, especially in its bearing on,the relation between Church and State, as well as his powers of clear thought and expression, made his services sought after. He was the mediator in many disputes, the confidant in many plan, the active manager in many of the more important matters of popular Church business. His correspondence on public affairs soon grew very voluminous. He was an active member of the various Church societies — of the Church Law Society, of the Anti-Patronage Society, for example —and his whole time was occupied in the business which Church affairs brought upon him.[1]

In 1833 he was busiest with the Chapel Act, and was actively engaged in promoting anti-patronage meetings; in 1834 he became editor of the "Presbyterian Review. In 1835 Church extension occupied him; in 1837 and 1838 the Auchterarder case, the conflict between the Church and the Court of Session, and non-intrusion meetings, absorbed his attention.[1]

The sympathies of Dunlop were very warmly enlisted in the operations of the church, and he took an active part in all the ecclesiastical reforms and benevolent undertakings of the period. But in a pre-eminent degree his interest was excited by the questions relating to the law of patronage, and the collision which arose out of them between the church and the civil courts.[3]

Relying on history and statute, Dunlop very earnestly supported what was called the "non-intrusion" party, led by Thomas Chalmers and others, believing it to be constitutionally in the right, and when the church became involved in litigation he devoted himself with rare disinterestedness to her defence. He not only defended the church at the bar of the court of session, but in private councils, in committees, deputations, and publications he was unwearied on her behalf. The public documents in which his position was stated and defended, especially the Claim of Right in 1842, the Protest and Deed of Demission in 1843, were mainly his work.[3]

Church of Scotland elder edit

Dunlop became an elder in the Church of Scotland in Greenock in 1822. On going to Edinburgh he became a member of the kirk-session in St Bernard's church.[12] This made it possible for him to take part in the General Assemblies and other church courts. From 1845 he was an elder at Free St Georges, Edinburgh.[13] Among Church reforms Mr Dunlop took special interest in the restoration of the eldership to its old place in the Church of Scotland. He wrote two articles upon this subject in the "Presbyterian Review," and prepared an elaborate report for the General Assembly. He also left some historical notes upon the place of the eldership in the ancient Church of Scotland, which were not published in his lifetime. Church extension, too, interested him greatly; but, as was natural from his previous studies, the relation of the Church to education and to the poor occupied most of his attention. The inforrnation furnished by the Church to the Government about the number of paupers in Scotland, and the elaborate Report on the same subject presented to the Assembly of 1841, were both the result of Mr Dunlop's almost unaided labour. He took an active part in the Voluntary controversy.[1]

The Claim of Right edit

His argument, the same in speech and pamphlet, and at last set forth in detail in the Claim of Rights, was substantially this: There is no need in Scotland to dispute about the precise meaning and effects of the abstract doctrine of spiritual independence. In virtue of a concordat between Church and State, the Church of Scotland has had certain rights and liberties which can be enumerated, guaranteed her, and recognised as hers. These she claims to possess, not merely by inherent right, but also by legal recognition, and these are now being illegally wrested from her. [1]

Originally in the form of an "Overture," this paper, when adopted by the Church of Scotland General Assembly on the motion of Thomas Chalmers, and carried by a majority of 131 in 1842, became the " Claim, Declaration, and Protest, anent the encroachments of the Court of Session," a title which is often abbreviated "The Claim of Right".[14][15] After a preamble containing eighteen paragraphs, dealing with historical and legal details, the manifesto formulates the Church's "Claim" to possess and exercise her liberties, government, discipline, rights and privileges according to law; her "Declaration" that it is impossible for her to intrude ministers on reclaiming congregations, or carry on the government of Christ's Church subject to the coercion attempted by the Court of Session; and her "Protest" that all acts of the Parliament of Great Britain passed without the consent of this Church and nation, in alteration of, or derogation to, the government, discipline, rights and privileges of this Church, as also all sentences of Courts in contravention of the same are, and shall be, in themselves void and null, and of no legal force or effect. The document concludes with an invitation to all the office-bearers and members of this Church, who are willing to suffer for their allegiance to their adorable King and Head, to stand by the Church and by each other, in defence of the great doctrine of the sole Headship of the Lord Jesus over His Church, and of the liberties and privileges, whether of office-bearers or people, which rest upon it ; and to unite in supplications to Almighty God that He would be pleased to turn the hearts of the rulers of this kingdom to keep unbroken the faith pledged to this Church in former days, and the obligations, come under to God Himself, to preserve and maintain the government and discipline of this Church in accordance with His Word ; or otherwise, that He would give strength to this Church to endure resignedly the loss of the temporal benefits of an Establishment, and the personal sufferings and sacrifices to which they may be called ; and that, in His own good time, He would restore to them these benefits, the fruits of the struggles and sufferings of their fathers in times past in the same cause; and thereafter give them grace to employ them more effectually than hitherto they have done for the manifestation of His glory.[16]

On 1 January 1843 a reply was received from the Crown, signed by Sir James Graham, pronouncing the Church's claim to be "unreasonable."[17]

At the Disruption edit

On 7 March 1843 the Claim of Rights was finally brought before the House of Commons by Foxe Maule in the British Parliament. Maule's motion for a Committee of Inquiry was lost upon a division, by 211 votes to 76. Of 36 Scottish members present, 25 voted with Maule.[18] Following this the General Assembly met on 18 May 1843, within a large hall at Canonmills, Edinburgh. The Moderator, David Welsh,prayed, made some comments and then read a Protest which was again largely written by Dunlop. As soon as it was read Welsh handed the paper to the clerk, quitted the chair, and walked away.[18] In all 193 members moved off, of whom about 123 were ministers and about 70 elders. All, including Dunlop, withdrew slowly and regularly amidst perfect silence till that side of the house was left nearly empty. They were joined outside by a large body of adherents, among whom were about 300 clergymen. They walked through the streets to Tanfield Hall where a Free Church Assembly had been organised. Following this Free Church Assembly another two legal documents the Act of Separation and Deed of Demission, were signed and registered in the books of Council and Session, on 8 June 1843.[19]

Changes of name edit

In 1844, he married Eliza Esther, only child of John Murray of Ainslie Place, Edinburgh, and on the death of his father-in-law in 1849, he assumed the name of Murray-Dunlop. Subsequently, in 1866, on succeeding to the estate of his cousin, William Colquhoun-Stirling of Law and Edinbarnet, he took the name of Colquhoun-Stirling-Murray-Dunlop. [3] He received an honorary LLD from Princeton University.[2]

Political career edit

In 1845 and 1847, he contested the representation of his native town of Greenock, but without success; in 1852, he was returned by the electors, and for fifteen years represented them.[2] In early life he had been a tory, but he was now thoroughly liberal. In parliament, however, while generally supporting the liberals he retained an independent position, declining offices both in connection with the government and with his own profession in Scotland, to which his services and abilities well entitled him.[3]

His services in parliament were fruitful of much useful legislation. In a sketch of his life by his friend, David Maclagan, mention is made of eight various acts which he got passed.[5][2] Those on legal points introduced important practical amendments of the laws, the most interesting, perhaps, being that which put a stop to Gretna Green marriages. Some of his measures bore on social improvement, one of them being an act to facilitate the erection of dwelling-houses for the working classes, and another an act to render reformatories and industrial schools more available for vagrant and destitute children, well known as Dunlop's Act.[3] Another allowed orphans to inherit from their parents rather than the estate being divided by next of kin.[5]

In the "Arrow" affair, he testified his abhorrence of the conduct of the Liberal Government in the war with China in 1857. The defeat of the Ministry involved a general election, and it was felt that many of the Liberals who had voted against the Government would lose their seats. Mr Dunlop at once placed his resignation in the hands of his constituency, and declared, with his usual high sense of honour, that he would not even stand as a candidate if they disapproved of his conduct.[1]

The most chivalrous of his parliamentary services was an attack (19 March 1861) on the government of Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston, which he had usually supported, in connection with the Afghan war.[20] Many years after the event, it was ascertained that certain despatches written in 1839 by Sir Alexander Burnes, our envoy at the Afghan court, had been tampered with in publication, and made to express opinions opposite to those which Sir Alexander held. Dunlop, at a great sacrifice of feeling, moved on 19 March 1861 for a committee of inquiry, and was very ably supported by Mr. Bright and others. Lord Palmerston was put to great straits in his defence, as it could not be denied that Burnes's despatches had been changed; but Benjamin Disraeli came to his rescue, and on the ground that the matter was now twenty years old advised the house not to reopen it. On a division, the motion of Dunlop was negatived by a vote of 159 to 49.[3]

In 1868, he resigned his seat in parliament, the rest of his days being spent chiefly on his property of Corsock in Dumfriesshire. Lord Cockburn in his "Journal" ranks Dunlop in everything, except impressive public exhibition, superior to Thomas Chalmers and Robert Smith Candlish:

Dunlop, is the purest of enthusiasts. The generous devotion with which he has given himself to this cause (the church) has retarded, and will probably arrest the success of his very considerable talent and learning; but a crust of bread and a cup of cold water would satisfy all the worldly desires of this most disinterested person. His luxury would be in his obtaining justice for his favourite and oppressed church, which he espouses from no love of power or any other ecclesiastical object, but solely from piety and the love of the people.

Dunlop died on 1 September 1870, in age seventy-one. [3]

Family edit

In 1844, Dunlop married Eliza Esther Murray, only child of John Murray of Edinburgh.[2] She died at Corsock on 14 July 1902, 84 years old.[21] They had four sons and four daughters.[3] Their eldest daughter was Anna Lindsay whose name was said to be synonymous with women's rights in Scotland.[22]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Wylie 1881.
  2. ^ a b c d e Mair 1868.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Blaikie 1888, p. 204.
  4. ^ "Disruption Brooch". Retrieved 1 June 2019.
  5. ^ a b c Maclagan 1871.
  6. ^ Dunlop 1854.
  7. ^ Dunlop 1830.
  8. ^ Dunlop 1833.
  9. ^ Welsh & Colquhoun-Stirling-Murray-Dunlop 1846.
  10. ^ Monteith & Colquhoun-Stirling-Murray-Dunlop 1852.
  11. ^ Maclagan 1876, p. 162.
  12. ^ Maclagan 1871, p. 82.
  13. ^ Maclagan 1876, p. 207.
  14. ^ Johnston 1887, pp. 205-209.
  15. ^ Claim 1842.
  16. ^ M'Crie 1893.
  17. ^ Johnston 1887, pp. 209.
  18. ^ a b Johnston 1887, p. 210.
  19. ^ Johnston 1887, p. 213.
  20. ^ Dunlop 1861.
  21. ^ "Deaths". The Times. No. 36821. London. 16 July 1902. p. 1.
  22. ^ K. D. Reynolds, 'Lindsay , Anna (1845–1903)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 14 Oct 2017

Sources edit

  • Bayne, Peter (1893). The Free Church of Scotland : her origin, founders and testimony. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark. pp. 71 et passim.
  • Blaikie, William Garden (1888). "Dunlop, Alexander Colquhoun-Stirling-Murray-". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 16. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 204–205.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Brown, Thomas (1893). Annals of the disruption with extracts from the narratives of ministers who left the Scottish establishment in 1843 by Thomas Brown. Edinburgh: Macniven & Wallace. pp. 460, et passim.
  • Bryce, James (1850a). Ten Years of the Church of Scotland from 1833 to 1843. Vol. 1. Edinburgh: Blackwood.
  • Bryce, James (1850b). Ten Years of the Church of Scotland from 1833 to 1843. Vol. 2. Edinburgh: Blackwood.
  • Buchanan, Robert (1854a). The ten years' conflict : being the history of the disruption of the Church of Scotland. Vol. 1. Glasgow ; Edinburgh ; London ; New York: Blackie and Son. pp. 235, et passim.
  • Buchanan, Robert (1854b). The ten years' conflict : being the history of the disruption of the Church of Scotland. Vol. 2. Glasgow ; Edinburgh ; London ; New York: Blackie and Son. pp. 85, et passim.
  • Candlish, Robert (1870). "obituary". The Home and Foreign Missionary Record of the Free Church of Scotland for 1871. Edinburgh: Thomas Nelson and Sons. pp. 235-236.
  • Dunlop, Arch. (1898). Dunlop of that ilk : memorabilia of the families of Dunlop ... ; with the whole of the Songs ; and a large selection from the poems of John Dunlop. Glasgow: Kerr and Richardson. pp. 62-64.
  • Dunlop, Alexander Murray (1830). Parochial Law. Edinburgh: W. Blackwood and Sons.
  • Dunlop, Alexander Murray (1833). Law of Patronage, and Settlement of Parochial Ministers, Being a Supplement to "Parochial Law". Edinburgh: W. Blackwood and Sons.
  • Dunlop, Alexander Murray (1839). An answer to the dean of faculty's [J. Hope's] Letter to the lord chancellor on the claims of the Church of Scotland. Edinburgh: John Johnstone.
  • Dunlop, Alexander Murray (1854). The law of Scotland regarding the poor. Edinburgh: W. Blackwood and Sons.
  • Dunlop, Alexander Murray (1861). Affghan papers. Speech of Alexander Murray Dunlop, Esq., M.P., on moving for the appointment of a select committee, "To consider the 'Correspondence relating to Affghanistan' ..." in the House of Commons, on Tuesday, March 19th, 1861. London: Hansard.
  • Hanna, William (1849). Memoirs of the life and writings of Thomas Chalmers. Vol. 4. Edinburgh: Pub. for T. Constable. pp. 290, et passim.
  • Johnston, John C. (1887). Treasury of the Scottish covenant. Edinburgh: Andrew Elliot.
  • MacGeorge, Andrew (1875). The statements in the claim of right : are they true?. Glasgow: James Maclehose.
  • Maclagan, David (1871). "A Christian Legislator". In Arnot, William (ed.). The Family treasury of Sunday reading. [Continued as] The Christian monthly and family treasury. London, Edinburgh and New York: T. Nelson and sons. pp. 77-83.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Maclagan, David (1876). St. George's, Edinburgh. London, Edinburgh and New York: T. Nelson and sons. pp. 160-165.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Macpherson, Hector C. (1905). Scotland's battles for spiritual independence. Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd. pp. 257-258, 205–222.
  • Mair, Robert Henry, ed. (1868). Debrett's Illustrated House of Commons and the Judicial Bench. London: Dean & Son. pp. 76-77.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • M'Crie, Charles Greig (1893). The Free Church of Scotland : her ancestry, her claims, and her conflicts. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark. pp. 77–79, et passim.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Millar, Gordon F. (2010). "Dunlop, Alexander Colquhoun-Stirling-Murray-". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/8272. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Monteith, Alexander Earle of; Colquhoun-Stirling-Murray-Dunlop, Alexander (1852). Two letters of the Late Alexander Earle of Monteith, Sheriff of Fife on the evidences of revealed religion. With a memoir by A.M. Dunlop. Edinburgh: Adam and Charles Black.
  • Turner, Alexander (1859). The Scottish Secession of 1843 : being an examination of the principles, and narrative of the contest, which led to that remarkable event. Edinburgh: Paton and Ritchie. pp. 289, et passim.
  • Walker, Norman L. (1895). Chapters from the History of the Free Church of Scotland. Edinburgh: Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier. pp. 22-23 et passim.
  • Welsh, David; Colquhoun-Stirling-Murray-Dunlop, Alexander (1846). Sermons by the Late Reverend David Welsh D.D. With a Memoir by A. Dunlop. Edinburgh: W. P. Kennedy.
  • Wilson, William, minister of St. Paul's Free Church, Dundee (1880). Memorials of Robert Smith Candlish, D.D. : minister of St. George's Free Church, and principal of the New College, Edinburgh with a chapter on his position as a theologian by Robert Rainy. Edinburgh: A. and C. Black.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Wylie, James Aitken, ed. (1881). Disruption worthies : a memorial of 1843, with an historical sketch of the free church of Scotland from 1843 down to the present time. Edinburgh: T. C. Jack. pp. 237–244.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • . Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland. Archived from the original on 2 May 2008. Retrieved 21 July 2008.
Attribution
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainBlaikie, William Garden (1888). "Dunlop, Alexander Colquhoun-Stirling-Murray-". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 16. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 204–205.
    • Notice of the late Mr. Dunlop, by Mr. David Maclagan
    • Hansard's Debates
    • Scotsman and Daily Review, 2 September 1870
    • Funeral Sermons, by Rev. Dr. J. Julius Wood and Rev. Dr. Candlish
    • personal recollections and letters from Mr. Dunlop's family to the writer.

External links edit

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Alexander Colquhoun-Stirling-Murray-Dunlop

alexander, colquhoun, stirling, murray, dunlop, december, 1798, september, 1870, scottish, church, advocate, liberal, party, politician, member, parliament, greenock, from, 1852, 1868, very, influential, figure, disruption, 1843, which, formation, free, church. Alexander Colquhoun Stirling Murray Dunlop 27 December 1798 1 September 1870 was a Scottish church advocate and Liberal Party politician 3 He was the Member of Parliament MP for Greenock from 1852 to 1868 He was a very influential figure in the Disruption of 1843 which led to the formation of the Free Church of Scotland For that denomination he drafted the Church State papers the Claim of Right and the Protest He became known by the nickname the Member for Scotland Alexander Colquhoun Stirling Murray DunlopAlexander Murray Dunlop from Disruption Worthies 1 Personal detailsBornAlexander Dunlop27 December 1798Died1 September 1870MP for GreenockIn office 1852 1868legal advisor to the Free Church of ScotlandIn office 1843 1870 2 Mr Dunlop and David Welsh by Hill amp AdamsonMr Dunlop by Hill amp AdamsonMr Dunlop by Schenck Unknown man from Glasgow University CollectionSeated Rev Robert Elder Rev Dr Patrck Clason Alexander Earle Monteith Robert Cunningham Graham Speirs Rev Dr George Muirhead Rev Dr Thomas Chalmers Rev Dr John Bruce Rev Dr James Begg Rev Dr Robert Gordon Rev Dr Henry Grey standing Alexander Dunlop Rev Alexander Watson Brown Patrick Graham Murray two unknown men Alexander or William Fraser Rev Dr William Tweedie Rev Foggo Charles Chalmers Rev James Fairbairn Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Interest in church law 3 Church of Scotland elder 4 The Claim of Right 5 At the Disruption 6 Changes of name 7 Political career 8 Family 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 10 External linksEarly life and career edit nbsp Disruption brooch showing the graves of Andrew Melville John Knox David Welsh James Renwick and Alexander Henderson The names of Chalmers Dunlop and Candlish are also engraved 4 Alexander Murray Dunlop was born in Greenock on 27 December 1798 He was the fifth son of Alexander Dunlop of Keppoch Dunbartonshire by Margaret Colquhoun of Kenmure Lanarkshire His family had in former times taken much interest in the Scottish church 3 He was educated at the Grammar School of that town and at the University of Edinburgh At university he was a member of The Speculative Society 5 After the usual attendance on the classes in the faculties of Arts and of Law Dunlop was called to the bar in 1820 and in his earliest years was an ardent student of his profession 1 In 1822 he became one of the editors of Shaw and Dunlop s Reports and gave evidence of his legal attainments At an early period his attention was specially directed to parochial law in 1825 he published a treatise on the law of Scotland relating to the poor in 1833 a treatise on the law of patronage and afterwards his fuller treatise on parochial law 6 7 8 He later published some of David Welsh s sermons with a 138 page memoir 9 and a memoir of Alexander Earle Monteith 10 Welsh had been a private tutor to Dunlop 11 Interest in church law editThe year 1832 saw the beginning of Mr Dunlop s public life He became really well known and a confidential leader just when the party in the Church which he supported became dominant in the Assembly His great knowledge of old Scotch law especially in its bearing on the relation between Church and State as well as his powers of clear thought and expression made his services sought after He was the mediator in many disputes the confidant in many plan the active manager in many of the more important matters of popular Church business His correspondence on public affairs soon grew very voluminous He was an active member of the various Church societies of the Church Law Society of the Anti Patronage Society for example and his whole time was occupied in the business which Church affairs brought upon him 1 In 1833 he was busiest with the Chapel Act and was actively engaged in promoting anti patronage meetings in 1834 he became editor of the Presbyterian Review In 1835 Church extension occupied him in 1837 and 1838 the Auchterarder case the conflict between the Church and the Court of Session and non intrusion meetings absorbed his attention 1 The sympathies of Dunlop were very warmly enlisted in the operations of the church and he took an active part in all the ecclesiastical reforms and benevolent undertakings of the period But in a pre eminent degree his interest was excited by the questions relating to the law of patronage and the collision which arose out of them between the church and the civil courts 3 Relying on history and statute Dunlop very earnestly supported what was called the non intrusion party led by Thomas Chalmers and others believing it to be constitutionally in the right and when the church became involved in litigation he devoted himself with rare disinterestedness to her defence He not only defended the church at the bar of the court of session but in private councils in committees deputations and publications he was unwearied on her behalf The public documents in which his position was stated and defended especially the Claim of Right in 1842 the Protest and Deed of Demission in 1843 were mainly his work 3 Church of Scotland elder editDunlop became an elder in the Church of Scotland in Greenock in 1822 On going to Edinburgh he became a member of the kirk session in St Bernard s church 12 This made it possible for him to take part in the General Assemblies and other church courts From 1845 he was an elder at Free St Georges Edinburgh 13 Among Church reforms Mr Dunlop took special interest in the restoration of the eldership to its old place in the Church of Scotland He wrote two articles upon this subject in the Presbyterian Review and prepared an elaborate report for the General Assembly He also left some historical notes upon the place of the eldership in the ancient Church of Scotland which were not published in his lifetime Church extension too interested him greatly but as was natural from his previous studies the relation of the Church to education and to the poor occupied most of his attention The inforrnation furnished by the Church to the Government about the number of paupers in Scotland and the elaborate Report on the same subject presented to the Assembly of 1841 were both the result of Mr Dunlop s almost unaided labour He took an active part in the Voluntary controversy 1 The Claim of Right editHis argument the same in speech and pamphlet and at last set forth in detail in the Claim of Rights was substantially this There is no need in Scotland to dispute about the precise meaning and effects of the abstract doctrine of spiritual independence In virtue of a concordat between Church and State the Church of Scotland has had certain rights and liberties which can be enumerated guaranteed her and recognised as hers These she claims to possess not merely by inherent right but also by legal recognition and these are now being illegally wrested from her 1 Originally in the form of an Overture this paper when adopted by the Church of Scotland General Assembly on the motion of Thomas Chalmers and carried by a majority of 131 in 1842 became the Claim Declaration and Protest anent the encroachments of the Court of Session a title which is often abbreviated The Claim of Right 14 15 After a preamble containing eighteen paragraphs dealing with historical and legal details the manifesto formulates the Church s Claim to possess and exercise her liberties government discipline rights and privileges according to law her Declaration that it is impossible for her to intrude ministers on reclaiming congregations or carry on the government of Christ s Church subject to the coercion attempted by the Court of Session and her Protest that all acts of the Parliament of Great Britain passed without the consent of this Church and nation in alteration of or derogation to the government discipline rights and privileges of this Church as also all sentences of Courts in contravention of the same are and shall be in themselves void and null and of no legal force or effect The document concludes with an invitation to all the office bearers and members of this Church who are willing to suffer for their allegiance to their adorable King and Head to stand by the Church and by each other in defence of the great doctrine of the sole Headship of the Lord Jesus over His Church and of the liberties and privileges whether of office bearers or people which rest upon it and to unite in supplications to Almighty God that He would be pleased to turn the hearts of the rulers of this kingdom to keep unbroken the faith pledged to this Church in former days and the obligations come under to God Himself to preserve and maintain the government and discipline of this Church in accordance with His Word or otherwise that He would give strength to this Church to endure resignedly the loss of the temporal benefits of an Establishment and the personal sufferings and sacrifices to which they may be called and that in His own good time He would restore to them these benefits the fruits of the struggles and sufferings of their fathers in times past in the same cause and thereafter give them grace to employ them more effectually than hitherto they have done for the manifestation of His glory 16 On 1 January 1843 a reply was received from the Crown signed by Sir James Graham pronouncing the Church s claim to be unreasonable 17 At the Disruption editOn 7 March 1843 the Claim of Rights was finally brought before the House of Commons by Foxe Maule in the British Parliament Maule s motion for a Committee of Inquiry was lost upon a division by 211 votes to 76 Of 36 Scottish members present 25 voted with Maule 18 Following this the General Assembly met on 18 May 1843 within a large hall at Canonmills Edinburgh The Moderator David Welsh prayed made some comments and then read a Protest which was again largely written by Dunlop As soon as it was read Welsh handed the paper to the clerk quitted the chair and walked away 18 In all 193 members moved off of whom about 123 were ministers and about 70 elders All including Dunlop withdrew slowly and regularly amidst perfect silence till that side of the house was left nearly empty They were joined outside by a large body of adherents among whom were about 300 clergymen They walked through the streets to Tanfield Hall where a Free Church Assembly had been organised Following this Free Church Assembly another two legal documents the Act of Separation and Deed of Demission were signed and registered in the books of Council and Session on 8 June 1843 19 Changes of name editIn 1844 he married Eliza Esther only child of John Murray of Ainslie Place Edinburgh and on the death of his father in law in 1849 he assumed the name of Murray Dunlop Subsequently in 1866 on succeeding to the estate of his cousin William Colquhoun Stirling of Law and Edinbarnet he took the name of Colquhoun Stirling Murray Dunlop 3 He received an honorary LLD from Princeton University 2 Political career editIn 1845 and 1847 he contested the representation of his native town of Greenock but without success in 1852 he was returned by the electors and for fifteen years represented them 2 In early life he had been a tory but he was now thoroughly liberal In parliament however while generally supporting the liberals he retained an independent position declining offices both in connection with the government and with his own profession in Scotland to which his services and abilities well entitled him 3 His services in parliament were fruitful of much useful legislation In a sketch of his life by his friend David Maclagan mention is made of eight various acts which he got passed 5 2 Those on legal points introduced important practical amendments of the laws the most interesting perhaps being that which put a stop to Gretna Green marriages Some of his measures bore on social improvement one of them being an act to facilitate the erection of dwelling houses for the working classes and another an act to render reformatories and industrial schools more available for vagrant and destitute children well known as Dunlop s Act 3 Another allowed orphans to inherit from their parents rather than the estate being divided by next of kin 5 In the Arrow affair he testified his abhorrence of the conduct of the Liberal Government in the war with China in 1857 The defeat of the Ministry involved a general election and it was felt that many of the Liberals who had voted against the Government would lose their seats Mr Dunlop at once placed his resignation in the hands of his constituency and declared with his usual high sense of honour that he would not even stand as a candidate if they disapproved of his conduct 1 The most chivalrous of his parliamentary services was an attack 19 March 1861 on the government of Henry John Temple 3rd Viscount Palmerston which he had usually supported in connection with the Afghan war 20 Many years after the event it was ascertained that certain despatches written in 1839 by Sir Alexander Burnes our envoy at the Afghan court had been tampered with in publication and made to express opinions opposite to those which Sir Alexander held Dunlop at a great sacrifice of feeling moved on 19 March 1861 for a committee of inquiry and was very ably supported by Mr Bright and others Lord Palmerston was put to great straits in his defence as it could not be denied that Burnes s despatches had been changed but Benjamin Disraeli came to his rescue and on the ground that the matter was now twenty years old advised the house not to reopen it On a division the motion of Dunlop was negatived by a vote of 159 to 49 3 In 1868 he resigned his seat in parliament the rest of his days being spent chiefly on his property of Corsock in Dumfriesshire Lord Cockburn in his Journal ranks Dunlop in everything except impressive public exhibition superior to Thomas Chalmers and Robert Smith Candlish Dunlop is the purest of enthusiasts The generous devotion with which he has given himself to this cause the church has retarded and will probably arrest the success of his very considerable talent and learning but a crust of bread and a cup of cold water would satisfy all the worldly desires of this most disinterested person His luxury would be in his obtaining justice for his favourite and oppressed church which he espouses from no love of power or any other ecclesiastical object but solely from piety and the love of the people Dunlop died on 1 September 1870 in age seventy one 3 Family editIn 1844 Dunlop married Eliza Esther Murray only child of John Murray of Edinburgh 2 She died at Corsock on 14 July 1902 84 years old 21 They had four sons and four daughters 3 Their eldest daughter was Anna Lindsay whose name was said to be synonymous with women s rights in Scotland 22 References editCitations edit a b c d e f g Wylie 1881 a b c d e Mair 1868 a b c d e f g h i j Blaikie 1888 p 204 Disruption Brooch Retrieved 1 June 2019 a b c Maclagan 1871 Dunlop 1854 Dunlop 1830 Dunlop 1833 Welsh amp Colquhoun Stirling Murray Dunlop 1846 Monteith amp Colquhoun Stirling Murray Dunlop 1852 Maclagan 1876 p 162 Maclagan 1871 p 82 Maclagan 1876 p 207 Johnston 1887 pp 205 209 Claim 1842 M Crie 1893 Johnston 1887 pp 209 a b Johnston 1887 p 210 Johnston 1887 p 213 Dunlop 1861 Deaths The Times No 36821 London 16 July 1902 p 1 K D Reynolds Lindsay Anna 1845 1903 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 accessed 14 Oct 2017 Sources edit Bayne Peter 1893 The Free Church of Scotland her origin founders and testimony Edinburgh T amp T Clark pp 71 et passim Blaikie William Garden 1888 Dunlop Alexander Colquhoun Stirling Murray In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 16 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 204 205 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Brown Thomas 1893 Annals of the disruption with extracts from the narratives of ministers who left the Scottish establishment in 1843 by Thomas Brown Edinburgh Macniven amp Wallace pp 460 et passim Bryce James 1850a Ten Years of the Church of Scotland from 1833 to 1843 Vol 1 Edinburgh Blackwood Bryce James 1850b Ten Years of the Church of Scotland from 1833 to 1843 Vol 2 Edinburgh Blackwood Buchanan Robert 1854a The ten years conflict being the history of the disruption of the Church of Scotland Vol 1 Glasgow Edinburgh London New York Blackie and Son pp 235 et passim Buchanan Robert 1854b The ten years conflict being the history of the disruption of the Church of Scotland Vol 2 Glasgow Edinburgh London New York Blackie and Son pp 85 et passim Candlish Robert 1870 obituary The Home and Foreign Missionary Record of the Free Church of Scotland for 1871 Edinburgh Thomas Nelson and Sons pp 235 236 Dunlop Arch 1898 Dunlop of that ilk memorabilia of the families of Dunlop with the whole of the Songs and a large selection from the poems of John Dunlop Glasgow Kerr and Richardson pp 62 64 Dunlop Alexander Murray 1830 Parochial Law Edinburgh W Blackwood and Sons Dunlop Alexander Murray 1833 Law of Patronage and Settlement of Parochial Ministers Being a Supplement to Parochial Law Edinburgh W Blackwood and Sons Dunlop Alexander Murray 1839 An answer to the dean of faculty s J Hope s Letter to the lord chancellor on the claims of the Church of Scotland Edinburgh John Johnstone Dunlop Alexander Murray 1854 The law of Scotland regarding the poor Edinburgh W Blackwood and Sons Dunlop Alexander Murray 1861 Affghan papers Speech of Alexander Murray Dunlop Esq M P on moving for the appointment of a select committee To consider the Correspondence relating to Affghanistan in the House of Commons on Tuesday March 19th 1861 London Hansard Hanna William 1849 Memoirs of the life and writings of Thomas Chalmers Vol 4 Edinburgh Pub for T Constable pp 290 et passim Johnston John C 1887 Treasury of the Scottish covenant Edinburgh Andrew Elliot MacGeorge Andrew 1875 The statements in the claim of right are they true Glasgow James Maclehose Maclagan David 1871 A Christian Legislator In Arnot William ed The Family treasury of Sunday reading Continued as The Christian monthly and family treasury London Edinburgh and New York T Nelson and sons pp 77 83 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Maclagan David 1876 St George s Edinburgh London Edinburgh and New York T Nelson and sons pp 160 165 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Macpherson Hector C 1905 Scotland s battles for spiritual independence Edinburgh Oliver and Boyd pp 257 258 205 222 Mair Robert Henry ed 1868 Debrett s Illustrated House of Commons and the Judicial Bench London Dean amp Son pp 76 77 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain M Crie Charles Greig 1893 The Free Church of Scotland her ancestry her claims and her conflicts Edinburgh T amp T Clark pp 77 79 et passim nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Millar Gordon F 2010 Dunlop Alexander Colquhoun Stirling Murray Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8272 Subscription or UK public library membership required Monteith Alexander Earle of Colquhoun Stirling Murray Dunlop Alexander 1852 Two letters of the Late Alexander Earle of Monteith Sheriff of Fife on the evidences of revealed religion With a memoir by A M Dunlop Edinburgh Adam and Charles Black Turner Alexander 1859 The Scottish Secession of 1843 being an examination of the principles and narrative of the contest which led to that remarkable event Edinburgh Paton and Ritchie pp 289 et passim Walker Norman L 1895 Chapters from the History of the Free Church of Scotland Edinburgh Oliphant Anderson amp Ferrier pp 22 23 et passim Welsh David Colquhoun Stirling Murray Dunlop Alexander 1846 Sermons by the Late Reverend David Welsh D D With a Memoir by A Dunlop Edinburgh W P Kennedy Wilson William minister of St Paul s Free Church Dundee 1880 Memorials of Robert Smith Candlish D D minister of St George s Free Church and principal of the New College Edinburgh with a chapter on his position as a theologian by Robert Rainy Edinburgh A and C Black a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Wylie James Aitken ed 1881 Disruption worthies a memorial of 1843 with an historical sketch of the free church of Scotland from 1843 down to the present time Edinburgh T C Jack pp 237 244 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain ACT XIX 1842 Claim Declaration and Protest Anent the Encroachments of the Court of Session Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland Archived from the original on 2 May 2008 Retrieved 21 July 2008 Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Blaikie William Garden 1888 Dunlop Alexander Colquhoun Stirling Murray In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 16 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 204 205 Notice of the late Mr Dunlop by Mr David Maclagan Hansard s Debates Scotsman and Daily Review 2 September 1870 Funeral Sermons by Rev Dr J Julius Wood and Rev Dr Candlish personal recollections and letters from Mr Dunlop s family to the writer External links editHansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Alexander Colquhoun Stirling Murray DunlopParliament of the United KingdomPreceded byViscount Melgund Member of Parliament for Greenock1852 1868 Succeeded byJames Johnston Grieve Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexander Colquhoun Stirling Murray Dunlop amp oldid 1184476811, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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