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William Boyd, 4th Earl of Kilmarnock

William Boyd, 4th Earl of Kilmarnock (12 May 1705 – 18 August 1746), was a Scottish peer who joined the 1745 Jacobite Rising, was captured at Culloden and subsequently executed for treason on Tower Hill.

William Boyd, 4th Earl of Kilmarnock
Earl of Kilmarnock
William Boyd, 4th Earl of Kilmarnock ca 1746
Tenure1717 to 1746
PredecessorWilliam Boyd, 3rd Earl of Kilmarnock
SuccessorJames Hay, 15th Earl of Erroll (1726–1778)
BornWilliam Boyd
(1705-05-12)12 May 1705
Dean Castle, Kilmarnock
Died18 August 1746(1746-08-18) (aged 41)
Tower Hill
Cause of deathExecuted for treason
BuriedSt Peter ad Vincula, Tower of London
NationalityScottish
ResidenceDean Castle
Callendar House
LocalityEast Ayrshire
Wars and battles1745 Jacobite Rising
Falkirk Culloden
OfficesGrand Master, Masonic Grand Lodge of Scotland 1742-1743
Spouse(s)Anne Livingstone (1709–1747)
IssueJames (1726–1778), Charles (1728–1782), William (1724–1780)
ParentsWilliam Boyd, 3rd Earl of Kilmarnock
Eupheme Ross

His family were supporters of the government and Kilmarnock had not previously been involved with the Stuarts; he later stated "for the two Kings and their rights, I cared not a farthing which prevailed; but I was starving."[1]

His title was declared forfeit and his heavily mortgaged estates confiscated; they were later returned to his eldest son James, later Earl of Erroll, who fought at Culloden on the government side.

Biography edit

 
Kilmarnock's restored family home, Dean Castle; gutted by fire in 1735 and left derelict until 1908

William Boyd was born in 1705, only son of William Boyd, 3rd Earl of Kilmarnock (1683–1717) and Eupheme Ross (1684–1729). His father supported the government during the 1715 Jacobite Rising, but was deeply in debt when he died in 1717. Educated at the University of Glasgow, Kilmarnock reportedly had "an Aversion to rigorous Study of Letters" and was devoted to "Riding, Fencing, Dancing and Musick...esteemed by Men of Taste, a Polite gentleman."[2]

In 1724 he married Lady Anne Livingston, only daughter of James Livingston, 5th Earl of Linlithgow, a Jacobite attainted for his role in the 1715 Rising. Despite the loss of her family estates, Anne was considered an heiress; the Commission of Forfeited Estates found selling Jacobite property so complex and time-consuming that it was easier to come to an arrangement with the original owners.[3]

Many such properties were purchased through an 18th-century vulture fund called the York Buildings Company, which did a deal with Anne, who became financially secure as a result. She married Kilmarnock against her family's wishes; money and his lifestyle were constant issues and they lived together "civilly, if not happily".[4] During the last year of his life he became the love interest of Viscountess Etheldreda Townshend, who briefly took an interest in becoming a Jacobite.[5]

The Earl and the Countess lived at Dean Castle in Kilmarnock (Ayrshire), but when it was destroyed by fire in 1735 they could not afford the repairs and moved to Anne's home, Callendar House (in Falkirk), which remained in the family until 1783. The Earl's son James sold Dean Castle in 1746; while the outbuildings remained in use, the castle stood derelict until restored in the early-20th century.[6]

Career edit

Kilmarnock's peerage gave him a seat in the House of Lords, where he voted as directed by Archibald Campbell, 3rd Duke of Argyll and Robert Walpole; he was paid a small pension for this, which ceased when Walpole lost power in 1742.[7] He was Grand Master for the Masonic Grand Lodge of Scotland from 1742 to 1743, his successor being the Earl of Wemyss, whose son Lord Elcho also served in the Jacobite army; Murray of Broughton, later Secretary to Prince Charles, was also a member.[8]

He first met Prince Charles during the 1745 Rebellion at Callendar House on 14 September. The decision to join the Jacobite army surprised many; it has been suggested one reason for doing so was pressure from his wife's family but he later told Argyll; "...I was starving, and...if Mahommed had set up his standard...I had been a good Mussulman for bread, for I must eat."[9]

 
Kilmarnock's political patron, the 3rd Duke of Argyll

On 18 October, he received a commission in "Kilmarnock's Horse," which seems to have been composed largely of individual volunteers. One of the few Lowland peers to join the Rising, he quickly gained a prominent position with Charles, largely because he was unconnected to the group of long-term Jacobite Scots centred around Lord George Murray. Even before the invasion of England, there were deep divisions between Charles and his exile advisors on the one hand and the Scots on the other; after the retreat from Derby, the two groups viewed each other with suspicion and hostility.[10] O'Sullivan later wrote "no man showed more respect for HRH (Charles)...", making Kilmarnock one of the few Scots who could be counted on to support Charles against his fellows.[11]

When the main army entered England on 8 November, Viscount Strathallan remained in Perth; the Strathallan or Perthshire Horse was added to Kilmarnock's, a combined strength of about 130 men in all.[12] They were chiefly engaged in reconnaissance duties and were the last to leave Carlisle on 21 December, before re-entering Scotland. In early January, the Jacobites besieged Stirling Castle; a government attempt to relieve it led to the Battle of Falkirk on 17 January.[13]

The battle was fought near Callendar House, where Lady Anne was hosting Hawley, who used it as his headquarters; she allegedly detained him at dinner, to distract him from the battle. The Battle of Falkirk took place in failing light, during a fierce storm and amid considerable confusion. Although the cavalry was not involved, Kilmarnock's local knowledge was employed afterwards in locating the retreating government forces; on his return, he attacked a Cameron deserter from the government army, who was still in uniform and had to be rescued from his fellow clansmen.[14]

Falkirk was a Jacobite tactical victory, but poor command and co-ordination deprived them of the last opportunity to decisively defeat their opponents.[15] Many of the Highlanders who took part went home and when Cumberland resumed his advance on 30 January, Charles was told the army was in no state to fight. On 1 February 1746, the siege of Stirling was abandoned and the Jacobites withdrew to Inverness.[16]

Kilmarnock's troop helped covered the retreat; at the end of this, their horses were in such poor condition that they were converted into infantry and retitled Foot Guards. The next two months were spent in Elgin, as part of Drummond's force guarding the line of the River Spey; the Jacobites were short of money and forced to requisition supplies from local merchants.[14] [a]

When the campaigning season began in April, their leaders agreed the only option was a decisive victory; this led to Culloden, where they were defeated with heavy losses in less than an hour. James Boyd was in the government front line with the Royal Scots but Kilmarnock was with the Jacobite reserve and saw little action. The claim he was captured after mistaking government dragoons for his own troops is not supported by his own account; another anecdote recounts he lost his hat and wig and James gave him his own.[17]

Trial and execution edit

 
Execution of the Earl of Kilmarnock and Lord Balmerino

Tried in London on 29 July, Kilmarnock, Lord Balmerino and the Earl of Cromartie were found guilty of treason and sentenced to death. This was commuted to beheading, rather than being hanged, drawn and quartered, as with Francis Towneley and others. It was expected one would be pardoned, but despite efforts by Kilmarnock's fellow Freemason, the Duke of Hamilton, this went to Cromartie, whose allegedly pregnant wife interceded with the Princess of Wales.[18] Cromartie's father-in-law had been Private Secretary to the Prince of Wales and the writer Horace Walpole (1717-1792) later observed "Hamilton's intercession for Lord Kilmarnock hurried him to the block."[19]

The sentences were carried out on Tower Hill on 18 August, Kilmarnock going first; shortly before, Balmerino contrived a meeting with him to discuss the "No quarter" order. Allegedly issued by the Jacobite leadership before Culloden and used to justify the harsh government response, its existence is extremely dubious. However, Balmerino ensured Kilmarnock confirmed before witnesses that if such an order did exist, the blame lay with Lord George Murray, not the Prince, a version later published in the official trial records. Even on the verge of death, the internal divisions that undermined the Jacobite cause continued.[20]

Kilmarnock complied with the convention prisoners facing death express contrition and acceptance of the justice of their sentence.[7] He confirmed George II was the "true and legitimate sovereign", wrote letters to his sons and wife and asked for help in settling his debts. Following his execution, he was buried in St Peter ad Vincula, the church attached to the Tower of London.

Lady Anne outlived him by a year, dying in September 1747. She is honoured with a mural in St Marnock Square, Kilmarnock.[21]

Ancestry edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Before his execution, he wrote to a friend from prison about his indebtedness to the shoemakers of Elgin: "Beside my personal debts mentioned in general and particular in the State, there is one for which I am liable in justice, if it is not paid, owing to poor people who gave their work for it by my orders. It was at Elgin in Murray, the Regiment I commanded wanted shoes. I commissioned something about seventy pair of shoes and brogues, which might come to 3 shillngs or three shillings and sixpence each, one with the other. The magistrates divided them among the shoemakers of the town and country, and each shoemaker furnished his proportion. I drew on the town, for the price, out of the composition laid on them, but I was afterwards told at Inverness that, it was believed, the composition was otherwise applied, and the poor shoemakers not paid. As these poor people wrought by my orders, it will be a great ease to my heart to think they are not to lose by me, as too many have done in the course of that year, but had I lived I might have made some inquiry after: but now it is impossible, as their hardships in loss of horses and such things, which happeened through my soldiers, are so interwoven with what was done by other people, that it would be very hard, if not impossible, to separate them. If you'll write to Mr Innes of Dalkinty at Elgin (with whom I was quartered when I lay there), he will send you an account of the shoes, and if they were paid to the shoemakers or no; and if they are not, I beg you'll get my wife, or my successors to pay them when they can......"[17]

References edit

  1. ^ Lenman 1980, p. 256.
  2. ^ Ray 1752, pp. 410–411.
  3. ^ Szechi & Sankey 2001, pp. 110–111.
  4. ^ Thomson 1848, pp. 387–388.
  5. ^ "Townshend [née Harrison], Etheldreda [Audrey], Viscountess Townshend (c. 1708–1788), society hostess". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/68358. Retrieved 14 October 2020. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  6. ^ Coventry 2000.
  7. ^ a b Lowe 2006.
  8. ^ Nicholson 2006.
  9. ^ Lenman 1980, pp. 256–257.
  10. ^ Reid 2012, p. 44.
  11. ^ Annand 1994, p. 72.
  12. ^ Annand 1994, p. 70.
  13. ^ Riding 2016, p. 334.
  14. ^ a b Annand 1994, p. 73.
  15. ^ "Falkirk II" (PDF). Scotland's Historic Fields of Conflict. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  16. ^ Riding 2016, pp. 356–359.
  17. ^ a b Annand 1994, p. 74.
  18. ^ Riding 2016, p. 484.
  19. ^ Lewis 1933, p. 296.
  20. ^ Riding 2016, p. 486.
  21. ^ Dunn, Ross. "The haunting and tragic story behind Kilmarnock's stunning new town centre mural". Daily Record. Retrieved 15 October 2022.

Sources edit

  • Annand, A Mck (1994). "Lord Kilmarnock's Horse Grenadiers (Later Foot Guards), in the Army of Prince Charles Edward, 1745-6". Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research. 72 (290).
  • Coventry, Martin (2000). Dean Castle in The Castles of Scotland. Goblinshead. ISBN 978-1899874279.
  • Lenman, Bruce (1980). The Jacobite Risings in Britain 1689–1746. Methuen Publishing. ISBN 978-0413396501.
  • Lewis, Wilmarth S (1933). The Yale Edition of Horace Walpole's Correspondence, Volume 19. Yale University.
  • Lowe, William (2006). "Boyd, William, fourth earl of Kilmarnock". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/3117. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • * Nicholson, Eirwen (2006). "Murray, Sir John, of Broughton, baronet [called Secretary Murray, Mr Evidence Murray". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/19629. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Ray, James (1752). A Compleat History of the rebellion, from 1745, to 1746. James Farley, Bristol.
  • Reid, Stuart (2012). Cumberland's Culloden Army 1745-46. Osprey. ISBN 978-1849088466.
  • Riding, Jacqueline (2016). Jacobites: A New History of the 45 Rebellion. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1408819128.
  • Szechi, Daniel; Sankey, Margaret (November 2001). "Elite Culture and the Decline of Scottish Jacobitism 1716-1745". Past & Present. 173.
  • Thomson, Katherine (1848). Memoirs of the Jacobites of 1715 and 1745, Volume 1.
Masonic offices
Preceded by Grand Master of the
Grand Lodge of Scotland

1742–1743
Succeeded by
Peerage of Scotland
Preceded by Earl of Kilmarnock
1717–1746
Forfeit

william, boyd, earl, kilmarnock, 1705, august, 1746, scottish, peer, joined, 1745, jacobite, rising, captured, culloden, subsequently, executed, treason, tower, hill, earl, kilmarnock, 1746tenure1717, 1746predecessorwilliam, boyd, earl, kilmarnocksuccessorjame. William Boyd 4th Earl of Kilmarnock 12 May 1705 18 August 1746 was a Scottish peer who joined the 1745 Jacobite Rising was captured at Culloden and subsequently executed for treason on Tower Hill William Boyd 4th Earl of KilmarnockEarl of KilmarnockWilliam Boyd 4th Earl of Kilmarnock ca 1746Tenure1717 to 1746PredecessorWilliam Boyd 3rd Earl of KilmarnockSuccessorJames Hay 15th Earl of Erroll 1726 1778 BornWilliam Boyd 1705 05 12 12 May 1705Dean Castle KilmarnockDied18 August 1746 1746 08 18 aged 41 Tower HillCause of deathExecuted for treasonBuriedSt Peter ad Vincula Tower of LondonNationalityScottishResidenceDean Castle Callendar HouseLocalityEast AyrshireWars and battles1745 Jacobite RisingFalkirk CullodenOfficesGrand Master Masonic Grand Lodge of Scotland 1742 1743Spouse s Anne Livingstone 1709 1747 IssueJames 1726 1778 Charles 1728 1782 William 1724 1780 ParentsWilliam Boyd 3rd Earl of Kilmarnock Eupheme RossHis family were supporters of the government and Kilmarnock had not previously been involved with the Stuarts he later stated for the two Kings and their rights I cared not a farthing which prevailed but I was starving 1 His title was declared forfeit and his heavily mortgaged estates confiscated they were later returned to his eldest son James later Earl of Erroll who fought at Culloden on the government side Contents 1 Biography 2 Career 3 Trial and execution 4 Ancestry 5 Notes 6 References 7 SourcesBiography edit nbsp Kilmarnock s restored family home Dean Castle gutted by fire in 1735 and left derelict until 1908William Boyd was born in 1705 only son of William Boyd 3rd Earl of Kilmarnock 1683 1717 and Eupheme Ross 1684 1729 His father supported the government during the 1715 Jacobite Rising but was deeply in debt when he died in 1717 Educated at the University of Glasgow Kilmarnock reportedly had an Aversion to rigorous Study of Letters and was devoted to Riding Fencing Dancing and Musick esteemed by Men of Taste a Polite gentleman 2 In 1724 he married Lady Anne Livingston only daughter of James Livingston 5th Earl of Linlithgow a Jacobite attainted for his role in the 1715 Rising Despite the loss of her family estates Anne was considered an heiress the Commission of Forfeited Estates found selling Jacobite property so complex and time consuming that it was easier to come to an arrangement with the original owners 3 Many such properties were purchased through an 18th century vulture fund called the York Buildings Company which did a deal with Anne who became financially secure as a result She married Kilmarnock against her family s wishes money and his lifestyle were constant issues and they lived together civilly if not happily 4 During the last year of his life he became the love interest of Viscountess Etheldreda Townshend who briefly took an interest in becoming a Jacobite 5 The Earl and the Countess lived at Dean Castle in Kilmarnock Ayrshire but when it was destroyed by fire in 1735 they could not afford the repairs and moved to Anne s home Callendar House in Falkirk which remained in the family until 1783 The Earl s son James sold Dean Castle in 1746 while the outbuildings remained in use the castle stood derelict until restored in the early 20th century 6 Career editKilmarnock s peerage gave him a seat in the House of Lords where he voted as directed by Archibald Campbell 3rd Duke of Argyll and Robert Walpole he was paid a small pension for this which ceased when Walpole lost power in 1742 7 He was Grand Master for the Masonic Grand Lodge of Scotland from 1742 to 1743 his successor being the Earl of Wemyss whose son Lord Elcho also served in the Jacobite army Murray of Broughton later Secretary to Prince Charles was also a member 8 He first met Prince Charles during the 1745 Rebellion at Callendar House on 14 September The decision to join the Jacobite army surprised many it has been suggested one reason for doing so was pressure from his wife s family but he later told Argyll I was starving and if Mahommed had set up his standard I had been a good Mussulman for bread for I must eat 9 nbsp Kilmarnock s political patron the 3rd Duke of ArgyllOn 18 October he received a commission in Kilmarnock s Horse which seems to have been composed largely of individual volunteers One of the few Lowland peers to join the Rising he quickly gained a prominent position with Charles largely because he was unconnected to the group of long term Jacobite Scots centred around Lord George Murray Even before the invasion of England there were deep divisions between Charles and his exile advisors on the one hand and the Scots on the other after the retreat from Derby the two groups viewed each other with suspicion and hostility 10 O Sullivan later wrote no man showed more respect for HRH Charles making Kilmarnock one of the few Scots who could be counted on to support Charles against his fellows 11 When the main army entered England on 8 November Viscount Strathallan remained in Perth the Strathallan or Perthshire Horse was added to Kilmarnock s a combined strength of about 130 men in all 12 They were chiefly engaged in reconnaissance duties and were the last to leave Carlisle on 21 December before re entering Scotland In early January the Jacobites besieged Stirling Castle a government attempt to relieve it led to the Battle of Falkirk on 17 January 13 The battle was fought near Callendar House where Lady Anne was hosting Hawley who used it as his headquarters she allegedly detained him at dinner to distract him from the battle The Battle of Falkirk took place in failing light during a fierce storm and amid considerable confusion Although the cavalry was not involved Kilmarnock s local knowledge was employed afterwards in locating the retreating government forces on his return he attacked a Cameron deserter from the government army who was still in uniform and had to be rescued from his fellow clansmen 14 Falkirk was a Jacobite tactical victory but poor command and co ordination deprived them of the last opportunity to decisively defeat their opponents 15 Many of the Highlanders who took part went home and when Cumberland resumed his advance on 30 January Charles was told the army was in no state to fight On 1 February 1746 the siege of Stirling was abandoned and the Jacobites withdrew to Inverness 16 Kilmarnock s troop helped covered the retreat at the end of this their horses were in such poor condition that they were converted into infantry and retitled Foot Guards The next two months were spent in Elgin as part of Drummond s force guarding the line of the River Spey the Jacobites were short of money and forced to requisition supplies from local merchants 14 a When the campaigning season began in April their leaders agreed the only option was a decisive victory this led to Culloden where they were defeated with heavy losses in less than an hour James Boyd was in the government front line with the Royal Scots but Kilmarnock was with the Jacobite reserve and saw little action The claim he was captured after mistaking government dragoons for his own troops is not supported by his own account another anecdote recounts he lost his hat and wig and James gave him his own 17 Trial and execution edit nbsp Execution of the Earl of Kilmarnock and Lord BalmerinoTried in London on 29 July Kilmarnock Lord Balmerino and the Earl of Cromartie were found guilty of treason and sentenced to death This was commuted to beheading rather than being hanged drawn and quartered as with Francis Towneley and others It was expected one would be pardoned but despite efforts by Kilmarnock s fellow Freemason the Duke of Hamilton this went to Cromartie whose allegedly pregnant wife interceded with the Princess of Wales 18 Cromartie s father in law had been Private Secretary to the Prince of Wales and the writer Horace Walpole 1717 1792 later observed Hamilton s intercession for Lord Kilmarnock hurried him to the block 19 The sentences were carried out on Tower Hill on 18 August Kilmarnock going first shortly before Balmerino contrived a meeting with him to discuss the No quarter order Allegedly issued by the Jacobite leadership before Culloden and used to justify the harsh government response its existence is extremely dubious However Balmerino ensured Kilmarnock confirmed before witnesses that if such an order did exist the blame lay with Lord George Murray not the Prince a version later published in the official trial records Even on the verge of death the internal divisions that undermined the Jacobite cause continued 20 Kilmarnock complied with the convention prisoners facing death express contrition and acceptance of the justice of their sentence 7 He confirmed George II was the true and legitimate sovereign wrote letters to his sons and wife and asked for help in settling his debts Following his execution he was buried in St Peter ad Vincula the church attached to the Tower of London Lady Anne outlived him by a year dying in September 1747 She is honoured with a mural in St Marnock Square Kilmarnock 21 Ancestry editAncestors of William Boyd 4th Earl of Kilmarnock16 James Boyd 9th Lord Boyd8 William Boyd 1st Earl of Kilmarnock17 Catherine Creyke4 William Boyd 2nd Earl of Kilmarnock18 William Cunningham 9th Earl of Glencairn9 Lady Jean Cuninghame19 Lady Anne Ogilvy2 William Boyd 3rd Earl of Kilmarnock10 Thomas William Boyd blood line of Boyd Clan Bloodline of Family Eair and Grace Location Locharbriggs Dumfries l Dg11xw BLOOD LINE FAMILY OF KILMARNOCK THOMAS WILLIAM BOYD Barron current held Earl of Kilmarnock Earl of Arron 5 Letitia Boyd1 William Boyd 4th Earl of Kilmarnock24 William Ross 10th Lord Ross12 George Ross 11th Lord Ross25 Margaret Forrester6 William Ross 12th Lord Ross26 William Cochrane 1st Earl of Dundonald13 Lady Grizel Cochrane27 Eupheme Scott3 Lady Eupheme Ross14 Sir John Wilkie7 Agnes WilkieNotes edit Before his execution he wrote to a friend from prison about his indebtedness to the shoemakers of Elgin Beside my personal debts mentioned in general and particular in the State there is one for which I am liable in justice if it is not paid owing to poor people who gave their work for it by my orders It was at Elgin in Murray the Regiment I commanded wanted shoes I commissioned something about seventy pair of shoes and brogues which might come to 3 shillngs or three shillings and sixpence each one with the other The magistrates divided them among the shoemakers of the town and country and each shoemaker furnished his proportion I drew on the town for the price out of the composition laid on them but I was afterwards told at Inverness that it was believed the composition was otherwise applied and the poor shoemakers not paid As these poor people wrought by my orders it will be a great ease to my heart to think they are not to lose by me as too many have done in the course of that year but had I lived I might have made some inquiry after but now it is impossible as their hardships in loss of horses and such things which happeened through my soldiers are so interwoven with what was done by other people that it would be very hard if not impossible to separate them If you ll write to Mr Innes of Dalkinty at Elgin with whom I was quartered when I lay there he will send you an account of the shoes and if they were paid to the shoemakers or no and if they are not I beg you ll get my wife or my successors to pay them when they can 17 References edit Lenman 1980 p 256 Ray 1752 pp 410 411 Szechi amp Sankey 2001 pp 110 111 Thomson 1848 pp 387 388 Townshend nee Harrison Etheldreda Audrey Viscountess Townshend c 1708 1788 society hostess Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 68358 Retrieved 14 October 2020 Subscription or UK public library membership required Coventry 2000 a b Lowe 2006 Nicholson 2006 Lenman 1980 pp 256 257 Reid 2012 p 44 Annand 1994 p 72 Annand 1994 p 70 Riding 2016 p 334 a b Annand 1994 p 73 Falkirk II PDF Scotland s Historic Fields of Conflict Retrieved 15 April 2019 Riding 2016 pp 356 359 a b Annand 1994 p 74 Riding 2016 p 484 Lewis 1933 p 296 Riding 2016 p 486 Dunn Ross The haunting and tragic story behind Kilmarnock s stunning new town centre mural Daily Record Retrieved 15 October 2022 Sources editAnnand A Mck 1994 Lord Kilmarnock s Horse Grenadiers Later Foot Guards in the Army of Prince Charles Edward 1745 6 Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research 72 290 Coventry Martin 2000 Dean Castle in The Castles of Scotland Goblinshead ISBN 978 1899874279 Lenman Bruce 1980 The Jacobite Risings in Britain 1689 1746 Methuen Publishing ISBN 978 0413396501 Lewis Wilmarth S 1933 The Yale Edition of Horace Walpole s Correspondence Volume 19 Yale University Lowe William 2006 Boyd William fourth earl of Kilmarnock Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 3117 Subscription or UK public library membership required Nicholson Eirwen 2006 Murray Sir John of Broughton baronet called Secretary Murray Mr Evidence Murray Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 19629 Subscription or UK public library membership required Ray James 1752 A Compleat History of the rebellion from 1745 to 1746 James Farley Bristol Reid Stuart 2012 Cumberland s Culloden Army 1745 46 Osprey ISBN 978 1849088466 Riding Jacqueline 2016 Jacobites A New History of the 45 Rebellion Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1408819128 Szechi Daniel Sankey Margaret November 2001 Elite Culture and the Decline of Scottish Jacobitism 1716 1745 Past amp Present 173 Thomson Katherine 1848 Memoirs of the Jacobites of 1715 and 1745 Volume 1 Masonic officesPreceded byThe Earl of Leven Grand Master of theGrand Lodge of Scotland1742 1743 Succeeded byThe Earl of WemyssPeerage of ScotlandPreceded byWilliam Boyd Earl of Kilmarnock1717 1746 Forfeit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Boyd 4th Earl of Kilmarnock amp oldid 1166260492, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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