The Gallowlee
The Gallowlee midway between Edinburgh and Leith and near the present Shrub Place was a well known and famous place. An old Chronical of Tales and Traditions of Leith thus narrates about it- During the troublous times of Morton s regency (in the 16th century) the Gallowlee had rather an undue share of notoriety.
According to Captain Grant while Morton strung up his prisoners by fifties on a gigantic gallows at the Gallowlee midway between Leith and Edinburgh, the Loyalists displayed an equal number on a gibbet which reared its ghastly outline on the Castle Hill, in view of the Regents camp.
(This was during the period after Mary,Queen of Scot’s had fled to England in 1568 and civil war
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The gibbet at the Gallowlee was occasionally used for the purpose of exhibiting the effigies of individuals who had rendered themselves in some way obnoxious to the populace. For example when the celebrated John Wilkes in 1763 published the memorable No 45 of his periodical entitled, the North Briton, the bitter satire in which he indulged towards Scotland and Scotsmen gave great offence in the North and a famous leader of the Edinburgh mob, named Bowed Joseph got a cart fitted up with
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The cart with its curious burden was leisurely paraded through the principal streets until it reached the Gallowlee where two criminals were at that moment dangling in chains and alongside of these Wilkes and his companion the devil were elevated amid the enthusiastic applause of the multitude. No opposition was offered by the authorities to the proceedings for two reasons they fully participated in the angry feelings entertained towards Wilkes and they were not in a position to oppose the will of such an independent leader as Bowed Joseph . The magistrates on many
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The fine sand of which the mound at the Gallowlee was composed was carted away to be mixed with the lime used in the erection of the New Town of Edinburgh. The spot once known the dreaded Gallowlee is now or was lately occupied as a marble work. But chiefly by the nursery of Thomas Methven and Sons. The proprietor of the ground at the time referred to according to Mr Chambers was nearly as much of a sand bed as his property. He was a big
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A public house was at length erected at the spot for his particular bnefit and assuredly as long as the Gallowlee lasted this pub house did not want his custom. It must be borne in mind however that the gibbet laird only got quit of the hillock of sand in this way he still retained the ground the grog supplying process having merely converted it from a
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The Gallowlee and the victims of its gibbets are now only matters of history.
John Arthur is a Leith Historian and Genealogist,married with two sons having websites at http://www.lineages.co.uk, http://www.leithhistory.co.uk and http://persevere.lineages.co.uk













