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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

LORD LOVAT

Beheaded for High Treason, at the age of Eighty, on
9th of  April, 1747

LORD LOVAT, who in 1715 had been a supporter of
the House of Hanover, in 1745 changed sides, and
became a friend of the party which he had before opposed.
   His career in life began in the year 1692, when he was
appointed a captain in Lord Tullibardine's regiment, but
he resigned his commission in order to prosecute his claim
to be the Chief of the Frasers; in order to effect which he
laid a scheme to get possession of the heiress of Lovat, who
was about to be married to a son of Lord Salton. He raised
a clan, who violently seized the young lord, and, erecting a
gibbet, showed it to him and his father, threatening their in-
stant deaths unless they relinquished the contract made for
the heiress of Lovat. To this, fearing for their lives, they con-
sented; but, still unable to get possession of the young lady,
he seized the Dowager Lady Lovat in her own house, caused
a priest to marry them against her consent, cut her stays
open with his dirk, and, assisted by his ruffians, tore off
her clothes, forced her into bed, to which he followed her,
and then called his companions to witness the consumma-
tion of the outrageous marriage. For this breach of the
peace he was indicted, but fled from justice; but he was
nevertheless tried for rape, and for treason, in opposing
the laws with an armed force; and sentence of outlawry
was pronounced against him. Having fled to France, he
turned Papist, ingratiated himself with the Pretender, and

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was rewarded by him with a commission; but he was appre-
hended on the remonstrance of the English ambassador
in Paris, and lodged in the Bastille, where, having remained
some years, he procured his liberty by taking priests' orders,
under colour of which he became a Jesuit in the College of
St Omer,
   In the first rebellion of 1715 he returned to Scotland,
and, joining the King's troops, assisted them in seizing
Inverness from the rebels; for which service he got the
title of Lovat, was appointed to command, and had other
favours conferred upon him. In the rebellion of which we
are now treating he turned sides and joined the Pretender,
a step treacherous in the extreme. When taken, he was
old, unwieldy and almost helpless; although in that condition
he had been possessed of infinite resources to assist the
rebellion. He petitioned the Duke of Cumberland for
mercy; and, hoping to work upon his feelings, recapitu-
lated his former services, the favours that he had received
from the Duke's grandfather, King George I., and dwelt
much upon his access to Court, saying he had carried him
to whom he now sued for life in his arms and, when a
baby, held him up while his grandsire fondled him.
   On the 9th of March, 1747, however, he was taken from
the Tower to Westminster Hall for trial, and, the evidence
adduced clearly proving his guilt to be of no ordinary char-
acter, he was convicted. He was next day brought up for
judgment, and sentence of death was pronounced.
   That this sentence was not ill deserved appears from a
speech of Lord Belhaven, delivered in the last Parliament
held in Edinburgh, in 1706, in which his lordship, speaking
of this nobleman, then Captain Fraser, on occasion of the
Scots plot, commonly called Fraser's plot, says that " he de-
served, if practicable, to have been hanged five several times,
in five different places, and upon five different accounts at
least : as having been notoriously a traitor to the Court of
St James's, a traitor to the Court of St Germain's, a traitor
to the Court of Versailles and a traitor to his own country of
Scotland; in being not only an avowed and restless enemy

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to the peace and quiet of its established government and
constitution, both in Church and State, but likewise, a vile
Proteus-like apostate and a seducer of others in point of
religion, as the tide or wind changed; and, moreover, that
(abstracted from all those, his multiplied acts of treason,
abroad and at home) he deserved to be hanged as a con-
demned criminal, outlaw and fugitive, for the barbarous,
cruel and most flagitious rape he had, with the assistance of
some of his vile and abominable band of ruffians, violently
committed on the body of a right honourable and virtuous
lady, the widow of the late Lord Lovat, and sister of his
Grace the late Duke of Atholl. Nay, so hardened was
Captain Fraser, that he audaciously erected a gallows, and
threatened to hang thereon one of the said lady's brothers
and some other gentlemen of quality who accompanied
him in going to rescue him out of that criminal's cruel
hand."
   On the morning fixed for his execution, 9th of April,
1747, Lord Lovat, who was now in his eightieth year, and
very large and unwieldy in his person, awoke at about three
o'clock, and was heard to pray with great devotion. At five
o'clock he arose, and asked for a glass of wine-and-water,
and at eight o'clock he desired that his wig might be sent,
that the barbe r might have time to comb it out genteelly,
and he then provided himself with a purse to hold the
money which he intended for the executioner. At about
half-past nine o'clock he ate heartily of minced veal, and
ordered that his friends might be provided with coffee and
chocolate, and at eleven o'clock the sheriffs came to demand
his body. He then requested his friends to retire while he
said a short prayer; but he soon called them back, and said
that he was ready.
   When his lordship was going up the steps to the scaffold,
assisted by two warders, he looked round, and, seeing so
great a concourse of people, " God save us," says he, " why
should there be such a bustle about taking off an old grey
head, that cannot get up three steps without three bodies to
support it ? "

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   Turning about, and observing one of his friends much
dejected, he clapped him on the shoulder, saying: " Cheer
up thy heart, man! I am not afraid; why should you be
so? " As soon as he came upon the scaffold he asked for
the executioner, and presented him with ten guineas in a
purse, and then, desiring to see the axe, he felt the edge
and said he " believed it would do." Soon after, he rose
from the chair which was placed for him and looked at
the inscription on his coffin, and on sitting down again he
repeated from Horace:
" Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori "
and afterwards from Ovid:
Nam genus et proavos, et qux non fecimus ipsi,
Vix ea nostra voco."
   He then desired all the people to stand off, except his two
warders, who supported his lordship while he said a prayer;
after which he called his solicitor and agent in Scotland,
Mr W. Fraser, and, presenting his gold-headed cane, said,
" I deliver you this cane in token of my sense of your faithful
services, and of my committing to you all the power I have
upon earth," and then embraced him. He also called for
Mr James Fraser, and said: " My dear James, I am going
to heaven ; but you must continue to crawl a little longer in
this evil world." And, taking leave of both, he delivered
his hat, wig and clothes to Mr William Fraser, desiring
him to see that the executioner did not touch them. He
ordered his cap to be put on, and, unloosing his neckcloth
and the collar of his shirt, knelt down at the block, and
pulled the cloth which was to receive his head close to
him. But, being placed too near the block, the executioner
desired him to remove a little farther back, which with the
warders' assistance was immediately done; and, his neck
being properly placed, he told the executioner he would say
a short prayer and then give the signal by dropping his
handkerchief. In this posture he remained about half-a-
minute, and then, on throwing his handkerchief on the floor,

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the executioner at one blow cut off his head, which was
received in the cloth, and, with his body was put into the
coffin and carried in a hearse back to the Tower, where it
was interred near the bodies of the other lords.

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Newgate Calendar Vol. III Table of Contents / The Complete Newgate Calendar