The Hunt for Jimmy
The Hunt for Jimmy
The Hunt for Jimmy
“The Hunt for Jimmy” was the operational codename our family affectionately assigned to my fathers somewhat obsessional search for his most distant ancestor, James Thomson, who was born in the early part of the eighteenth century.
My father retired from medical practice in 1974, and he spent his retirement attending to his beloved garden and, when the weather was inclement, on researching the family history of the Thomson family, which involved frequent visits to the Record Office in Edinburgh.
I recall him explaining to me that discovering the more recent generations of Thomsons had been helped because of the Scottish tradition of naming the eldest son after the paternal grandfather. So if Alexander Thomson had named his eldest son James, then it was likely that his father would also be called James.
This article is taken directly from the paper prepared by my father before his death in 1991. It was completed by my sister, Jennifer Tarry, who pieced together the rest of his paper from his numerous notes.
James Thomson
The Thomson family in the Isle of Lewis is descended from James Thomson, who had been posted there by the Society in Scotland for the Propagation of Christian Knowledge (SSPCK).
He is first recorded working as a schoolmaster for the SSPCK in the village of Laggan near Glen Spean in 1721. In 1725 the minister in the parish of Kilmonivaig in Lochaber wrote to the SSPCK to say that James Thomson, who had been running a private school in Glen Spean, Lochaber was now experiencing great difficulty in getting his fees paid.
The school was, therefore, under threat of closure. As this school was filling a great need in the locality they felt the society might be interested in taking over the school. The society readily agreed. James Thomson was interviewed and appointed as a Charity Schoolmaster. He began his work in his old school in Glenroy on 1st May 1726.
SSPCK
The SSPCK had been founded in 1709 to provide a basic education in the Highlands of Scotland. The Society’s objective was a very limited one -namely “to teach children, and any adults who are interested, to read, write and do simple arithmetic”.
The schools were administered through the Presbytery Committee who arranged to pay the master twice a year (1st May and 1st November). All schools were inspected twice a year and a report sent to the SSPCK in Edinburgh.
Each parish desirous of having a school applied to the society for permission to have a school and schoolmaster. The parish was obliged to provide a home for the schoolmaster, a building to accommodate the school and an acre of land sufficient to graze one cow.
The SSPCK Rules
Two rules were laid down for the schools by the SSPCK Rule 1 The Gaelic language was never to be used in the schools. The schoolmasters protested strongly against this rule pointing out that this severely handicapped the children who could not speak English. They insisted that the use of Gaelic during the stages of the children’s stay at school would accelerate their learning of English considerably.
The rule, however, was not revoked until 1759 when the S.S.P.C.K. finally cancelled it for the very reasons the schoolmasters had suggested. It is also possible that the rule was quietly ignored sometimes in the remote glens. Rule 2 Catholic children were not to be admitted to the schools unless their parents adopted the Protestant religion and attended protestant communion services.
The Royal Bounty
James Thomson’s commencing salary in 1726 was £6 per annum, £3 paid by the society and £3 paid by the Royal Bounty. The Royal Bounty was a fund set up by King George I in 1724 to assist in education in the Highlands. He donated a sum of money to the Church of Scotland for the reformation of the parts of the island where popery and ignorance prevailed. In 1729 all Charity Schoolmasters were appointed catechists at a further salary of£6 per annum paid in the same manner as their basic salary.
Dismissed
In 1734 the Society suddenly dismissed James Thomson because of “a bad report”. No details of the “bad report” appeared in the minutes of the Society or in the minutes of the Presbytery of Abertarff. After representations by a member of the local clergy and a letter from James himself the Society decided to re-enrol James Thomson as a Charity Schoolmaster.
He was then posted to the village of Keose in the Lochs district of Lewis at a salary of £7 per annum as a schoolmaster and £7 per annum as a catechist. He continued at Keose until 5th August 1742 when he was posted to Barvas on the west side of the island and his salary was raised to £8 p.a. as a schoolmaster and £8 p.a. as a catechist.
Salary Advance
In October 1744 there is a minute of the Society to say that James Thomson applied for an advance of one year’s salary and this was granted. Unfortunately there is no note of what he intended to do with the money. Was he planning marriage? At that point he had been teaching for at least 20 years and must have been about 40 years old.
Barvas, Isle of Lewis
All went well for him for the next eleven years at Barvas. Then suddenly this minute appears in the minutes of the Presbytery of Lewis, That James Thomson be posted to Swainbost at the Northern tip of the island “for certain reasons laid before them”. Once again there is no note of what the reasons might be.
Nearly five years later on 1st May 1759 the Presbytery of Lewis decided that James Thomson would, in future, be employed solely as a catechist at Swainbost at a salary of £8 p.a. Again no reasons are recorded. Finally on 26th November 1761 James Thomson and three other catechists were dismissed and their salaries withdrawn.
Where was James Thomson from?
Where did James Thomson come from originally? This question has exercised the minds of the Thomson family in Lewis for nearly two centuries. The family views differ. The more common theory is that he came from Banffshire. The other theory was expressed in this way, “although James Thomson came to Lewis from further North (i.e. Lochaber) his people came from the neighbourhood of Couper Angus in eastern Perthshire.
Professor Derick Thomson of Glasgow pointed out that there is in Perthshire a small community called Bamff. This community is a small private estate in the parish of Alyth and some 11-12 miles north of Couper Angus.
The Bamff Estate was owned by the Ramsey family for eight centuries until the family died out this century. The estate has several farms and houses and it is known that one Thomson family lived on the estate in the late seventeenth century.
Kilmonivaig Church
Some years after James Thomson was posted to the Isle of Lewis the parish church of Kilmonivaig (the parish church for Glen Spean) was destroyed by a sudden severe freak storm in which the entire church and all its contents were washed away and lost.
So all parish records of James Thomson’s period there were destroyed. The minutes of the SSPCK and of the Presbytery of Abertarff (later Lochaber) were the only sources of information about James Thomson and both of these were silent on any details of the events recorded.
That makes it difficult to find his parents or his birthplace.
Acknowledgement
I am grateful to Angus Smith of Keose, Lochs, Isle of Lewis for sharing his research into James Thomson. I have updated this article to include information he has made available.