Page 66 - Fenning_Scoland
P. 66

Internal Postal Rates set by the Scottish Privy Council

 1692 - Edinburgh to Glasgow 2 Shillings Rate
           I




 The Scottish Privy Council's Proclamation in  1689 on  pbstal charges set the Edinburgh to
 Glasgow rate at 2 shillings Scots for a single letter, unch~nged since 1662.







 William Carstares (1649-1715), Cleric, Revolutionary and Statesman

 This letter, unsigned and written in a guarded vein with warnings to the addressee to be cautious, was
 written by William Carstares to his brother-in-law William Dunlop.

 His father,  John, a parish  minister and convinced Presbyterian,  had been outlawed in  May  1662 for
 refusing to conform to the new regime or take the oath of allegiance. William subsequently decided to
 leave Scotland for Holland where he studied divinity in Utrecht and Leiden.

 William  Carstares  became  an  agent  for  the  House  of  Orange  in  1672
 using  the pseudonym  William  Williams  in  his  letters to the  Hague.  From
 1675 until 1679 he was a prisoner in  Edinburgh Castle having been jailed
 for distributing an  anti-government pamphlet. He then  became one of the
 Scottish  conspirators  planning  an  armed  insurrection  and,  in  1683, was
 accused  of involvement  in  a plot to  assassinate  King  Charles  II  and the
 Duke of York (later to become King James II and Vil). This resulted in him
 being arrested, tortured and imprisoned for a further period.

 On  his release,  Carstares fled  to  Holland,  becoming  a  close  adviser to
 William  of Orange.  When  the  'Glorious  Revolution'  of 1688-89  started,
 111
 Carstares sailed to England on William's ship and, on 5 November 1688,
 he held a service of thanksgiving for the expeditionary forces on the beach   ath March 1692. Letter from London to Glasgow via Edinburgh.
 at Torbay.  He  was  instrumental in  the  events that led to the  offer of the
 English  and  Scottish crowns  to  William  and  Mary in  1689 and  remained   Rates applied:
 one  of  William's  most  trusted  advisers  thereafter.  In  later  life,  he  was
 elected Moderator of the Scottish Church on four occasions.   5d Sterling London to Edinburgh per Act of the English Parliament (1660)
                         2s Scots Edinburgh to Gl~sgow pe! Scottish Privy Coµncil (1689)

                         The manuscript charge marks:
 William Dunlop (1653(?) -1700), Political Activist, Colonist and University Principal
                         On the front are '5' and '2' charges indicating the English and Scottish rates.
 The  addressee  of  the  letter  was  William  Dunlop.  In  the  1660's,  both  of  his  parents  suffered   On  the  reverse  is  a  '5<1'  Edinburgh  accounting  mark  tor the  London  to
 imprisonment by the Scottish Privy Council on account of their sympathy with the covenanter party.   Edinburgh  charge  and an  as yet  unexplained  manuscript  mark,  possibly
                         another accounting mane
 Before the battle of Bothwell Bridge in 1679, Dunlop was responsible in part for the 'Declaration of the   -
 oppressed Protestants now in  arms in Scotland'.  His political  views  and  opposition to Charles  II  led
 him to live in  self-imposed exile in Carolina,  North America where he helped to found a settlement at
 Stuart's  Town.  After  the  'Glorious  Revolution',  Dunlop  returned  to  Scotland  and,  in  1690,  he  was
 inducted into the office of PrincipaJ of Glasgow University.


 Reference: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71