We
visited Maryculter in July last year and found and photographed John
Glennie's grave in the kirkyard of St Mary's. His son, also Rev John
(1765 -1817), minister of Dunnottar, is buried in the same grave, with
his memorial stone vertically placed at the head of the grave. (John
jnr's wife, Harriet Cook, is buried in St Andrews), Three of John
Glennie's sons became ministers, his son William (my ancestor) had 13
children (12boys, 1 girl) and four of them became ministers! There is an
unbroken line of 6 generations of ministers from John, with the 7th
generation all girls, one of whom became a nun!
We
didn't swim the Dee to Peterculter but drove straight to Aberdeen
afterwards as a haar was coming in and we didn't think we could find our
hotel in it.
We
have Norman Douglas Nicol's monograph on Maryculter in the 18th century
(bought from the ANEHFS), where he states that John Glennie is
(possibly) the son of a John Glenny, farmer of
Tillieskeith, mentioned as a witness to a baptism in 1703. However,
Marianne Glennie (1845-1921), John's great grand daughter and my great
grand mother, gives the following in a memo she wrote about 1870.
"As
far as we know, the Glennie Family dates back to about 1650 when
Alexander Glennie, who came from the South, settled in the parish of
Mary Coulter. His son John was married in 1713 to Grissel Dalgarno,
whose son John born 1720 married Jean Mitchell in 1754; these were the
great-grandparents of my (Marianne Holmes, nee Glennie) generation. This
John Glennie was Minister of Drumoake, and afterwards of Mary Coulter,
where he had an Academy for education of the sons of the leading
families round. The first two mentioned, Alexander & John, had lived
on a farm called White Shaw (actually Wetshaw) and died there in the
parish of Mary Coulter."
She also quotes her uncle, Rev John David Glennie (1797-1874) as saying
that:
The Glennies of Glen (wherever that may be) after a roving life
in the South, settled in Deeside in the North Borders of the county of
Kincardine, in the neighbourhood of the monastery called the "House
of Blairs" to which they in process of time transferred land, the
deed of transfer of which exhibits their seal with coat of arms about
the middle of the last century.
The Revd John Glennie D.D. of Marischal College, Aberdeen, who
was Minister of Maryculter on Deeside and previously of an adjoining
parish of Drumoak, was a learned man & eloquent preacher & was
competitor with Dr George Campbell for the Professor's Chair of Divinity
at Aberdeen; he educated a number of sons of the leading families on
Deeside, Duffs of Fetteresso and others. His youngest son George Glennie
D.D. succeeded Dr Beattie {whose niece he had married} as Professor of
Moral Philosophy in Aberdeen.
In discussion with Norman Douglas Nicol, he says this information about
the house of Blairs is rubbish.
Malcolm has sent a file of
information detailing many of the Glennie descendants. With his
permission, we would hope to have this available to you in the family
tree section soon. If you would like more information from Malcolm, send
a message to our e-mail address and we will pass your interest on .
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