| "That same year [1722] many of the proprietors enclosed their grounds to stock them with blank cattle, and by that means turned out a large number of tenants at the term of Whitsunday, 1723, whereby numbers of them became destitute, and in consequence
rose in a mob, when with pitchforks, gavellocks. and spades, they levelled the park dykes of Barncalzie and Munches at Dalbeattie, which I saw with my own eyes, The mob passed by Dalbeattie and Buittle, and did the same on the estate of Dunrod and [of] laird Murdoch, then proprietor of Kilquhanady,
who turned out 16 familes at that time. The proprietors rose with their servants and dependants to quell the mob . . . . and sent for two troops of dragoons from Edinburgh, and after their appearing the mob dispersed. After that warrants were granted for apprehending many of the tenants and persons
concerned in the said mob; several of them were tried; those of them who had any funds were fined; some were banished to the plantations, while others were imprisioned, and it brought great distress upon this part of the country." |