David Hackston of Rathillet, in the
shire of Fife, is said in his younger years to have
been without the least sense of any thing religious,
until it pleased the Lord, in his infinite goodness,
to incline him to go out and attend the gospel then
preached in the fields, where he was caught in the
gospel net, and became such a true convert, that after
a most mature deliberation upon the controverted points
of the principles of religion in that period, he at
last embarked himself in that noble cause (for which
he afterward suffered), with a full resolution to
stand and fall with the despised persecuted people,
cause and interest of Jesus Christ.
There is no account of any public
appearance that this worthy gentleman made, amongst
that party, until the 3d of May 1679, that we find
him, with other eight gentlemen, who were in quest
of one Carmichael, who, by means of the arch-bishop,
had got commission to harrass and persecute all he
could find (in the shire of Fife) for non-conformity;
but not finding him, when they were ready to drop
the search, they providentially met with their arch-enemy
himself. Whenever they descried his coach, one
of them said, It seems that the Lord hath delivered
him into our hand; and proposed that they should choose
one for their leader, whose orders the rest were to
obey. Upon which they chose David Hackston for
their commander; but he absolutely refused, upon account
of a difference subsisting betwixt Sharp and him in
a civil process, wherein he judged himself to have
been wronged by the primate; which deed he thought
would give the world ground to think, it was rather
out of personal pique and revenge, which he professed
he was free of. They then chose another, and
came up with the coach; and having got the bishop
out, and given him some wounds, he fell on the ground.
They ordered him to pray, but, instead of that, seeing
Rathillet at some distance, (having never alighted
from his horse), he crept towards him on his hands
and his feet, and said, Sir, I know you are a gentleman,
you will protect me. To which he answered,
I shall never lay a hand on you. At last he was
killed; after which every one judged of the action
as their inclinations moved them. However, the
deed was wholly charged upon him (and his brother-in-law,
Balfour of Kinloch) although he had no active hand
in this action.
About the latter end of the same month
of May, that he might not be found wanting to the
Lord’s cause, interest and people, upon any
emergent or occasion, he, with some friends from Fife,
joined that suffering handful of the covenanters at
Evandale, where, after he and Mr. Hamilton, &c. had
drawn up that declaration (afterward called the Rutherglen
declaration), he and Mr. Douglas went to the market
cross of Rutherglen, and upon the anniversary day
the 29 of May, where they extinguished the bonefire,
and published the said testimony. They returned
back to Evandale, where they were attacked by Claverhouse,
upon the first of June near Drumclog. Here Mr.
Hackston was appointed one of the commanding officers
(under Mr. Hamilton who commanded in chief), where
he behaved with much valour and gallantry during that
skirmish. After which he was a very useful
instrument among that faithful remnant (as witness
his repeated protests against the corrupt and Erastian
party), and had an active hand in the most part of
the public transactions among them, until that fatal
day the 22d of June, where he and his troop of horse
were the last upon the field of battle at Bothwel-bridge.
But, this worthy and religious gentleman,
being now declared a rebel to the king (though no
rebel to Zion’s king), and a proclamation issued
out, wherein was a reward offered of 10,000 merks to
any who could inform of or apprehend him, or any of
those concerned in the death of the arch-bishop of
St. Andrews. Upon this and the proclamation after
Bothwel, he was obliged to retire out of the way for
about a year’s space. In which time he
did not neglect to attend the gospel in the fields,
where-ever he could have it faithfully dispensed.
But this pious gentleman, having run fast and done
much in a little time, it could not be expected he
should continue long, and upon the 22d of July 1680,
having been with that little party a few days, who
attended Mr. Richard Cameron at Airs-moss, they were
surprized by Bruce of Earls-hall, Airly’s troop
and Strahan’s dragoons.
Here, being commander in chief of
that little band, and seeing the enemy approaching
fast, he rode off to seek some strength of ground for
their better advantage, and the rest followed; but
seeing they could go no further, they turned back,
and drew up quickly. Eight horse on the right,
and fifteen on the left; and the foot who were but
ill armed in the middle. He then asked, If they
were all willing to fight? They all answered,
They were. Both armies advanced, and a strong
party of the enemies horse coming hard upon them,
their horse fired, killed and wounded severals of
them, both horse and foot; after which they advanced
to the enemies very faces, when, after giving and receiving
fire, valiant Hackston being in the front, finding
the horse behind him broke, rode in among them, and
out at a side, without any damage; but being assaulted
by severals with whom he fought a long time, they following
him and he them by turns, until he stuck in a bog,
and the foremost of them, one Ramsay, one of his acquaintance,
who followed him in, and they being on foot, fought
with small swords, without much advantage on either
side. But at length closing, he was struck down
by three on horseback behind him; and falling after
he had received three sore wounds on the head, they
saved his life, which he submitted to. He was,
with the rest of the prisoners, carried to the rear,
where they gave them all a testimony of brave
resolute men. After this he was brought to Douglas,
and from thence to Lanerk, where Dalziel threatened
to roast him for not satisfying him with answers.
After which he and other three prisoners were taken
to Edinburgh, where, by order of the council, they
were received by the magistrates at the water-gate,
and he set on a horse’s bare back, with his
face backward, and the other three laid on a goad
of iron, and carried up the street (and Mr. Cameron’s
head on a halbert before them) to the parliament closs,
where he was taken down, and the rest loosed by the
hand of the hangman.
He was immediately brought before
the council, where his indictment was read by the
chancellor, and he examined, which examination and
answers thereunto being elsewhere inserted at
large, it may suffice here to observe, that being
asked, if he thought the bishop’s death murder?
he told them, That he was not obliged to answer such
questions; yet he would not call it so, but rather
say, it was not murder. Being further asked,
If he owned the king’s authority, he replied,
“That though he was not obliged to answer, yet
as he was permitted to speak, he would say something
to that; and 1st, That there could be no lawful
authority but what was of God, and that no authority
stated in a direct opposition to God could be of God,
and that he knew of no authority nor justiciary this
day in these nations, but what were in a direct opposition
to God, and so could neither be of God nor lawful,
and that their fruits were kything it, in that they
were letting murderers, sorcerers, and such others
at liberty from justice, and employing them in their
service, and made it their whole work to oppress,
kill and destroy the Lord’s people.”
Bishop Paterson asked, “If ever Pilate and that
judicature, who were direct enemies to Christ, were
disowned by him as judges?” He said, “He
would answer no perjured prelate in the nation.”
Paterson replied, “He could not be called perjured,
since he never took that sacrilegious covenant.”
Mr. Hackston said, “That God would own that covenant,
when none of them were to oppose it, &c.”
Notwithstanding these bold, free, and open answers,
they threatened him with torture, but this he no-wise
regarded.
Upon the 26th, he was again brought
before the council, where he answered much to the
same purpose as before. The chancellor said, He
was a vicious man. He answered, That while he
was so, he had been acceptable to him, but now when
otherwise it was not so. He asked him, If he would
yet own that cause with his blood, if at liberty? He
answered, That both their fathers had owned it with
the hazard of their blood before him. Then he
was called by all a murderer. He answered,
God should decide it betwixt them, to whom he referred
it, who were most murderers in his sight, him or them.
Bishop Paterson’s brother, in conference, told
him, That the whole council found that he was a man
of great parts, and also of good birth. He said,
That for his birth, he was related to the best of
the kingdom, which he thought little of, and as for
his parts, they were very small; yet he trusted so
much to the goodness of that cause for which he was
a prisoner, that if they would give God that justice,
as to let his cause be disputed, he doubted not to
plead it against all that speak against it.
Upon the 27, he was taken before the
justiciary, where he declined the king’s authority
as an usurper of the prerogative of the Son of God,
whereby he had involved the land in idolatry, perjury
and other wickedness; and declined them as exercising
under him the supreme power over the church, usurped
from Jesus Christ, &c. and therefore durst not, with
his own consent, sustain them as competent judges;
but declined them as open and stated enemies to the
living God, and competitors for his throne and power,
belonging to him only.
On the 29, he was brought to his trial,
where the council, in a most unprecedented manner,
appointed the manner of his execution; for they well
knew his judges would find him guilty. And upon
Friday the 30th, being brought again before them,
they asked, If he had any more to say. He
answered, What I have said I will seal. Then they
told him, They had something to say to him; and commanded
him to sit down and receive his sentence, which he
did, but told them, They were all murderers; for all
the power they had was derived from tyranny; and that
these years bygone they had not only tyrannized over
the church of God, but also grinded the faces of the
poor, so that oppression, perjury and bloodshed were
to be found in their skirts.
Upon this, he was carried from the
bar on a hurdle drawn backwards, unto the place of
execution at the cross of Edinburgh. None were
suffered to be with him but two bailies, the executioner
and his servants. He was permitted to pray to
God Almighty but not to speak to the people. Being
come upon the scaffold, his right hand was struck off,
and a little after his left; which he endured with
great firmness and constancy. The hangman being
long in cutting off the right hand, he desired him
to strike in the joint of the left, which being done,
he was drawn up to the top of the gallows with a pully,
and suffered to fall down a considerable way upon
the lower scaffold three times with his whole weight,
and then fixed at the top of the gallows. Then
the executioner, with a large knife, cut open his
breast, and pulled out his heart, before he was dead,
for it moved when it fell on the scaffold. He
then stuck his knife in it, and shewed it on all sides
to the people, crying, Here is the heart of a traitor.
At last, he threw it into a fire prepared for that
purpose, and having quartered his body, his head was
fixed on the Nether-bow; one of his quarters, with
his hands at St. Andrews; another at Glasgow; a third
at Leith; and the fourth at Bruntisland. Thus
fell this champion for the cause of Christ, a sacrifice
unto prelatic fury, to gratify the lust and ambition
of wicked and bloody men. Whether his courage,
constancy or faithfulness had the pre-eminency it
is hard to determine. But his memory is
still alive, and it is better to say no more of him,
than either too much or too little.