James Blaikie
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James Ogilvie Blaikie of Craigiebuckler (20 May 1786 – 3 October 1836) was
Provost of Aberdeen The Lord Provost of Aberdeen is the convener of the Aberdeen City local authority in Scotland. They are elected by the city council and serve not only as the chair of that body, but as a figurehead for the entire city. They are equivalent in m ...
from 1833 until 1836.


Ancestry

James Blaikie was a son of John Blaikie, plumber and coppersmith in Aberdeen, by his wife, Helen Richardson. The family belonged originally to the Borders, but certain of them having been engaged in the
Jacobite rising of 1715 The Jacobite rising of 1715 ( gd, Bliadhna Sheumais ; or 'the Fifteen') was the attempt by James Edward Stuart (the Old Pretender) to regain the thrones of England, Ireland and Scotland for the exiled Stuarts The House of Stuart, ori ...
, they came north to Perthshire, under the protection of the Duke of Perth, and settled on a farm near Dunkeld. The Provost's father, John Blaikie, came from Perth to Aberdeen about 1780, and founded the business of John Blaikie & Sons. James was the elder brother of fellow Provost
Sir Thomas Blaikie Sir Thomas Blaikie of Kingseat (11 February 1802 – 25 September 1861) was a Scottish businessman who twice served as Lord Provost of Aberdeen, from 1839 to 1847 and 1853 to 1856. Life Born in Aberdeen, he was the son of John Blaikie (1756â ...
.


Life and works

James Blaikie was born in 1786, studied law, and was admitted a member of the Society of Advocates in Aberdeen in 1808. Provost Blaikie took a great interest in the rebuilding of Marischal College, and it was principally through his exertions and the aid of Alexander Bannerman, M.P., that the Government were finally induced to contribute the sum necessary to make the scheme of rebuilding possible. Their efforts thus brought to a successful issue, the foundation-stone of the new buildings was to have been laid by him during the month in which he died. Other matters which occupied the attention of the council during the three years above mentioned were the abolition of the office of public executioner; the preparation of a memorial to the Commissioners on Burghs, asking that a stipendiary magistrate be appointed and paid for by government; the demolition of the old East Church, built in the latter quarter of the fifteenth century, and the erection of the present structure. It will be observed that the duration of the office of provost was, under the Reform Act of 1833, altered from two to three years.


Family

He married Jane Garden, a daughter of William Garden, Braco Park, by his wife, Eliza Logie, and had issue- *John, advocate in Aberdeen, and afterwards of
Craigiebuckler Craigiebuckler is a residential area of Aberdeen, Scotland. It is around 2 miles south west of the city centre. The local schools are Hazlehead Primary School Hazlehead Academy, formerly known as Central School then Aberdeen Academy, is a ...
* William Garden Blaikie, D.D., LL.D., Professor of Apologetics and Pastoral Theology in New College, Edinburgh,
Moderator of the General Assembly The moderator of the General Assembly is the chairperson of a General Assembly, the highest court of a Presbyterian or Reformed church. Kirk sessions and presbyteries may also style the chairperson as moderator. The Oxford Dictionary states th ...
of the
Free Church A free church is a Christian denomination that is intrinsically separate from government (as opposed to a state church). A free church does not define government policy, and a free church does not accept church theology or policy definitions from ...
in 1895. *Anthony Adrian, advocate in Aberdeen, married, 6 July 1852, his cousin, Helen Blaikie, and died in Natal, South Africa, 18 November 1871 *Elizabeth, married in 1840 to Alexander Dyce Davidson, minister of the West Church of S. Nicholas but died young as did their child. Mrs. Blaikie died on 2 April 1857, in her sixty-third year.


Death

Provost James Blaikie died suddenly in the vestibule of the old Town-House, on 3 October 1836, within a month of completing his third year of office. His character, as sketched by Alexander Dyce Davidson who later married Blaikie's daughter, in the funeral sermon preached by him, was as follows : – " He was a man of thorough integrity, kindliness of heart, and unruffled evenness of temper. He had deep sagacity, clearness and soundness of judgment, and a wondrous faculty of concentrating his whole mind at once on any subject that was presented to him. He was not only a good man and an upright magistrate, but a Christian. His piety was not obtrusive, but deep and genuine." This estimate of the Provost is borne out by the wording of the vote of thanks given to him by the Council in 1835, when he was thanked " for the very able, courteous, and efficient manner in which he had performed the duties of his office." He was buried at St Nicholas, Aberdeen.


Memorials

The memory of Provost Blaikie is still kept green by the statue in marble – one of the earliest works of the late Sir John Steell, R.S.A. – having been removed from Drum's Aisle before the fire of 1874. His portrait, painted by John Phillip, R.A., also hangs in the Town-Hall, and there is also an engraving of the portrait by J. E. Coombs, executed in 1838.


See also

*
List of Provosts and Lord Provosts of Aberdeen The Lord Provost of Aberdeen is the convener of the Aberdeen City local authority in Scotland. They are elected by the city council and serve not only as the chair of that body, but as a figurehead for the entire city. They are equivalent in m ...


References


Citations


Sources

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External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Blaikie, James Ogilvie 1786 births 1836 deaths People from Aberdeen Lord Provosts of Aberdeen