Jean Gardner
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Jean Gardner or later Jean Hill, was ''"a young woman of very surpassing beauty,"'' with a ''"light foot and an ensnaring eye,"''
Retrieved : 7 November 2012
but she may have been thirteen years older than Robert Burns with whom she was on friendly or 'intimate' terms. A strong local tradition in
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links her with Robert Burns (25 January 1759 – 21 July 1796), however no contemporary written evidence records this relationshipMackay, Page 107 and Burns himself is not thought to have written about her, other than a disputed use of her given name as the 'darling Jean' of Burns's 'Epistle to Davie', and most recent writers have considered the reference to be to Jean Armour.


Life and character

Gardner may have been the daughter of James Gardiner (d.1768), a butcher living at the Seagate in
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, and Janet Caldwell. James owned three houses in the Seagate and a park called Spenshill. Gardner was baptised on 14 September 1746. When James Gardiner died in 1768 his eldest daughter inherited half of his property; already a widow according to Strawhorn, her dead husband, a shipmaster, being one Alexander Armour. This would confusingly make her married name 'Jean Armour.' It was in Gardner’s family house in Seagate (probably in the second house on the right from Highstreet) that the preacher Hugh White was supposed to have lodged. Revd. Hugh White or Whyte was the minister of the Relief Congregation which had seceded from the established church and it was after he preached a sermon at Glasgow that one
Elspeth Buchan Elspeth Buchan (1738–1791) was the founder of a Scotland, Scottish religious sect known as the Buchanites. Early life She was born in 1738, the daughter of John Simpson and Margaret Gordon, who kept a wayside inn at Fatmacken, between Banff, Abe ...
or Elspat Buchan (1738–1791) followed him back to Irvine where she went on to form the fanatical
Buchanites The Buchanites were the late 18th-century followers of Elspeth Buchan, a Scottish woman who claimed to be the Woman Clothed with the Sun, one of the figures named in the Book of Revelation. History In 1783, Mrs Buchan, in her late 40s and th ...
. The Revd White and his wife supported her and he was suspended from his church as a result.Mackay, Page 108 Gardner joined the Buchanites, who numbering only around forty-six at this time, were expelled from Irvine in May 1784 after the sect had seceded from the Relief Church. She eventually joined them in the barn at New Cample in
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where the Buchanites had temporarily settled after 'Mother Buchan' sent Andrew Inness back to collect her. It has been speculated that she was unwilling to leave because of her attachment to Burns.Life of Andrew Inness
Retrieved : 7 November 2012
At New Cample, she met and later married George Hill, another member of the group, after the sect broke up. The couple emigrated with to America where she is said to have died from a fever at
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in around 1793. It is also recorded that her sister Kate and the rest of her family joined the Buchanites and that Kate or Katie had a child by Andrew Inness whom she was not allowed to marry as this was against the laws of the sect. Kate remained with Andrew in a belated celibate friendship until she died and he became the last member of the sect.


George Hill

George Hill was the first person who joined the Buchanites at New Cample. He was a well-educated and had been for some time clerk to the Closeburn Lime Works. He lived at Closeburn Castle, with Mr Stewart, on the estate of Mr Monteith, and often visited the sect. A native of Edinburgh, his relations there became aware of his being about to give up his job for the purpose of becoming a Buchanite, two of his brothers travelled to Closeburn to persuade him against taking such a move that would ruin him and bring disgrace on the family.World Burns Federation
Retrieved : 7 November 2012


Association with Robert Burns

A fanatical member of the Buchanites sect, Andrew Innes is recorded to have said that ''"When I was sent back from Thornhill for Mr Hunter, Jean Gardner came with me from Irvine to Closeburn, and when we were in the neighbourhood of Tarbolton, she seemed to be in fear, and in a rather discomposed condition; when in enquired the cause, she said it was lest Burns the poet, should see her, for if he did, he would be sure to interrupt her, for they had been on terms of intimacy, but we proceeded on our journey without meeting any obstruction."''Burns Encyclopedia
Retrieved : 7 November 2012
Burns had actually moved to Mossgiel by this date. Although the word 'intimate' was supposedly used this could mean little more than 'good friends' in the 18th century, however Burns' sister, Mrs Begg stated that the poet was for a time fond of Jean Gardner.
Joseph Train Joseph Train (6 November 1779 – 7 December 1852) was a Scottish excise officer, antiquarian, writer and poet. He corresponded with Sir Walter Scott, and his local knowledge provided Scott with ideas for his novels. Life Train was born in 1779 at ...
states that ''"Burns frequently visited her in the society both at New Cample and Auchen Gibbert."'' It has been suggested that Jean tried to persuade the poet to join the Buchanites. Robert is also said to have ridden after her to New Cample where he tried to persuade to return, spending a whole day and night trying to persuade her to leave the sect. however this may simply be an exaggeration based on Andrew Innes's actual testimony given half a century after the events took place. Burns is recorded as having held a surprisingly dim view of the Buchanites and wrote:- ''" out two years ago, a Mrs Buchan from Glasgow came among them, & began to spread some fanatical notions of religion among them, ..till in spring last the Populace rose & mobbed the old leader Buchan & put her out of the town; on which all her followers voluntarily quit the place likewise, & with such precipitation, that many of them never shut their doors behind them ..Their tenets are a strange jumble of enthusiastic jargon; among others, she pretends to give them the Holy Ghost by breathing on them, which she does with postures & practices that are scandalously indecent. They have likewise disposed of all life, carrying on a great farce of pretended devotion in barns, & woods, where they lodge and lye all together, & hold likewise a community of women, as it is another of their tenets that they can commit no moral sin. ..This My Dear Sir, is one of the many instances of the folly in leaving the guidance of sound reason, & common sense in matters of Religion."''Letter to James Burness, August 3 1784
Retrieved : 7 November 2012


See also

* Jean Armour * Lesley Baillie * Alison Begbie *
Nelly Blair Nelly Blair, later Nelly Smith (17591820) is sometimes suggested as being Scottish poet Robert Burns' first love. The true identity of Nell Burns himself did not identify his 'Handsome Nell' by name. Nelly Kilpatrick has been suggested as being ...
*
May Cameron May Cameron also known as Margaret, Peggy, or Meg Cameron,Burns Encyclopedia
Ret ...
* Mary Campbell (Highland Mary) * Jenny Clow *
Jean Glover Jean Glover or Jennifer Glover (1758–1801) was a Scottish poet and singer. She was the daughter of James Glover, handloom weaver and Jean Thomson, born in Townhead, Kilmarnock; was well educated for the time she lived in, clever and sharp-wit ...
*
Helen Hyslop Helen Hyslop, also Nelly or Ellen Hyslop was a 'noted local beauty' in Moffat and a strong local tradition maintains that Robert Burns was for some time a great admirer of her and that she had an affair with him. A daughter, also Helen, is said t ...
*
Kate Kemp Kate Kemp of Barskimming lived with her father at the Bridge House on the northern side of the single span Barskimming Old Bridge (Barskimming Auld Brig), River Ayr, Scotland. Both Robert Burns and James Andrew, the miller at Barskimming Mill, ...
*
Nelly Kilpatrick Nelly or Nellie Kilpatrick, Helen Kilpatrick or later Nelly Bone (1759–1820). Nelly (usually short for "Helen") was possibly Robert Burns's first love and muse as stated by Isabella Burns. Early life Nelly is usually used as a nickname for "He ...
* Jessie Lewars *
Elizabeth Paton Elizabeth "Betsey" Paton or later Elizabeth Andrew of Lairgieside (1760 – c. 1799) was the daughter of James Paton and Eleanor Helen Paton of Aird Farm, Crossroads, Ayrshire. Following an affair with Robert Burns she gave birth on 22 May 1785 ...
*
David Sillar David Sillar (1760–1830) was a Scottish farmer, poet, grocer, schoolteacher and baillie who was a close friend of the poet Robert Burns. He died in 1830, aged 70, after a long illness, and was buried in Irvine's Old Parish Church cemetery. Hi ...
*
Isabella Steven Isabella Steven or Tibbie Stein was the daughter of a tenant farmer from Littlehill or Little Hill Farm (NS467305) that adjoined the Burns's farm at Lochlea.Boyle, Page 86 'Stein' is an alternative form of the surname 'Steven'. Littlehill had th ...
* Peggy Thompson


References

;Notes ;Sources # Boyle, A. M. (1996). ''The Ayrshire Book of Burns-Lore.'' Darvel : Alloway Publishing. . # Cameron, John (1904). ''History of the Buchanite Delusion : 1783-1846''. Castle Douglas : R. G. Mann. # Mackay, James (2004). ''A Biography of Robert Burns. Edinburgh : Mainstream Publishing''. . # Strawhorn, John (1985). ''The History of Irvine. Royal Burgh and Town''. Edinburgh : John Donald. . {{DEFAULTSORT:Gardner, Jean Robert Burns 1746 births 1793 deaths 18th-century Scottish people Scottish emigrants to the United States 18th-century Scottish women People from Irvine, North Ayrshire