William Crichton, 1st Earl of Dumfries

William Crichton
Lord Crichton of Sanquhar[1]
Viscount of Ayr (1622-1642/3)[1]
Earl of Dumfries (1633-1642/3)[1]
IssueWilliam Crichton, 2nd Earl of Dumfries
James Crichton
John Crichton
Mary Crichton
Catherine Crichton
FatherWilliam Crichton, tutor of Sanquhar[1]
MotherKatherine Carmichael

William Crichton, 1st Earl of Dumfries the ninth Lord Crichton, was born to William Crichton (brother of the sixth and seventh Lords Crichton) and Katherine Carmichael.[1]

The title Lord Crichton passed to William after his cousin Robert was hanged outside Westminster Hall for his involvement with a murder.[1][2] A challenge arose to his claim to the title and lands from an illegitimate son of Robert, but a decree arbitral from King James VI found in favour of William's rights to the title, and compensated Robert's son with lands around Perth.[1][3]

On 31 July 1617, King James VI stayed at Sanquhar Castle while travelling through Scotland.[1] During this visit, Crichton is reported to have burnt a bond recording a large debt owed to him the King.[4][5] In 1622, the King gave Crichton the title Viscount of Ayr.[5] Eleven years later, King Charles I of England gave Crichton the title Earl of Dumfries and Baron Crichton of Cumnock.[5] Then in 1635, Crichton was given Lefnoreis Castle and surrounding lands (on which a descendant would later build Dumfries House).[5]

By the time of his death in 1642 or 1643, due to the family's financial difficulties William and his sons had sold Sanquhar Castle and the estates in the area to William Douglas, 1st Earl of Queensberry, and relocated the family to Cumnock.[1]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Sir James Balfour Paul, ed. (1906). The Scots Peerage Founded on Wood's Edition of Sir Robert Douglas's Peerage of Scotland.
  2. ^ Christopher Winn (2009). I Never Knew That About The Scottish. Pengiun Random House.
  3. ^ Act in favour of William Crichton, lord Crichton of Sanquhar. Parliament of Scotland. 28 June 1617.
  4. ^ William Wilson (1904). Folk Lore and Genealogies of Uppermost Nithsdale.
  5. ^ a b c d Rev John Warrick (1899). The History of Old Cumnock.