Hugh MacDonald (journalist)

Hugh MacDonald (4 April 1817 – 16 March 1860) was a Scottish journalist, poet and author from Glasgow. He wrote for the newspaper the Glasgow Citizen for many years under the pen name 'Caleb'.[1] He is best known for his book Rambles Round Glasgow, published in 1854 by Thomas Murray and Son;[2] a version with modern footnotes was published in 2023.[3]

Profile relief of MacDonald at drinking fountain monument on the Gleniffer Braes

Life

MacDonald was born on Rumford Street in Bridgeton, Glasgow on 4 April 1817.[4][5] He was one of 11 children. His parents had moved from the Highlands to find work in the Glasgow textile industry, and MacDonald's father worked as a dyer in the Monteith and Company works in the Barrowland area.[6] MacDonald started work as a 'tearer' (junior assistant) at the same factory at the age of seven.[6] He was apprenticed to a block printer at the Barrowfield calico-printing works[2] and briefly ran a grocer's shop in 1848.[5] When the shop failed, he worked as a block printer for Harrow, McIntyre and Co. of Colinslie, Paisley. He initially continued to live in Bridgeton and walked to Paisley for work each day,[4] before temporarily relocating to the Renfrewshire town.[7]

MacDonald was a member of the City Club, a literary and artistic gathering which met in the Bank Tavern in Glasgow,[8] and was a founder member of the Ramblers Association.[6]

After around 1840 MacDonald moved into writing. He was a supporter of the Chartist movement and initially wrote poetry and articles for Chartist publications[5] such as the Chartist Circular.[6] In 1847 he came to public attention when he wrote a letter to the Glasgow Citizen defending the poetry of Robert Burns against an attack by Rev. George Gilfillan of Dundee.[6] MacDonald was a great enthusiast for Burns and quoted him extensively in his writing.[1]

James Hedderwick, who was editor of the Glasgow Citizen, then invited him to write for the paper.[9] MacDonald joined the staff of the paper in 1849. He wrote articles under the pen name Caleb, many of them of on social or political issues,[2] but it was his series of Glasgow travelogues, published over a period of three years, for which he became well known. These 'rambles' in the countryside around Glasgow were collected into a book, Rambles Round Glasgow, in 1854, which MacDonald dedicated to Hedderwick.[10] The book was very popular[8] and went through several editions.[11] MacDonald followed it up in 1857 with Days at the Coast, a travelogue of locations on the Firth of Clyde, which was also well received.[8]

MacDonald became sub-editor of the Glasgow Citizen. He later went on to write for the Glasgow Morning Journal and the Glasgow Sentinel , and edited the Glasgow Times.[5]

MacDonald married twice. His first wife, Agnes, died within a year of their marriage along with their newborn child. His second wife, Alison, had been a bridesmaid at Agnes and Hugh's MacDonald's wedding. Agnes had no living children but Alison had one son and four daughters with Hugh MacDonald.[4]

MacDonald became ill in spring 1860 after an expedition to Castlemilk to research his planned book, Footsteps of the Year.[6] He died on 16 March 1860 at the age of 42[6] and is buried in the Southern Necropolis.[2] He was survived by his wife Alison and their five children.

Publications

  • Rambles Round Glasgow, 1854
  • Days at the Coast, 1857
  • Poems and Songs of Hugh MacDonald, 1864

Memorials

Drinking fountain monument to MacDonald at Glasgow Green
  • There is a memorial fountain for MacDonald on Glasgow Green,[12] the location of his first 'ramble'.[13] This originally stood on Gleniffer Braes, Paisley, but was moved to Glasgow Green in 1881.[14] The fountain was designed by John Mossman[14] and paid for by the Glasgow Ramblers Club.[15]
  • A memorial water stoop stands on Gleniffer Braes, Paisley,[2] the location of another 'ramble'.[16] It was erected in 1883 by the Paisley Old Weavers Society.[17]
  • One of the entrances to Glasgow Green is known as 'Hugh MacDonald's Gate'. It is situated at the corner of King's Drive and Arcadia Street.[18] A paving slab at that gate commemorates his book Rambles Round Glasgow.

References

  1. MacDonald, Hugh (2023). Rambles around Glasgow (21st Century ed.). Glasgow: Hephaestion Press. pp. v. ISBN 9781916490932.
  2. "Hugh MacDonald 1817-1860". Gazetteer for Scotland. 2021. Retrieved 8 February 2022.
  3. Victorian travelogue that details Glasgow and Lanarkshire is given new release, Jonathan Geddes, Daily Record, 17 February 2023
  4. MacDonald, Hugh (1863). Poems and Songs of Hugh MacDonald. W. Love.
  5. "TheGlasgowStory: Hugh MacDonald". www.theglasgowstory.com. Retrieved 8 February 2022.
  6. Mearns, Jim (2011). "The journalist, the minister and the lost cairnfield of Cathkin Braes". Scottish Archaeological Journal. 33 (1/2): 67–78. doi:10.3366/saj.2011.0025. JSTOR 43923911 via JSTOR.
  7. MacDonald, Hugh (1910). Rambles Round Glasgow (New edition with introduction and notes by the Rev. G. H. Morrison, M.A. ed.). Glasgow: John Smith & Son. pp. xxi–xxx.
  8. Lindsay, Maurice (1972). Portrait of Glasgow.
  9. MacGregor, George (1881). History of Glasgow from the Earliest Period to the Present Time. pp. 450–451.
  10. MacDonald, Hugh (1860). Rambles Round Glasgow (3rd ed.). Glasgow: John Cameron. pp. iii.
  11. "Formats and Editions of Rambles round Glasgow : descriptive, historical, and traditional [WorldCat.org]". www.worldcat.org. Retrieved 8 February 2022.
  12. Hugh MacDonald Memorial Fountain, Art UK
  13. MacDonald, Hugh (1860). Rambles Round Glasgow (3rd ed.). Glasgow: John Cameron. p. 11.
  14. "TheGlasgowStory: Bonnie Wee Well". www.theglasgowstory.com. Retrieved 8 February 2022.
  15. Griffith, Roger (28 March 2019). "MacDonald's Fountain or the 'Bonnie Wee Well', Gleniffer Braes, Paisley". YouTube. Retrieved 8 February 2022.
  16. MacDonald, Hugh (1860). Rambles Round Glasgow (3rd ed.). Glasgow: John Cameron. p. 239.
  17. Rosser1954 (27 March 2019), English: The MacDonald's Fountain or Bonnie Wee Well, Gleniffer Braes, Paisley. Water stoop and memorial of 1885 paid for by the Paisley Old Weavers Society. This replaces another memorial put up by the Glasgow Ramblers Club and moved to Glasgow Green., retrieved 8 February 2022
  18. "Glasgow Green map". maps Glasgow. Retrieved 8 February 2022.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.