Robert Barclay, East India Company

Number six was a copy of a correspondence from 1783 on behalf of a young man, Robert Barclay, by John Anderson, a lawyer in Edinburgh. Robert had hopes of a career in the East India Company, where the Scottish diaspora had become significant. There was a lot of money to be made, often in ways that were questionable – even then. John Anderson wrote to David Haliburton about Robert -- He comes from Shetland, where there are scarcely any who have friends or relation in India.

Shetland Archive Document GD144/212/6

While he didn’t have friends in India, Robert did have them in Shetland. His mother, Grizel Bruce (d. 1767) married the Revd. John Barclay, minister of Delting (1705-1781). Grizel was the sister of John Bruce Stewart of Symbister, who intervened on Robert’s behalf with Anderson. It had been a long-term relationship and evidently a good one -- all of us have been obliged in many different circumstances to Symbister. John Anderson’s father had dealt with Symbister before, and the dealings had stretched over thirty years.

John Anderson was connected to some important people in the East India Company. He approached David Haliburton through his father, John. David Haliburton worked out of Madras, and by 1791 he had a seat on the company’s Board of Revenue. There was also Hugh Maxwell, also on the Board of Revenue when he died in 1791. John Anderson knew him personally, though the letter begins by referring to a long absence of twelve years. He remarks later that he had seen his brother that day in very good health.

David and James Anderson were John Anderson’s brothers, working out of Bengal, perhaps too far away to exert any influence on behalf of Robert, who was bound for Madras. On the other hand, David was close to Warren Hastings, the Governor General of Bengal, and had been instrumental in getting the treaty that ended the First Anglo-Maratha War in 1782. His brother James was a Persian interpreter. Warren Hastings returned to England in 1785, David coming home at the same time, James a year after. Warren Hastings was famously impeached over his rule, and David Anderson stuck up for him in the hearings.

Both Anderson brothers collected manuscripts from the sub-continent, now in Edinburgh University, and David came home with enough of a fortune to buy and improve the fine establishment called St. Germain’s House, Longniddry, East Lothian. Robert Barclay, aged about 24 and with both parents dead when he went out, no doubt hoped to emulate people like the Anderson brothers. In fact, there was a good chance he would if he survived the Indian climate and bugs, where the European graveyards were rich in young white men.

Robert died in 1829, unmarried, clearly a man of robust constitution and some good luck. He lived at 5 Hanover Street, London, not far from where Vogue has a head office at the present day. His brother John, who predeceased him, lived nearby and worked as doctor. By that time he was a colonel and a “sir,” being made a KCB in 1816. Did he gain the goal of so many white men in India, and became well-off? It seems so. His was probably one of the more modest East India fortunes, but he was able to leave a thousand pounds to his brother John’s widow, and large sums of money to other relatives. Perhaps the urgings of John Anderson, and Bruce of Symbister had worked well.

Related Posts

Shining a light on Ann Harriet Pottinger this International Women's Day

To celebrate International Women’s Day 2024 we shine a light on Ann Harriet Pottinger, née Hunter, one of many unsung, hard-working ...

Read more

Be My Valentine

It’s that time of year, Valentine’s Day, the 14th of February. In the Shetland Archives Catalogue references to Valentines are ...

Read more

Old style islands courtships

We’re warming ourselves up to the idea of Valentine’s Day. Some might say Shetlanders are not renowned for being romantics and ...

Read more

Shetland's War Memorial - constructed by William Horne

Shetland’s War Memorial on Hillhead is now one hundred years old, and was rededicated with a ceremony on 6 January. The memorial ...

Read more

Christmas in Shetland - 1923

1923, like many of the years between the wars, was not a good one. The Shetland Times year end report spoke of a poor herring fishing, ...

Read more

New poetry book - ‘Love in Human Herts’

‘Love in Human Herts’, a new publication celebrating Vagaland’s finest poetry has been launched today by the Shetland Amenity ...

Read more

The funny story behind some of Lerwick's street names

In the 1880s Lerwick was changing rapidly. As the great herring fishery of that era developed, there were new streets, and potential ...

Read more

National Poetry Day

To celebrate National Poetry Day we asked assistant archivist (and poet) Mark Smith to uncover a hidden gem from the archives. This ...

Read more

Shetland Museum and Archives Launches New Online Archive Catalogue

A new online Archives catalogue has been launched today (Tuesday 8 August) at the Shetland Museum and Archives.

Read more

Alanbrooke and the Kearton Brothers

When archivist Angus Johnson started to read through his copy of Alanbrooke's War Diaries, he did some digging in the archives to see ...

Read more

Preparing for the herring – photos from the archives

George Gen and Sarah Mackintosh, members of our Visitor Experience team have pulled together a selection of photos from our online ...

Read more

Hugh MacDiarmid's poetry - taking inspiration from Shetland's herring industry

In the summer of 1933 a man called Christopher Murray Grieve came to live in Whalsay. Originally from the Scottish borders, he had ...

Read more

Memories from the archives

Grace Leask (née Mouat) shared her memories of time spent as a gutter lass in Shetland.

Read more

Celebrating World Book Day with Shetland's Oldest Known Book - Boece

For anyone who wants to read about Shetland, the archives is a good place to come.  Our book collection, we like to think, is perhaps ...

Read more

Love letters from the past

Since we’ve got to St Valentine’s Day the time has come to consider the Shetland Archives holdings on the subject of love. Do we ...

Read more