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Cranston
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Copyright ©1995-2015 by Celtic Studio |
CREST: A crane Proper dormant holding a stone in her claw.
MOTTO: Thou shalt want ere I want.
TRANSLATION: You shall want before I do.
PLANT: None
ORIGIN OF NAME: Local from the parish of Cranstoun in Edinburgshire.
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Cranston HistoryThe origin of this name is
territorial, from the lands and barony of
Cranstoun in Midlothian. The lands may have been
named from the Anglo-Saxon for place of the
crane'
, a bird which appears both on the
shield and as the crest of this noble family.
Another suggestion is the 'tun' or 'dwelling place'
of Cran or Cren, which
both appear as forenames in Saxon chronicles.
Elfrick de Cranstoun was witness to a charter by William the Lion to the Abbey of Holyrood. He also appears in a deed between Roger de Quincy
and the Abbot of Newbattle around 1170. Thomas de Craystoun is recorded, in the reign of Alexander
II, as making a donation of lands near Paiston in East Lothian to the Church, for the welfare of his soul and those of his ancestors and
successors. Hugh de Cranstoun appears on the Ragman Roll of Scottish barons swearing fealty to
Edward I of England in 1296. Randolphus de Cranston, son and heir of 'dominus de eodem' , made a donation to the Abbey of
Newbattle in 1338. Thomas de Cranston received a charter to his lands of Cranston from David II.
The Cranstons of that Ilk prospered until the late sixteenth century, when
they became embroiled in the volatile contemporary politic-al situation. Thomas and
John Cranston, descendants of the house of Cranston of that I1k, were among those accused of
treason in 1592 for assisting the Earl of
Bothwell in his attack on the Palace of Holyrood
House. In June 1600 Sir John Cranston of that Ilk
was indicted for harbouring his kinsmen,
forfeited traitors, and only obtained a stay of
the proceedings against him on the intervention
of the king. On 23 August 1600, another Thomas
Cranston, the brother of Sir John Cranston, was
executed at Perth for complicity in the Gowrie
Conspiracy to kidnap James VI. Sir John Cranstoun
of Morristoun, captain of the Guard to James VI,
was raised to the peerage with the title of
'
Lord Cranstoun'
on 17 November 1609.
Around the same time the Reverend William
Cranstoun was minister of Kettle in Fife. He was
a staunch Presbyterian who resisted the attempts
of the king to intro-duce bishops into the
Scottish Church. He fell into great disfavour with
the authorities, and they attempted to prevent
him preaching. He was in the middle of a sermon
when the king'
s commissioners charged him to
cease, advising him that another had been
appointed to preach in the church. Cranstoun,
nothing daunted, replied, '
But the Lord and
his Kirk have appointed me, therefore, beware how
you trouble this work'
. He continued his
sermon without interruption but he was formally
'
put to the horn'
, i.e. declared in
contempt and an outlaw. On 10 May 1620, John
Spottiswood, Archbishop of St Andrews, convened a
full ecclesiastical court and Cranstoun was
deprived of his charge despite his advanced age
and obvious sincerity.
The third Lord Cranston
supported the royalist cause in the civil war and
fought at the Battle of Worcester in 1651 where
he was taken prisoner. He languished in the Tower
of London and his estates were sequestrated, save
for a small portion which the Commonwealth
allowed to his wife and children for their support. William, fifth Lord Cranstoun, satin
the last independent Scots Parliament where he
was a supporter of the Treaty of Union. George
Cranstoun, a descendant of the fifth Lord, was an
eminent lawyer and judge. He had originally been
intended for a career in the army, but after
studying law he became an advocate and,
ultimately, Dean of the Faculty of Advocates in
1823. In 1826 he was elevated to the Bench,
taking the title, of "Lord Corehouse".
He was an excellent scholar who was particularly
well versed in the classics, and a friend of Sir
Walter Scott, with whom he had studied at
Edinburgh University. He entertained the great
author at his seat of Corehouse in Lanarkshire.
James, eighth Lord Cranstoun, was a distinguished
officer in the Royal Navy who commanded HMS
Bellerophon in a squadron of only seven ships
which was attacked on 17 June 1795 by a French
fleet three times larger After a running battle
which lasted more than twelve hours, the French
were completely defeated, and eight ships of the
line were destroyed. Lord Cranstoun was later
appointed Governor of Grenada, but before he
could set foot upon the island, he died, it is
believed of lead poisoning, in 1796. The peerage
became extinct in 1813.
Lieutenant Colonel Alastair
Cranstoun of that Ilk and Corehouse was
recognised as chief in 1950. He was a
distinguished soldier and holder of the Military
Cross, and was military attachee in Lisbon. He
died in 1990, when he was succeeded by the
present chief who still lives at Corehouse.
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Background: Lightened Cranston Tartan |
Copyright ©1995-2015 by Celtic Studio |
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