Stirling Wigtown Martyrs Monument
Mar Place Cemetery
Stirling
NGR - NS 791938
The monument is located within the Mar Place Cemetery (an extension of the Valley Cemetery), which lies between the castle and the Church of the Holy Rude. The inscription reads:
ny ¤ Ω
MARGARET
VIRGIN MARTYR OF THE OCEAN WAVE,
WITH HER LIKE–MINDED SISTER
AGNES
“LOVE MANY WATERS CANNOT QUENCH” – GOD SAVES
HIS CHASTE IMPEARLED ONE! IN COVENANT TRUE.
O SCOTIA’S DAUGHTERS! EARNEST SCAN THE PAGE”
AND PRIZE THIS FLOWER OF GRACE BLOOD - BOUGHT FOR YOU.
PSALMS IX. XIX.
REV XXII. 13 - 21
Wigtown Martyrs Monument
A large and ornate memorial to Margaret Wilson, one of the Wigtown Martyrs, is located on the shoulder of Ladies’ Rock in the Mar Place Cemetery. The statue shows the martyr in the act of reading the Scriptures, with her younger sister Agnes by her side. A lamb rests at their feet, and over both is a guardian angel. The statue is covered with an ornate cupola and glazing. The statue was erected in 1859 and was the work of Handyside Ritchie. Originally, the statue was open to the elements, but in 1867 an ornate cast iron frame and glass cupola was raised over it, making it one of the most distinctive monuments in Stirling, if not the whole of Scotland. The cupola was designed by John Thomas Rochead (1814-1878), who is better known for his design for the Wallace Monument on Abbey Craig. The frame was cast at the Sun Foundry in Glasgow, and when it was added, a marble lamb that lay at the feet of Margaret, had to be removed. The cost of the monument was financed by William Drummond, of the Drummond Tract Enterprise. Margaret Wilson was one of the Wigtown martyrs, two women who were drowned in the rising Solway Tide on 11 May 1685. They were both Covenanters, and the other martyr, Margaret MacLachlan, was a woman in her sixties. Drummond had a great love of the Presbyterian martyrs, and erected other memorials to them and other ministers in Stirling, including statues of Rev James Renwick, Rev Ebenezer Erskine, Rev John Knox and the Star Pyramid.
For more information on the Wigtown Martyrs, click the link.
Old Postcard of Monument