Mordington is an
agricultural parish in the extreme south-east of Berwickshire
in the Scottish
Borders region. It is five miles from Berwick-upon-Tweed
and borders Northumberland
to the east, and south (where the boundary is the
Whiteadder
Water
), Foulden to
the west, and Lamberton to
the north. The parish is bisected by the A6105 Berwick
to Duns
road. The lower part of the parish is covered by
the Edrington
estate.
It is
possibly the warmest parish in Scotland ; the annual hours of
sunshine are said to be almost as high as at Dunbar
, which
records the most hours in Scotland.
Origins
It is said
that there was once a Saxon village, dating from the 11th century,
in the northern part of the parish but this has long vanished
Originally claimed by Coldingham
Priory, the larger part of the parish eventually
came into the possession of the de Mordington family who appear to
have failed in the male line. Sir Peter de Mordington,
knight, son of the deceased Sir William de Mordington, gave a feu
to Simon Baddeby of certain lands in neighbouring Lamberton circa
1276
Churches
Mordington was said to have a chapel before the 11th century. The
first parish church of which there is reasonable record stood on
high ground known as the Kirk Park, near Mordington House, above
the ancient bullock-track which dissected the parish from the
Whiteadder to Lamberton Common. Apart from the tarmac, this
single-lane road is the same today. In 1275 the vicar at Mordington
refused to pay the crusader's tithe, and his successor, Bernard de
Lynton, swore allegiance to King
Edward I on 24 August 1296. It
mysteriously burnt down in 1757 and a new church was erected on the
Duns road on what became known as the Minister's
Glebe. Both of these churches had burial grounds
attached to them, and the latter has survived. Little remains of
the original churchyard, although in 1662
William Douglas, 2nd Lord
Mordington erected a new doorway to an ancient burial vault
which is still extant. In 1870 a new church was erected a quarter
of a mile uphill from the 2nd church. It was
Gothic and cruciform. It too had a
churchyard, still in use. This church was tragically and quickly
demolished circa 1989 when the Duns Presbytery refused to pay
c£10,000 for essential roof repairs.
In 1843 the
Free
Church of Scotland erected a church on
Kirk
Hill adjoining Edrington Mains farm and services were maintained
there until about 1910. Although still standing, it is now used as
a farm building. The two
manses in Mordington
are today private residences.
After more than 900 years Mordington has no parish church and
parishioners must now travel to Foulden.
Later proprietors
With the exception of Edrington, the rest of Mordington parish had
a succession of landed proprietors over the centuries. The feudal
barony of Mordington was long held by the Douglas of Dalkeith
family but was split, with Crown consent, early in the 17th
century. At that time Over Mordington came into the ownership of
Sir James Douglas (died 1656), a son of
William Douglas, 10th Earl
of Angus. In 1641 Sir
James Douglas was made a
Lord of Parliament as
Lord Mordington.
Three years later a Visitation to
the parish of Mordingtoun by the Presbytery of Chirnside
, called upon James, Lord Mordington, to conform to
an Ordinance of the Commissioners of the General Assembly that he,
"in the face of God's kirk, should renounce Popery", swear and
subscribe the Confession of Faith, and also the Solemn League and Covenant, which
his Lordship did at Mordington Kirk, 23 May, 1644.
The Ramsay family held Nether Mordington direct from the Crown, and
had a
tower house there (today Edrington
House). Eventually the Lords Mordington acquired this too.
However,
Charles Douglas,
5th Lord Mordington, took part in the Jacobite rising, was captured at Carlisle
and died in prison in 1745, his estates all
forfeited to the Crown. The Over Mordington estate was next
purchased by Thomas Hay of Mordington (died 1752), brother of
Sir John Hay of
Alderston, 1st Baronet. In 1752 it passed to a relative,
Alexander Hay of Mordington (died 1788),
Advocate. Thereafter it passed to the Renton (later
Campbell-Renton) of Lamberton family who retained possession until
the 1970s, when, having failed in the male line, the family ended
with a female inheritor who preferred to reside in Edinburgh.
Mordington House

Old Mordington House
A Pele or
tower house existed at
Mordington from a very early date, probably from the time of the
ownership of
Thomas
Randolph, 1st Earl of Moray, in the time of
Robert the Bruce. His daughter
Black Agnes certainly lived there, where she is
buried. On the 22 July 1650
Oliver
Cromwell's forces marched from Berwick-upon-Tweed to the
Mordington
Tower house and camped there
for two days. It appears the Hays may have been responsible for the
construction of the magnificent Mordington House, a
Georgian mansion centred upon the
original Pele Tower sections of which were incorporated in its
walls. This was the centre block, two storey with basement and
vaults, a seven bay front, flanking wings, originally two-storey
Palladian pavilions, with single storey
links to the main house. In 1932 the artist
Frank W Wood painted the house and grounds (see
right). Tragically, with great controversy, the house was
demolished in 1973. A few years later a new smaller house was built
on the site. The original house's lodge survives.
The Clappers

School & headmaster's house,
1891
The only hamlet in the parish is a small group of six tradesmen's
houses, once part of the Mordington Estate, known as
The
Clappers. They include the blacksmith's shop, still in
operation, with the resident blacksmith being the last in a line of
the family who have been there since circa 1700. A joiners shop and
residence stood nearby but the poor condition of the main row of
four houses meant that in 1976 they were demolished to be replaced
by three cottages.
Nearby is the Old School House (c1840), and the old schoolroom
which was originally built a few decades later and extended in
1909. Both have been given
Listed
Building status by
Historic
Scotland. At one time as many as 50 pupils attended the school
but by 1960 the school had closed due to dwindling numbers.
Thereafter it was used as a village hall. The schoolroom was sold
in 2002 and despite its Listed status was gutted three years later
to form a small private residence.
The Holdings
Following
The Great War a great part
of the Mordington estate was compulsorily purchased to provide
small-holdings for returning soldiers. Because of their size these
could only ever be of a subsistence-farming nature and since 1950
several of the small holdings have been merged with others to
provide larger farms.
Council
Following the 1973 Local Government Act, Mordington became part of
the monolithic Borders Regional Council (today
Scottish Borders Council). In 1976
the combined Foulden Mordington and Lamberton Community Council
(the rough equivalent to an English
parish council) was established,
with a dozen elected councillors, which considers all planning and
other matters, and advises the SBC accordingly of local
decisions.
References
- Royal
Commission on Historical Manuscripts, Manuscripts of
Colonel David Milne-Home of Wedderburn Castle, London, 1902,
p. 224, number 496.
- Johnson, W. R., The Parish of Mordington,
Berwick-upon-Tweed, August 1966.
- Strang, Charles Alexander, Borders and Berwick,
Rutland Press, 1994, ISBN 1-873190-10-7
- Williams, John, JP, editor, Smallholding Memories,
Berwick-upon-Tweed, 2000.