Thomas Hay Marshall (1770 – 15 July 1808) was twice lord provost of Perth, Scotland. With a passion for Georgian architecture,[1] Marshall is credited with building Perth's "new town" to the north and south of the city centre.[2][3]
A bronze statue of Marshall, designed by David Morison and sculpted by John Cochrane and Brothers in 1822, stands behind four Ionic order columns beside Perth Art Gallery with the Latin phrase cives grati (grateful citizens in English) following his name above the statue.[1][4]
Marshall was elected for two terms as Perth's lord provost, serving from 1800 to 1802 and from 1804 to 1806.[2] He was the first to begin serving two-year terms, it previously having been a role that was elected annually.[6]
Marshall co-wrote The History of Perth: From the Earliest Period to the Present Time, with information added by Henry Adamson. It was published posthumously of Marshall by John Fisher in 1849.[10]
Personal life
Marshall married Rosie Anderson on 6 February 1792.[11] The daughter of Thomas Anderson, owner of the Blackfriars land on which Perth is partly built,[2] the Georgian street Rose Terrace, which overlooks Perth's North Inch, is named for her. The couple lived at the corner of Rose Terrace and Atholl Street.[12] Their marriage was brief, Rose having had an affair with Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin, and a Dr Harrison. Marshall first "raised letters of inhibition" against his wife on 2 June 1796.[13] They divorced in November 1803,[2][14] although it took two attempts due to Marshall's providing insufficient evidence of said adultery. Even while he was building his case, the defendant was sleeping with several officers, one of whom testified in court that he had "enjoyment of her person".[15]
The proceedings gave way to several Scots ballads, including "Rosey Anderson":
There was an Assembly into Perth, and Rosey she was there,
Lord Elgin danced with her that night, and did her heart ensnare,Lord Elgin danced with her that night, she walked home on his arm,
Hay Marshall he came rushing in, in very great alarm.[16]
The Ancient Capital of Scotland: The Story of Perth from the Invasion of Agricola to the Passing of the Reform Bill · Volume 1, Samuel Cowan (1904), p. 375
Smith, David Crawford (1906). The Historians of Perth, and Other Local and Topographical Writers, Up to the End of the Nineteenth Century. J. Christie. p.123.
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