'James Murray' (
Ballencrieff,
East Lothian,
Scotland,
21 January 1721–
18 June 1794 Battle) was a
British military officer, whose lengthy career included service as colonial administrator and governor of
Quebec.
He was a younger son of
Alexander Murray, 4th Lord Elibank, and his wife Elizabeth (Betty) Stirling. Educated in
Haddington and
Selkirk, he began his military career in
1736 in the 3rd Scots Regiment in the Dutch service. In
1740 he served as Second-Lieutenant in Wynyard’s Marines, under his brother
Patrick Murray, 5th Lord Elibank, in the unsuccessful attack on
Cartagena. He returned as Captain in
1742. He served as Captain of the grenadier company of the 15th Regiment of Foot during the
War of the Austrian Succession, being severely wounded at
Ostend in
1745, and distinguishing himself at
Lorient in
1746. In December
1748, he married Cordelia Collier, of Hastings.
James Murray purchased his majority in the 15th Regiment in
1749, and the lieutenant-colonelcy in
1751. He commanded his regiment at
Rochefort,
1757, defending
Sir John Mordaunt in his subsequent
court-martial. He commanded a battalion in the 1758 siege of
Louisbourg and served under General
James Wolfe at the
Battle of the Plains of Abraham in 1759. He was the military commander of
Quebec City after it fell to the British.
Lévis managed to defeat Murray and the British in the Battle of Sainte-Foy in 1760, but he had to abandon the siege of Quebec due to a lack of supplies and the arrival of a British relief fleet.
He encouraged his favourite nephew
Patrick Ferguson to follow him in a military career. He also assisted another nephew, Patrick Murray, illegitimate son of his brother
George.
In October 1760, he became military
governor of the district of Quebec and became the first civil governor of Quebec in 1764. As governor he was sympathetic to the
French-Canadians favouring them over British merchants who came to settle in the wake of the conquest and allowed the continuance of French civil law. The dissatisfaction of British settlers led to his recall in 1766 (however he remained governor in name until 1768) but his precedents were preserved in the
Quebec Act. Murray successfully argued for the Quebec Act to continue slavery in Quebec as it had existed under the French; an advertisement appeared in the ''Quebec Gazette'' in 1769 for a "negro woman, aged 25 years, with a mulatto male child... formerly the property of General Murray".
[ The Hanging of Angélique, , Afua, Cooper, Harper Collins, , ]
_-_Project_Gutenberg_eText_16747.jpg)
James Murray in later life
Murray was
lieutenant-governor and then
governor of
Minorca from 1774 to 1782. In 1780, he married, as his second wife, Ann Witham, daughter of the Consul-General there. During the
American Revolutionary War, he defended Fort St. Philip, at
Port Mahon, against a Franco-Spanish siege for seven months (1781-82), until forced to surrender. He was known as ‘Old Minorca’ Murray as a result. He then returned to his home, Beauport, in Hollington, Sussex, where he died. Further honours came to him in his last years: he was appointed General, and Governor of
Kingston upon Hull in
1783, and Colonel, of the 21st Regiment in
1789.
His first marriage had been childless, but by his second, he had six children (two of whom died in infancy):
★ James Patrick Murray, later a Major General, who m. Elizabeth Rushworth
★ Cordelia Murray, who m. Rev. Henry Hodges
★ Wilhelmina Murray, m. James, 4th Lord Douglas of Douglas
★ George Murray (died in infancy)
★ Elizabeth Mary Murray (died in infancy)
★ Anne Harriet Murray
He and his wife also brought up his older brother Patrick, Lord Elibank’s illegitimate daughter Maria Murray.
''See also:
List of Governors General of Canada and
List of Lieutenant Governors of Quebec''
References
Sources
★ Murray, Colonel Hon. Arthur C., ''The Five Sons of "Bare Betty"'', London, 1936.
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
Links
★
National Battlefields Commission. The Plains of Abraham, Quebec, Canada.
★
From the Warpath to the Plains of Abraham. Virtual Exhibition.