I walk past this monument several
times a week on my way to and from town and became very curious about it so I
did some research! It's found at the north end of Kay
Park and was the work of Charles Benham Grassby (1834 -1910).
Although he originated in Hull, he moved to Scotland around 1864 and worked on
important commissions throughout Glasgow and beyond. Built in 1885, this
is a tall Corinthian stone column on a square plinth which actually used to
have a graceful 'Statue of Liberty' on the top! Very unfortunately, she blew
down and was smashed during a terrible storm in 1936 but was never replaced. (I
think this is a great pity and would be a perfect opportunity for a local
benefactor to grace it with something new, appropriate to the town) There were also steps
at one time on either side but they were eventually removed. The monument commemorates
a public gathering held in Dean Park on the 7th December, 1816, which was protesting
against the voting system in the town. About 6,000 people (from
a population of 13,000) attended to campaign for Parliamentary reform and
representation for working class people. Astonishingly, just one man in
Kilmarnock was eligible to vote! The whole of the county of Ayrshire had only
156 votes. Local people, Alexander
McLaren, Thomas Baird, John Kennedy, Archibald Craig and John Burt all gave
speeches which were afterwards published and sold to raise funds. McLaren and
Baird were duly arrested for wickedly and feloniously printing, selling,
publishing and circulating the said tract or statement. They were imprisoned
in Edinburgh for six months and sadly both died shortly after their release.
Craig and Kennedy were imprisoned but subsequently released without charge and they
emigrated to America. John Burt also left the country but I couldn't find out where he
relocated. In 1885, Lord Rosebery
unveiled the monument. The Melbourne Age wrote, It is only right that
posterity should treasure the names of Alexander McLaren and Thomas Baird. These
men do not belong to Scotland alone. Wherever the British race is planted in
the enjoyment of constitutional liberties, their memory ought to be
cherished. A plaque on one side of the monument reads, To the memory of Captain Thomas Baird and
Alexander McLaren, as also John Burt, John Kennedy, Archibald Craig and other
Kilmarnock pioneers of Parliamentary reform who, in the early part of the 19th
Century, devoted themselves with unselfish zeal to the cause of the people.
Erected by public subscription 1885. read more