Proclamation declaring those persons at Rullion Green to
be rebels and traitors, and prohibiting having any contact
with them.
 
[ Mackenzie, History
of Galloway, ii, pt 1. p 167-8. Note the title Mr usually
indicates a minister of the kirk.]


Proclamation discharging the receipt of the rebels,
December 4th, 1666.



 
Charles, by the grace
of God, King of Scotland, England, France, and Ireland,
defender of the faith, to all and sundry our lieges and
loving subjects whom these presents do or may concern,
greeting: forasmuch we, upon the first notice given to our
privy council, of the rising and the gathering of these
disloyal and seditious persons in the west, who have of
late appeared in arms, in a desperate and avowed rebellion
against us, our government, and laws, we declare them to
be traitors, and discharge all our subjects to assist ,
reset, supply or correspond with any of them, under the
pain of treason; and the said rebels and traitors being
now, by the blessing of God upon our forces, subdued,
dissipated and scattered, and such of them as were not
either killed or taken in the field, being lurking in the
country; and we being unwilling that any of our good
subjects should be ensnared or brought in trouble by them,
have therefore, by the advice of our privy council,
thought fit again to hereby to discharge and inhibit all
our subjects, that none of them offer or presume to
harbour, reset, supply, or correspond, hide or conceal,
the persons of Colonel James Wallace, major Learmont;
Maxwell of Monrief younger; Maclellan of Barscob; Gordon
of Parbreck; Maclellan of Balmagachan; Cannon of
Burnshalloch younger; Cannon of Barley younger; 
Cannon of Mordrogget younger; Welsh of Skar; Welsh
of Cornley; Gordon of Garery in Kells; Robert Chalmers
brother to Gadgrith; Henry Grier of Balmaclellan; David
Scott in Irongray; John Gordon in Midton of Dalry; William
Gordon there; John Macnaught there; Robert and Gilbert
Cannons there; Gordon of Bar elder in Kirkpatrick Durham;
Patrick Macnaught in Cumnock; John Macnaught, his son;
Gordon of Holm younger; Dempster of Carridow; Grier of
Dalgoner;   
of Sundiwall; Ramsay in the Mains of Arniston; John
Hutchison in Newbottle; 
Row chaplain to Scotstarbet; Patrick Liston in
Calder; William Liston his son; James Wilkie in the Mains
of Cliftonhall; 
the Laird of Caldwell; the goodman of Caldwell; 
the laird of Kersland; the Laird of
Bedlandcunningham; 
Porterfield of Quarrelton; Alexander Porterfield,
his brother; Lockhart of Wicketshaw; Trail son to Mr
Robert Trail; David Poe in Pokelly; Mr Gabriel Semple;
John Semple; Mr John Guthrie; Mr John Welsh;  Mr Samuel Arnot; 
Mr James Smith; 
Mr Alexander Peden; Mr Orr; Mr William Veitch; Mr
Patton; Mr Cruikshanks; Mr Gabriel Maxwell; Mr John
Carstairs; Mr James Mitchell; Mr William Forsyth, or any
others who concurred or joined in the late rebellion, or
who, upon account thereof, have appeared in arms 
in any part of that our 
kingdom; but that they pursue them as the worst of
traitors, and present and deliver such of them as they 
shall have within their power, to the lords of our
privy council, the sheriff of the county, or the
magistrates of the next adjacent burgh royal, to be made
by them forthcoming to law ; certifying all such as be
found to fail in their duty herein, they shall be esteemed
and punished as favourers of the said rebellion, and as
persons accessory to, and guilty of the same. And to the
end, all our good subjects may have timeous notice hereof,
we do ordain these presents to be forthwith printed, and
published at the market crosses of Edinburgh, Ayr, Lanark,
Glasgow, Irvine, Wigtown, Kirkcudbright, Dumfries, and
remnent market crosses of our said kingdom: and we do
recommend to the right reverend our archbishops and
bishops, to give orders that this our proclamation be with
all possible diligence read on the Lord`s day, in all
churches within their several dioceses.Given at Edinburgh,
the fourth day of December, and our reign the eighteenth
year, one thousand six hundred and sixty six.

Most of the ministers
among the above named  seem to have come from
Dumfries & Galloway region, including:

Samuel Arnot  of
Tongland.

John Semple of
Carsphairn.

Gabriel Semple of
Kirkpatrick Durham.

John Guthrie  of 
Tarbolton.

John Welsh of
Irongray.

Alexander Peden of
New Glenluce.

William Veitch.
Chaplain to Sir Hugh Campbell of Cawdor until 1664 before
he was  forced out by the Bishop of  Moray.
Helped the 9th Earl escape from Scotland and involved in
the 1685 invasion by the Earl, which failed. Major
Learmont was his son in law.

Robert Trail, son of
Robert Trail, minister in Edinburgh 1661.

James Mitchell tried
to assassinate Archbishop Sharp in 1668, but failed.

John Carstairs had
earned Sharp`s spite by witnessing the declaration of
James Wood in 1664 that he had not renounced Presbytery –
as maliciously alleged.

Mr Patton is probably
Robert Paton, minister of Terreglese.

John Crookshanks, an
Irish Presbyterian minister was in fact killed and buried
at Rullion Green along with his companion Andrew
McCormick. They were both refugees from Ireland having
been involved in the Captain Blood  plot to rebel
against King Charles.

Mr Orr may have been
connected to the Lochwinnoch Orrs who had Covenanters
among their number. He might also be related ( father ) to
Alexander Orr  (1650-1710) who was minister at Beith 
in 1689 and then at St Quivox until his death.