1 00:00:07,041 --> 00:00:08,601 Culloden. 2 00:00:08,681 --> 00:00:12,881 In Scotland, no other name casts such a long shadow. 3 00:00:12,961 --> 00:00:16,201 The Jacobites' failure to restore Bonnie Prince Charlie 4 00:00:16,281 --> 00:00:19,841 to the British throne in 1746 was a catastrophe. 5 00:00:19,921 --> 00:00:23,441 While the rest of Britain now saw Scots as hated traitors, 6 00:00:23,521 --> 00:00:27,841 the defeat had left Scotland divided and bankrupt. 7 00:00:27,921 --> 00:00:30,681 But there was another, less well-known Culloden, 8 00:00:30,761 --> 00:00:32,081 here in Jamaica. 9 00:00:32,161 --> 00:00:35,321 This beautiful place was once a sugar plantation. 10 00:00:35,401 --> 00:00:38,041 Many of them round here were owned by Jacobites 11 00:00:38,121 --> 00:00:40,721 who'd fled Scotland after their final defeat. 12 00:00:40,801 --> 00:00:45,001 But why travel all this way to re-invent yourself in a new life, 13 00:00:45,081 --> 00:00:48,881 while carrying with you all the baggage of the old one? 14 00:00:48,961 --> 00:00:52,841 Because the very name Culloden was to be a bloody reminder 15 00:00:52,921 --> 00:00:56,521 that they must never again allow themselves to be so humiliated. 16 00:01:01,401 --> 00:01:05,161 But rather than dwell on defeat, on the Britain that might have been, 17 00:01:05,241 --> 00:01:08,881 the exiled Jacobites started afresh. 18 00:01:08,961 --> 00:01:13,241 Jamaica was a (and rich in resources, waiting to be exploited. 19 00:01:13,321 --> 00:01:17,161 From halfway across the world they helped rebuild Scotland, 20 00:01:17,241 --> 00:01:20,521 injecting it with wealth and new possibilities. 21 00:01:22,401 --> 00:01:26,681 It was the dawn of a new era, when Scotland made her mark on the world 22 00:01:26,761 --> 00:01:31,801 by exporting her most valuable commodities - her people and ideas, 23 00:01:31,881 --> 00:01:34,801 ideas that would help start a revolution. 24 00:02:23,961 --> 00:02:26,401 After Culloden, there was chaos. 25 00:02:27,481 --> 00:02:30,281 17-year-old Jacobite John Wedderburn 26 00:02:30,361 --> 00:02:33,081 had been lucky to escape the battle with his life, 27 00:02:33,201 --> 00:02:37,721 but his father had been captured, his (and seized and sentenced to hang. 28 00:02:37,801 --> 00:02:40,441 Now young Wedderburn was on the run. 29 00:02:42,441 --> 00:02:48,001 He needed money and he needed to disappear, fast. 30 00:02:53,041 --> 00:02:56,201 Dodging spies, sleeping in hedges, half-starved, 31 00:02:56,281 --> 00:02:58,561 Wedderburn found his way to Glasgow. 32 00:02:58,641 --> 00:03:02,721 There, he boarded a ship, destined for the Colonies. 33 00:03:05,521 --> 00:03:09,041 Young John Wedderburn's world had been turned upside down. 34 00:03:09,121 --> 00:03:12,681 A trip like this would've been terrifying for a boy who, after all, 35 00:03:12,761 --> 00:03:15,281 had spent his whole life living in Scotland. 36 00:03:15,361 --> 00:03:18,121 And even supposing he survived the harsh voyage, 37 00:03:18,201 --> 00:03:19,961 who knew where he would end up? 38 00:03:45,841 --> 00:03:50,601 After months at sea, John Wedderburn arrived here, in Jamaica. 39 00:03:54,201 --> 00:03:58,161 To Wedderburn, it must have seemed fierce and strange. 40 00:03:58,241 --> 00:04:01,801 Men as black as the earth working in fields filled with giant plants, 41 00:04:01,881 --> 00:04:04,441 the place splitting with heat. 42 00:04:07,681 --> 00:04:10,881 In spite of its otherworldliness, it was a British colony, 43 00:04:11,001 --> 00:04:16,761 a place where a young man with energy and enterprise could re-invent himself. 44 00:04:22,481 --> 00:04:24,801 But what as? 45 00:04:26,361 --> 00:04:29,521 As John Wedderburn was searching for his future abroad, 46 00:04:29,601 --> 00:04:32,881 another young Scot was hoping to find it at home. 47 00:04:35,041 --> 00:04:37,361 Adam Smith had been studying in England 48 00:04:37,441 --> 00:04:40,761 and missed the upheaval of the Jacobite rebellion. 49 00:04:40,841 --> 00:04:45,801 As the dust settled, he returned to a country at a crossroads. 50 00:04:48,041 --> 00:04:52,121 To many Scots, the past was a dark place. 51 00:04:52,201 --> 00:04:54,361 It was time to start again. 52 00:04:54,441 --> 00:04:57,241 This was the dawn of a modern age, 53 00:04:57,321 --> 00:05:01,201 an age that was ready to embrace new ideas and a new philosophy. 54 00:05:02,761 --> 00:05:06,721 From childhood, Adam Smith had questioned everything around him, 55 00:05:06,801 --> 00:05:09,321 even the existence of God. 56 00:05:09,401 --> 00:05:13,201 Now he was determined to make his mark in this new Scotland, 57 00:05:13,281 --> 00:05:16,081 as an academic. 58 00:05:16,161 --> 00:05:19,721 Rejecting Christianity as a student at Oxford, 59 00:05:19,801 --> 00:05:23,121 Smith set out to better understand human behaviour 60 00:05:23,201 --> 00:05:27,521 and how it impacted upon the codes and laws that governed society. 61 00:05:27,601 --> 00:05:30,481 At the time, it was radical, almost taboo. 62 00:05:33,481 --> 00:05:37,841 Smith argued that if God was removed from our understanding of the world, 63 00:05:37,921 --> 00:05:40,201 man's true nature would be revealed. 64 00:05:42,481 --> 00:05:46,881 He said that man's fundamental drive was not to please God, 65 00:05:46,961 --> 00:05:48,601 but to please himself, 66 00:05:48,681 --> 00:05:53,481 and, controversially, that this invisible hand of self-interest 67 00:05:53,561 --> 00:05:56,641 was what made for a healthy, productive society. 68 00:06:00,041 --> 00:06:04,561 The ideas contained in his lectures threatened to blow apart a world 69 00:06:04,641 --> 00:06:07,081 that had always been dominated by God. 70 00:06:12,841 --> 00:06:15,841 But just as Smith's reputation began to spread, 71 00:06:15,961 --> 00:06:21,001 something happened that would change both Smith's and Scotland's future forever. 72 00:06:21,081 --> 00:06:24,001 Europe's first world war. 73 00:06:27,361 --> 00:06:31,921 In 1756, a global war broke out, over trade. 74 00:06:32,001 --> 00:06:36,401 Until then, trading with colonies in America, Canada and the Caribbean 75 00:06:36,481 --> 00:06:37,921 had been a free-for-all, 76 00:06:38,001 --> 00:06:40,961 but with so many valuable resources at stake, 77 00:06:41,041 --> 00:06:44,241 Europe's leading powers fought to take control. 78 00:06:44,321 --> 00:06:48,481 The war lasted seven years and a million lives were lost, 79 00:06:48,561 --> 00:06:52,641 but eventually, Britain prevailed, securing a trading empire 80 00:06:52,721 --> 00:06:55,721 that stretched across the Atlantic for a century to come. 81 00:07:05,281 --> 00:07:09,881 The British victory made a huge impact on one element of Scottish society - 82 00:07:09,961 --> 00:07:12,281 Glasgow's tobacco merchants. 83 00:07:14,001 --> 00:07:16,361 Suddenly the Colonies had opened up 84 00:07:16,441 --> 00:07:19,841 and the River Clyde was their gateway to the West. 85 00:07:26,161 --> 00:07:28,401 The Glasgow merchants 86 00:07:28,521 --> 00:07:32,761 rapidly became the wealthiest and most successful businessmen in Britain, 87 00:07:32,841 --> 00:07:35,721 outstripping their rivals in London and Bristol 88 00:07:35,801 --> 00:07:38,921 and gaining 50% of the world trade in tobacco. 89 00:07:39,001 --> 00:07:43,481 With their uniform of gold-topped canes and scarlet frock coats 90 00:07:43,561 --> 00:07:47,921 they announced their presence as the country's first self-made men. 91 00:07:52,321 --> 00:07:55,721 These Tobacco Lords fascinated Adam Smith. 92 00:07:56,641 --> 00:07:59,401 They seemed to embody his ideas. 93 00:08:01,441 --> 00:08:04,481 They were the selfish, self-interested men 94 00:08:04,561 --> 00:08:07,041 he believed would benefit society. 95 00:08:10,881 --> 00:08:13,601 It seemed that the wealth created by these men 96 00:08:13,721 --> 00:08:17,601 was the key to generating improvement and progress in society. 97 00:08:17,681 --> 00:08:19,441 But Smith wanted to get closer. 98 00:08:19,521 --> 00:08:20,881 He wanted to learn 99 00:08:20,961 --> 00:08:24,561 precisely how these men made their money and how they spent it. 100 00:08:30,921 --> 00:08:33,681 You can imagine Adam Smith down here at the clocks, 101 00:08:33,761 --> 00:08:35,841 watching all the frenzied activity. 102 00:08:35,921 --> 00:08:39,001 This was his first real experience of big business - 103 00:08:39,081 --> 00:08:42,441 a huge labour force pulling together to unload the ships, 104 00:08:42,521 --> 00:08:45,201 heaving barrels, hauling on fresh supplies. 105 00:08:45,281 --> 00:08:48,241 After the secluded cloisters of the university, 106 00:08:48,321 --> 00:08:51,681 the atmosphere here must have been overwhelming. 107 00:08:56,001 --> 00:08:59,641 For Smith, there would have been a resonance to this scene, 108 00:08:59,721 --> 00:09:04,881 because it wasn't his first experience of seeing seafaring entrepreneurs. 109 00:09:07,641 --> 00:09:12,401 Smith had grown up in Kirkcaldy in Fife, where smuggling was rampant. 110 00:09:12,481 --> 00:09:15,561 His father was the local Customs officer 111 00:09:15,641 --> 00:09:18,681 and had fought a losing battle against the smugglers 112 00:09:18,761 --> 00:09:21,881 who found ever more ingenious ways to evade the law. 113 00:09:21,961 --> 00:09:24,161 Adam Smith was left with the feeling 114 00:09:24,241 --> 00:09:27,161 that his father's interventions had been pointless, 115 00:09:27,241 --> 00:09:30,081 that nothing can stand in the way of self-interest. 116 00:09:30,161 --> 00:09:33,721 Making money was man's natural instinct. 117 00:09:35,361 --> 00:09:39,241 After observing the Glasgow merchants' trading empires at first hand, 118 00:09:39,321 --> 00:09:43,441 Smith concluded that what drove their ambition to succeed in business 119 00:09:43,521 --> 00:09:47,881 was an insatiable, stop-at-nothing desire to turn a profit. 120 00:09:47,961 --> 00:09:50,121 And he admired them for it. 121 00:09:55,081 --> 00:09:58,041 On the other side of the world, in Jamaica, 122 00:09:58,161 --> 00:10:02,641 Scottish entrepreneurs were also getting rich, John Wedderburn amongst them. 123 00:10:06,561 --> 00:10:10,281 It didn't take long for the Jacobite runaway to find his way. 124 00:10:10,361 --> 00:10:14,721 He settled here in the west of Jamaica near Montego Bay, 125 00:10:14,801 --> 00:10:17,241 and quickly set about finding the occupation 126 00:10:17,321 --> 00:10:20,001 that would make him his fortune - sugar. 127 00:10:24,361 --> 00:10:28,681 Running a sugar plantation was not a job for the faint-hearted, 128 00:10:28,801 --> 00:10:32,801 but before long, Wedderburn was expanding his estates 129 00:10:32,881 --> 00:10:35,001 and amassing huge profits. 130 00:10:52,001 --> 00:10:56,281 John Wedderburn's estate lay just a few miles from the town of Culloden 131 00:10:56,361 --> 00:10:59,041 so he would regularly have passed this way. 132 00:10:59,121 --> 00:11:02,801 Within a couple of decades, a name synonymous with defeat and division 133 00:11:02,921 --> 00:11:06,481 had come to mean something quite different for the Scots in Jamaica. 134 00:11:06,561 --> 00:11:09,841 Money was beginning to heal the wounds 135 00:11:09,921 --> 00:11:11,881 for many exiles like Wedderburn. 136 00:11:11,961 --> 00:11:14,361 Having fled halfway across the globe, 137 00:11:14,441 --> 00:11:18,361 he was starting to live the life he once hoped to inherit in Scotland. 138 00:11:18,441 --> 00:11:22,401 John Wedderburn was becoming a comfortable landed gentleman. 139 00:11:24,841 --> 00:11:29,481 Just what kind of money are we talking about? How rich could you get? 140 00:11:29,561 --> 00:11:33,241 Well, John Wedderburn got to own ten...ten properties, 141 00:11:33,321 --> 00:11:35,841 um. 142 00:11:35,921 --> 00:11:39,961 All totalling over 17,000 acres of land. 143 00:11:40,041 --> 00:11:46,601 Of the 168,000 acres of land which was returned... 144 00:11:46,681 --> 00:11:49,361 - He had 10% of... - He had 10% of the land 145 00:11:49,441 --> 00:11:52,441 and he was the largest land-holder in that part of the world 146 00:11:52,561 --> 00:11:57,321 and could be seen as ranking as among the top five landowners in this country. 147 00:11:57,401 --> 00:12:00,281 We have his will here. 148 00:12:00,361 --> 00:12:03,921 His will was probated and we have a copy at the Island Records Office. 149 00:12:04,001 --> 00:12:11,361 All his entire estate was valued at £300,000, 150 00:12:11,441 --> 00:12:13,681 Jamaican currency. 151 00:12:13,761 --> 00:12:20,041 In today's money, you are talking about £22 million sterling. 152 00:12:20,121 --> 00:12:24,241 That would be the value of their entire estate. 153 00:12:24,321 --> 00:12:27,281 By any stretch of the imagination, he was a top dog. 154 00:12:27,361 --> 00:12:28,961 He was. He was. 155 00:12:31,561 --> 00:12:34,961 As Scottish settlers were making inroads into the Caribbean, 156 00:12:35,081 --> 00:12:39,201 Glasgow tobacco merchants were building on their success in America. 157 00:12:39,281 --> 00:12:42,161 Their transatlantic operation was tightly controlled 158 00:12:42,241 --> 00:12:47,721 by three mafia-like families - the Glassfords, Spiers and Cunninghames. 159 00:12:53,561 --> 00:12:55,361 Their fleets of lightweight ships 160 00:12:55,441 --> 00:12:58,961 could cross the Atlantic faster than any vessel had done before. 161 00:13:02,801 --> 00:13:07,561 Young William Cunninghame was heir to one of the big Glasgow firms. 162 00:13:07,641 --> 00:13:12,161 His job was to supervise the speedy turnaround of his father's ships. 163 00:13:12,281 --> 00:13:16,881 Time was money, so as soon as the cargo was unloaded here in Virginia, 164 00:13:16,961 --> 00:13:21,201 the ship was sent back to Scotland packed with barrels of tobacco. 165 00:13:21,281 --> 00:13:25,001 Here in Chesapeake Bay, between 1750 and 1770, 166 00:13:25,121 --> 00:13:29,241 The Cunninghame docked twice a year, full of goods to sell to the planters. 167 00:13:29,361 --> 00:13:33,081 It was young William's job to get rid of as many leather-bottomed chairs, 168 00:13:33,161 --> 00:13:34,641 golf clubs, silver teapots, 169 00:13:34,681 --> 00:13:39,561 cream jugs and china plates as he could sell from the company store. 170 00:13:43,321 --> 00:13:46,681 The purpose of the stores was not just to make more money - 171 00:13:46,761 --> 00:13:50,801 they were a means to control the supply and price of tobacco. 172 00:13:50,881 --> 00:13:53,441 Cunninghame was expected to find and persuade 173 00:13:53,521 --> 00:13:57,481 even the smallest and most far-flung growers to sell their tobacco. 174 00:13:59,481 --> 00:14:02,481 Demand for tobacco in Europe was outstripping the supply, 175 00:14:02,561 --> 00:14:07,001 and Scots traders were out to find every last leaf. 176 00:14:07,121 --> 00:14:12,481 Young men like William were hand-picked by the elders back in Glasgow, 177 00:14:12,561 --> 00:14:16,081 because they had specific qualities or qualifications. 178 00:14:16,161 --> 00:14:17,521 They had to be single, 179 00:14:17,601 --> 00:14:20,681 so they could devote all of their energies to the business. 180 00:14:20,761 --> 00:14:22,721 They had to be likeable and trustworthy 181 00:14:22,801 --> 00:14:26,001 so they could ingratiate themselves with the local community. 182 00:14:26,121 --> 00:14:30,921 They were under constant pressure to expand the business and to raise profits. 183 00:14:31,001 --> 00:14:35,081 So, above all else, they had to be ruthless. 184 00:14:43,881 --> 00:14:48,121 On the same day every year, the local price of tobacco was decided, 185 00:14:48,201 --> 00:14:50,961 usually at the county courthouse. 186 00:14:51,041 --> 00:14:54,521 It was the most important day of the year. 187 00:15:01,001 --> 00:15:04,721 All the local growers turned up, and a heated exchange ensued. 188 00:15:06,801 --> 00:15:10,921 A market price was set depending on how good the harvest had been 189 00:15:11,001 --> 00:15:13,481 and what the demand was from Europe. 190 00:15:14,801 --> 00:15:16,961 It was a gentleman's agreement 191 00:15:17,041 --> 00:15:21,201 that everyone should stick to this price, no matter what. 192 00:15:21,321 --> 00:15:25,601 But William Cunninghame's company didn't get get rich playing by the rules. 193 00:15:25,681 --> 00:15:27,081 They played dirty. 194 00:15:40,281 --> 00:15:43,241 Cunninghame was instructed to ignore the market price 195 00:15:43,321 --> 00:15:45,201 and to deal with the farmers directly. 196 00:15:45,321 --> 00:15:49,321 The firm back in Glasgow encouraged him to offer credit to farmers 197 00:15:49,401 --> 00:15:53,041 who were otherwise paid only once a year, at harvest time. 198 00:15:53,121 --> 00:15:55,401 Now, the credit could take the form of a loan, 199 00:15:55,481 --> 00:15:58,801 or it could be a choice of the goods just brought in from Scotland. 200 00:15:58,881 --> 00:16:00,441 But it was a deal with the devil. 201 00:16:00,521 --> 00:16:02,321 Having taken the loan or the goods, 202 00:16:02,401 --> 00:16:05,681 the farmers were shackled to the merchants, and at harvest time, 203 00:16:05,801 --> 00:16:09,641 those merchants could demand whatever price they wanted for the tobacco. 204 00:16:09,721 --> 00:16:12,441 It was commerce without conscience. 205 00:16:14,081 --> 00:16:16,401 Cunninghame and company did well. 206 00:16:16,521 --> 00:16:20,601 They managed to beat the farmers down to 20% less than the market price, 207 00:16:20,681 --> 00:16:22,561 using the lure of credit. 208 00:16:22,641 --> 00:16:26,041 But there would be a price to pay in the long run. 209 00:16:26,121 --> 00:16:28,401 The local economy began to falter 210 00:16:28,481 --> 00:16:33,441 as the tobacco growers sank further and further into unsustainable levels of debt. 211 00:16:33,521 --> 00:16:37,881 By the 1770s, the farmers of Virginia and Maryland 212 00:16:37,961 --> 00:16:40,761 owed Scottish merchants over £1 million. 213 00:16:43,681 --> 00:16:48,761 Scottish business was booming, but it was sucking America dry. 214 00:16:48,841 --> 00:16:53,401 The Scots traders were described by one American farmer as, "Vile weeds, 215 00:16:53,481 --> 00:16:56,041 "which if cut down, grow more fiercely". 216 00:16:56,161 --> 00:17:01,881 In truth they were clannish, mafia-like, and they put profit before ethics. 217 00:17:01,961 --> 00:17:04,721 Adam Smith considered them perfect examples 218 00:17:04,801 --> 00:17:07,401 of the kind of self-interested capitalists 219 00:17:07,481 --> 00:17:11,281 he believed were vital to bring forth wealth and progress. 220 00:17:11,361 --> 00:17:13,361 Smith thought greed was good, 221 00:17:13,441 --> 00:17:17,081 and these men were nothing if not very, very greedy. 222 00:17:24,281 --> 00:17:29,881 By the 1760s, Glasgow was beginning to look very different...for some. 223 00:17:30,001 --> 00:17:34,521 Adam Smith watched as the merchants ploughed fortunes into great houses, 224 00:17:34,601 --> 00:17:37,921 and the Merchant Quarter became an exclusive community 225 00:17:38,001 --> 00:17:39,401 on the edge of the city. 226 00:17:53,681 --> 00:17:55,841 Not content that their mansions 227 00:17:55,961 --> 00:18:00,401 were the most expensive houses ever to be built in the city, they went further. 228 00:18:01,281 --> 00:18:05,041 They helped the local burgh to build this church, St Andrew's, 229 00:18:05,121 --> 00:18:08,921 which was modelled on St Martin-in-the-Fields in London. 230 00:18:16,401 --> 00:18:20,921 It perfectly sums up their showiness, their conspicuous wealth, 231 00:18:21,001 --> 00:18:23,641 and their self-serving aspirations. 232 00:18:29,921 --> 00:18:34,281 The balconies were mahogany, imported from Honduras on one of their ships. 233 00:18:45,081 --> 00:18:47,081 After just six years in Virginia, 234 00:18:47,161 --> 00:18:50,441 William Cunninghame returned from the New World to the Old. 235 00:18:50,521 --> 00:18:52,481 In his short time overseas, 236 00:18:52,561 --> 00:18:55,841 he'd been promoted to running the entire Virginia operation. 237 00:18:55,921 --> 00:18:58,601 He'd proved himself in that ruthless world 238 00:18:58,681 --> 00:19:02,641 and now he returned to Glasgow to join the ranks of older merchants 239 00:19:02,761 --> 00:19:07,761 and to oversee the family firm in considerably more comfort, from home. 240 00:19:22,881 --> 00:19:24,921 As Scotland's trading empire grew, 241 00:19:25,001 --> 00:19:28,161 so did the reputation of the Scottish Enlightenment. 242 00:19:28,281 --> 00:19:32,161 The control of the harsh and repressive Scottish Kirk was waning 243 00:19:32,241 --> 00:19:35,121 and now a generation of intellectuals 244 00:19:35,201 --> 00:19:39,201 made the study of human nature, not God, their new religion. 245 00:19:39,321 --> 00:19:43,321 They made waves which rippled all the way across the Atlantic to America. 246 00:19:43,401 --> 00:19:47,041 One of the Colonies' leading lights, Benjamin Franklin, 247 00:19:47,121 --> 00:19:50,281 was keen to meet these radical young thinkers. 248 00:19:50,361 --> 00:19:53,001 During a trip to Scotland, he got the chance. 249 00:19:55,241 --> 00:19:59,481 Franklin's father was English and he had lived on both sides of the Atlantic, 250 00:19:59,561 --> 00:20:02,481 so he was familiar with the politics and the culture 251 00:20:02,561 --> 00:20:04,841 of both Britain and America. 252 00:20:04,921 --> 00:20:08,681 He had a brilliant mind, he could turn his hand to anything. 253 00:20:08,761 --> 00:20:13,161 He was a publisher, a musician, a scientist, a writer, 254 00:20:13,241 --> 00:20:16,961 and he was in Scotland to collect an honorary degree in law 255 00:20:17,041 --> 00:20:19,401 from the University of St Andrews. 256 00:20:19,481 --> 00:20:23,121 As both an agent and representative of the Colonies, 257 00:20:23,201 --> 00:20:26,881 Franklin was keen to discover how the Anglo-Scottish union worked, 258 00:20:26,961 --> 00:20:30,321 what unity and strength it brought this emerging superpower. 259 00:20:30,401 --> 00:20:32,001 But after touring Scotland, 260 00:20:32,081 --> 00:20:35,921 Franklin gained quite a different impression of Great Britain. 261 00:20:36,001 --> 00:20:39,961 He told Scotland's finest minds one evening in 1759 262 00:20:40,041 --> 00:20:43,561 how all he'd seen was inequality and poverty. 263 00:20:43,641 --> 00:20:46,361 Among the guests was Adam Smith. 264 00:20:46,441 --> 00:20:49,841 Later, he put his thoughts in a letter to a friend. 265 00:20:51,401 --> 00:20:54,481 "I have lately made a tour through Ireland and Scotland. 266 00:20:54,601 --> 00:20:58,281 "In these countries, a small part of the society are landlords, 267 00:20:58,361 --> 00:21:00,161 "great noblemen and gentlemen, 268 00:21:00,281 --> 00:21:04,601 "extremely opulent, living in the highest affluence and magnificence. 269 00:21:04,681 --> 00:21:07,721 "The bulk of the people, tenants, extremely poor, 270 00:21:07,801 --> 00:21:10,201 "living in the most sordid wretchedness 271 00:21:10,281 --> 00:21:14,521 "in dirty hovels of mud and straw, and clothed only in rags. 272 00:21:14,601 --> 00:21:18,241 "And the effect of this kind of civil society seems only to be, 273 00:21:18,321 --> 00:21:21,201 "the depressing multitudes below the savage state 274 00:21:21,281 --> 00:21:23,961 "that a few may be raised above it." 275 00:21:25,681 --> 00:21:29,321 This trip was to have a profound effect on Franklin. 276 00:21:29,401 --> 00:21:32,521 He was disillusioned by what he saw in Scotland. 277 00:21:32,601 --> 00:21:36,121 Its union with England had not made it a thriving country. 278 00:21:36,201 --> 00:21:38,761 Men had no chance of being equal. 279 00:21:38,881 --> 00:21:43,281 At least America was a place where a man could succeed through his own efforts. 280 00:21:43,361 --> 00:21:48,521 America was unfettered by centuries of class division and corruption. 281 00:21:48,601 --> 00:21:50,681 It was a place of new beginnings, 282 00:21:50,761 --> 00:21:55,521 where there was real potential to create a civilised and fair society. 283 00:22:03,281 --> 00:22:05,761 Scotland was becoming more polarised than ever. 284 00:22:05,881 --> 00:22:08,721 Tobacco Lords like William Cunninghame were getting rich, 285 00:22:08,801 --> 00:22:11,281 but ordinary working people were not. 286 00:22:12,841 --> 00:22:15,961 Dr John Witherspoon was the minister of a church in Paisley 287 00:22:16,081 --> 00:22:19,401 and he worried that Scotland was now a place where his congregation 288 00:22:19,481 --> 00:22:22,761 struggled both materially and spiritually. 289 00:22:22,841 --> 00:22:25,161 (WOMAN COUGHS) 290 00:22:27,161 --> 00:22:30,641 As their moral guide, he was hard-pressed to show them anything 291 00:22:30,721 --> 00:22:34,161 that was good or fair about the society they lived in. 292 00:22:37,521 --> 00:22:39,561 But he was more than just a minister. 293 00:22:39,641 --> 00:22:42,841 Witherspoon was also one of the leaders of the Popular Party, 294 00:22:42,921 --> 00:22:44,801 a movement within the Church 295 00:22:44,881 --> 00:22:49,441 opposed to the imperious influence of Scotland's elite classes. 296 00:22:49,521 --> 00:22:51,601 Although he was an educated man, 297 00:22:51,721 --> 00:22:56,561 he hated what he regarded as the louche, soft world of the Edinburgh intellectuals, 298 00:22:56,641 --> 00:22:59,481 who were hand-picked by the same rich patrons 299 00:22:59,561 --> 00:23:02,681 who controlled the country with an unseen hand. 300 00:23:08,721 --> 00:23:11,881 He had become well-known for writing a satire 301 00:23:11,961 --> 00:23:15,361 lampooning the system of patronage amongst intellectuals. 302 00:23:15,441 --> 00:23:18,201 For Witherspoon, the ideas of Adam Smith 303 00:23:18,281 --> 00:23:20,681 and other leading lights of the Enlightenment 304 00:23:20,761 --> 00:23:23,041 were the ideas of the privileged few. 305 00:23:23,121 --> 00:23:25,841 They could afford to intellectual gameplay 306 00:23:25,921 --> 00:23:29,521 and debate concepts as profound as the significance of God. 307 00:23:29,601 --> 00:23:33,681 In writing it, Witherspoon raised an uncomfortable question. 308 00:23:35,321 --> 00:23:38,001 But what kind of society will we have 309 00:23:38,081 --> 00:23:42,801 if our responsibilities are set by man, and not by God? 310 00:24:03,481 --> 00:24:07,201 Out in Jamaica, just such a society had put down roots. 311 00:24:07,281 --> 00:24:12,601 Not only had it lost God, but it was fast descending into hell. 312 00:24:12,681 --> 00:24:17,001 This was the dark side of Scotland's progress to the modern age, 313 00:24:17,121 --> 00:24:21,761 because the engine driving both the tobacco and sugar industries was slavery. 314 00:24:33,241 --> 00:24:36,761 John Wedderburn, although a Christian man, 315 00:24:36,841 --> 00:24:40,281 knew that he could not plant, weed and tend his sugar canes 316 00:24:40,361 --> 00:24:43,681 and manage his acres of plantation without slaves. 317 00:24:48,201 --> 00:24:52,481 Every port in Jamaica in the 18th century had something called a "scramble". 318 00:24:52,561 --> 00:24:55,641 When ships docked bringing the newly enslaved from Africa, 319 00:24:55,721 --> 00:24:58,561 there was a rush to inspect them 320 00:24:58,641 --> 00:25:01,521 and pick the best and strongest for your plantation. 321 00:25:01,641 --> 00:25:06,601 It was much like farmers sizing up the best animals at an agricultural auction. 322 00:25:14,801 --> 00:25:17,761 John Wedderburn found such scrambles hard to face. 323 00:25:17,841 --> 00:25:20,721 Human beings were on display like cattle. 324 00:25:20,801 --> 00:25:23,961 Half had already died during the journey and many others, 325 00:25:24,041 --> 00:25:27,201 in the tight confines of the ship, had contracted diseases. 326 00:25:27,321 --> 00:25:31,521 But all of that was as nothing compared to the lives they were about to face, 327 00:25:31,601 --> 00:25:35,721 of backbreaking physical labour and soul-destroying confinement. 328 00:25:47,201 --> 00:25:51,441 For all of his career as a sugar planter, Wedderburn had tried to turn a blind eye. 329 00:25:52,601 --> 00:25:56,161 But he did attend one scramble, in the spring of 1762. 330 00:25:56,241 --> 00:25:58,841 And in amongst the sorry crowd, 331 00:25:58,921 --> 00:26:04,321 he saw a young boy, only 12 or 13, that he found he couldn't ignore. 332 00:26:08,481 --> 00:26:11,681 He was called Joseph Knight, after the captain of the ship 333 00:26:11,801 --> 00:26:15,401 that had been his prison on the three-month journey from Guinea. 334 00:26:15,481 --> 00:26:19,121 He was now a commodity, for sale to the highest bidder. 335 00:26:29,841 --> 00:26:32,681 Joseph became Wedderburn's personal servant. 336 00:26:32,761 --> 00:26:35,321 Something about him appealed to Wedderburn. 337 00:26:35,401 --> 00:26:38,081 So, he spared Joseph the hard labour in the fields 338 00:26:38,161 --> 00:26:41,641 and had him brought inside instead, to be trained up as a houseboy. 339 00:26:41,721 --> 00:26:44,921 He learned to speak English, to read and write. 340 00:26:45,001 --> 00:26:48,361 Wedderburn even allowed him to be baptised. 341 00:26:49,801 --> 00:26:54,801 Knight became the focus for Wedderburn's personal struggle with slavery. 342 00:26:54,881 --> 00:26:59,201 Perhaps having one indoors that he treated well, almost humanly, 343 00:26:59,281 --> 00:27:01,521 allowed Wedderburn to ignore the hundreds 344 00:27:01,641 --> 00:27:05,801 that were no better than animals, whipped and chained in his cane fields. 345 00:27:11,401 --> 00:27:15,281 When Wedderburn was finally rich enough to return to his beloved Scotland, 346 00:27:15,361 --> 00:27:16,601 he took Joseph with him. 347 00:27:16,681 --> 00:27:20,441 He'd grown into a fine-looking man, and was a Christian by then as well, 348 00:27:20,521 --> 00:27:22,761 equal to any man in the eyes of God. 349 00:27:22,841 --> 00:27:25,161 But he was still Wedderburn's slave. 350 00:27:58,521 --> 00:28:03,241 Although John Wedderburn had returned to a country he had never stopped loving, 351 00:28:03,321 --> 00:28:05,881 Joseph Knight was arriving in yet another place 352 00:28:05,961 --> 00:28:09,401 that reminded him how far he was from home. 353 00:28:26,641 --> 00:28:30,961 In Wedderburn's Perthshire mansion, Knight did odd jobs around the house. 354 00:28:31,081 --> 00:28:35,401 He took his meals and slept below stairs along with the domestic staff. 355 00:28:35,481 --> 00:28:39,001 But apart from his colour, there was one other crucial difference 356 00:28:39,081 --> 00:28:41,601 that separated him from the rest of the servants. 357 00:28:41,681 --> 00:28:43,561 They were paid. 358 00:29:08,041 --> 00:29:10,041 Knight felt lost. 359 00:29:10,161 --> 00:29:14,801 He drew some comfort from a friendship with a housemaid called Annie Thomson, 360 00:29:14,881 --> 00:29:16,681 but it was his only consolation. 361 00:29:16,761 --> 00:29:20,441 He was now 24, educated and restless. 362 00:29:24,201 --> 00:29:27,121 He asked his master if he could learn a trade, 363 00:29:27,201 --> 00:29:31,001 perhaps shaving and cutting hair, and Wedderburn agreed. 364 00:29:31,121 --> 00:29:35,161 Knight was released for a few hours a week for training in the local town. 365 00:29:35,241 --> 00:29:39,481 It was probably on one of those trips that he came across a newspaper 366 00:29:39,561 --> 00:29:42,761 headlining a fascinating drama that was the talk of London. 367 00:29:42,841 --> 00:29:46,681 An African slave named Somerset had taken his master to court 368 00:29:46,761 --> 00:29:48,521 in a bid to gain his freedom. 369 00:29:48,601 --> 00:29:52,201 He had argued that anyone living in England was British, 370 00:29:52,281 --> 00:29:55,641 and that all British citizens should be free men. 371 00:29:55,721 --> 00:29:58,041 The Lords of the King's Bench were up in arms 372 00:29:58,121 --> 00:30:02,121 and Knight, reading carefully as he'd been taught to by his master, 373 00:30:02,201 --> 00:30:05,521 would have been amazed to discover that Somerset had won. 374 00:30:20,441 --> 00:30:22,961 As Knight dreamt of a new life as a free man, 375 00:30:23,041 --> 00:30:27,561 the Reverend John Witherspoon gave up his old life in Scotland. 376 00:30:27,641 --> 00:30:29,881 He'd been offered a fresh start in America, 377 00:30:29,961 --> 00:30:32,281 teaching at Princeton College, New jersey. 378 00:30:34,721 --> 00:30:37,401 But his wife thought he'd lost his mind. 379 00:30:37,481 --> 00:30:39,481 For her, this wasn't a new life. 380 00:30:39,561 --> 00:30:43,001 11 weeks at sea was more like a death sentence. 381 00:30:46,601 --> 00:30:48,921 But Witherspoon knew it was time to go. 382 00:30:49,001 --> 00:30:51,521 Scotland had gone soft on religion. 383 00:30:51,601 --> 00:30:54,281 The influence of the Church was waning here, 384 00:30:54,361 --> 00:30:57,041 and Scotland was going to hell in a handcart. 385 00:30:57,121 --> 00:30:58,521 It was becoming a country 386 00:30:58,601 --> 00:31:01,961 where commerce seemed to matter more than Christianity. 387 00:31:02,041 --> 00:31:04,441 The place had lost its moral compass. 388 00:31:04,521 --> 00:31:06,441 He had a point. 389 00:31:14,121 --> 00:31:16,721 Witherspoon wasn't alone in starting a new life. 390 00:31:16,801 --> 00:31:20,081 Scotland's rural communities were leaving en masse, 391 00:31:20,161 --> 00:31:22,441 after years of hardship and poverty. 392 00:31:22,521 --> 00:31:25,361 The famous literary figures Boswell and Johnson 393 00:31:25,441 --> 00:31:28,041 wrote a diary of their Highland travels. 394 00:31:28,121 --> 00:31:30,961 They remarked on seeing a whole village celebrating 395 00:31:31,041 --> 00:31:34,601 on the eve of their emigration, dancing a jig they called "America. 396 00:31:39,761 --> 00:31:44,001 Johnson was later to describe the empty villages and broken communities 397 00:31:44,081 --> 00:31:46,601 as "an epidemical fury of migration". 398 00:31:51,041 --> 00:31:54,681 While the Colonies represented a new beginning for Witherspoon 399 00:31:54,761 --> 00:31:56,601 and thousands of other rural Scots, 400 00:31:56,681 --> 00:32:00,801 the bonds that tied America to Britain were beginning to look like shackles. 401 00:32:02,881 --> 00:32:06,561 America viewed her British master with growing frustration. 402 00:32:06,641 --> 00:32:09,001 Lack of representation at Westminster, 403 00:32:09,081 --> 00:32:12,241 coupled with increasing taxes on tobacco and imported goods, 404 00:32:12,321 --> 00:32:15,441 fuelled resentment and talk of rebellion, 405 00:32:15,521 --> 00:32:18,121 as Witherspoon would soon find out. 406 00:32:29,441 --> 00:32:31,961 In spite of the darkening mood across America, 407 00:32:32,041 --> 00:32:34,161 in the hallowed community of Princeton, 408 00:32:34,241 --> 00:32:37,441 Dr Witherspoon could not have received a warmer welcome. 409 00:32:39,681 --> 00:32:42,441 All the students turned out to light up Nassau Hall, 410 00:32:42,521 --> 00:32:44,201 the college's central building. 411 00:32:44,281 --> 00:32:47,081 It was a glorious beginning to his career. 412 00:32:47,161 --> 00:32:52,121 In that moment, he fell in love with the place, with its seriousness, 413 00:32:52,201 --> 00:32:55,481 its sense of community and its beauty. 414 00:32:55,561 --> 00:32:59,921 It was a place where the New World could be shaped. 415 00:33:02,081 --> 00:33:05,241 If there was one thing Witherspoon could be relied on to do, 416 00:33:05,321 --> 00:33:08,881 it was to bring his boundless energy and enthusiasm to the job. 417 00:33:08,961 --> 00:33:11,241 He lived up to his magnificent welcome, 418 00:33:11,321 --> 00:33:14,161 and straight away set about spring-cleaning the place, 419 00:33:14,241 --> 00:33:17,241 airing it and opening it up to new ideas. 420 00:33:20,641 --> 00:33:22,121 His big obstacle was money. 421 00:33:22,201 --> 00:33:25,761 When he arrived, the college was in debt, 422 00:33:25,881 --> 00:33:30,201 and, keen to keep the place independent and away from the meddling of patrons, 423 00:33:30,281 --> 00:33:34,041 he set out as a one-man band to raise the funds himself. 424 00:33:36,841 --> 00:33:40,481 Using all the charismatic charms he could muster, 425 00:33:40,561 --> 00:33:42,761 he set out on an open-air preaching tour. 426 00:33:42,841 --> 00:33:45,161 Witherspoon's style was unusual - 427 00:33:45,241 --> 00:33:47,761 he spoke from the heart rather than the page 428 00:33:47,881 --> 00:33:53,921 and he drew people in with a rare mix of emotion, common sense and great oratory. 429 00:33:55,241 --> 00:33:57,721 In Williamsburg, Virginia, 430 00:33:57,801 --> 00:34:01,881 Witherspoon raised the equivalent of £5,500 with just one sermon. 431 00:34:01,961 --> 00:34:05,681 He quickly secured Princeton's future by expanding the library 432 00:34:05,761 --> 00:34:09,281 and by funding new places for increasing numbers of students. 433 00:34:09,361 --> 00:34:14,481 As well as raising money, he also unintentionally raised his own profile. 434 00:34:14,561 --> 00:34:16,881 Beyond Princeton, his reputation grew, 435 00:34:16,961 --> 00:34:20,681 both as a man of the people and as an eloquent future leader. 436 00:34:27,641 --> 00:34:30,841 Witherspoon had two ambitions for Princeton. 437 00:34:30,921 --> 00:34:34,321 The first was to be a cutting-edge centre of learning. 438 00:34:39,201 --> 00:34:41,281 He brought with him 439 00:34:41,361 --> 00:34:45,161 the Scottish Enlightenment's thirst for knowledge and understanding, 440 00:34:45,241 --> 00:34:48,361 and he created a curriculum where students would read widely 441 00:34:48,441 --> 00:34:52,081 and open their minds to all points of view. 442 00:34:52,161 --> 00:34:56,841 The second was to rid his students of any false sense of entitlement. 443 00:34:56,921 --> 00:34:59,841 Once a week he opened the place up for meetings, 444 00:34:59,961 --> 00:35:03,761 inviting townsfolk to mix with students for lively debating sessions 445 00:35:03,881 --> 00:35:09,281 that inspired camaraderie and democracy, and blew away the cobwebs of elitism. 446 00:35:09,361 --> 00:35:12,761 In Witherspoon's new America, it would be education, 447 00:35:12,841 --> 00:35:17,121 not social standing, that elevated men to great things. 448 00:35:18,681 --> 00:35:20,041 In Perthshire, 449 00:35:20,121 --> 00:35:24,721 John Wedderburn '5 only ambition was to live the life of an aristocrat. 450 00:35:24,801 --> 00:35:28,481 His sugar fortune had brought him Ballindean House 451 00:35:28,561 --> 00:35:31,801 and had ensured him a comfortable retirement. 452 00:35:31,881 --> 00:35:36,161 Of all his staff, he was particularly pleased with Joseph Knight. 453 00:35:36,241 --> 00:35:41,121 He felt that it had been an act of charity to rescue the boy. 454 00:35:44,921 --> 00:35:48,561 But below stairs, all was not well. 455 00:35:59,161 --> 00:36:01,281 Joseph Knight could not settle. 456 00:36:01,361 --> 00:36:04,841 He didn't want to spend the rest of his life in domestic service. 457 00:36:04,921 --> 00:36:09,281 In fact, he had already staked his claim to a different future. 458 00:36:09,361 --> 00:36:12,921 Annie Thomson was pregnant with his child. 459 00:36:13,001 --> 00:36:17,801 He wanted to be free to marry her and have a family. 460 00:36:17,881 --> 00:36:20,681 Knight broke the news to his master. 461 00:36:20,761 --> 00:36:25,121 Uppermost in his mind was the case of Somerset, another African slave. 462 00:36:25,201 --> 00:36:28,761 He was hopeful that Wedderburn would at least consider his liberty, 463 00:36:28,841 --> 00:36:30,881 perhaps even give him his freedom. 464 00:36:30,961 --> 00:36:32,881 But Wedderburn was horrified. 465 00:36:32,961 --> 00:36:36,681 Despite all the privileges and help he'd given Knight over the years, 466 00:36:36,801 --> 00:36:40,801 all the skills that had endowed him with his independence of mind and spirit, 467 00:36:40,881 --> 00:36:43,241 Wedderburn refused to let him go. 468 00:36:45,641 --> 00:36:47,881 Somerset had been freed in London, 469 00:36:47,961 --> 00:36:51,401 but Knight didn't know that the law was different in Scotland. 470 00:36:51,481 --> 00:36:53,321 No slave had ever been freed here. 471 00:36:53,401 --> 00:36:56,241 But he was so enraged by Wedderburn's refusal 472 00:36:56,321 --> 00:36:58,041 that he made his mind up to leave. 473 00:36:58,121 --> 00:37:03,201 He would elope with Annie Thomson, the housemaid, 474 00:37:03,281 --> 00:37:06,561 who had already been dismissed over her relationship with Knight. 475 00:37:10,401 --> 00:37:14,361 Wedderburn found Knight packing his bags and summoned the magistrate. 476 00:37:14,441 --> 00:37:16,761 He was arrested and taken to Perth Gaol, 477 00:37:16,841 --> 00:37:18,881 and no doubt the chains and confinement 478 00:37:18,961 --> 00:37:21,761 reminded Knight of the earliest days of his slavery. 479 00:37:21,841 --> 00:37:25,601 John Wedderburn, when pushed, had proved to be the kind of man 480 00:37:25,681 --> 00:37:28,841 who was more interested in enjoying his own wealth and liberty 481 00:37:28,921 --> 00:37:30,561 than offering it to others. 482 00:37:30,641 --> 00:37:35,281 He had his limits, and Joseph Knight had pushed him to the very edge. 483 00:37:41,601 --> 00:37:45,961 Joseph Knight had no money, no influence, nothing to win him his freedom. 484 00:37:46,041 --> 00:37:47,881 Or so he thought. 485 00:37:47,961 --> 00:37:50,881 But the Lord Advocate of Scotland, Henry Dundas, 486 00:37:50,961 --> 00:37:54,241 was outraged by his case and offered to represent him. 487 00:37:54,321 --> 00:37:57,441 The case went to the Court of Session in Edinburgh, 488 00:37:57,521 --> 00:37:59,521 the highest court in Scotland. 489 00:38:01,361 --> 00:38:04,961 For Dundas, it was the case of the century. 490 00:38:05,041 --> 00:38:07,681 The rights and liberties of the British subject - 491 00:38:07,761 --> 00:38:10,241 it was the most controversial issue of the clay. 492 00:38:10,321 --> 00:38:13,201 England had just freed her first slave. 493 00:38:13,281 --> 00:38:16,801 The Colonies were agitating for release from their British master. 494 00:38:16,921 --> 00:38:21,641 Increasingly in Scotland, fundamental human rights were being acknowledged. 495 00:38:21,721 --> 00:38:24,601 But what haunted liberal philosophers and thinkers 496 00:38:24,721 --> 00:38:29,441 was the knowledge that Scotland's success and wealth depended on slavery. 497 00:38:39,761 --> 00:38:41,961 The documents of the case have survived. 498 00:38:42,081 --> 00:38:45,881 Both John Wedderburn and Joseph Knight recorded lengthy memorials, 499 00:38:45,961 --> 00:38:48,761 stating their grievances in their own words, 500 00:38:48,841 --> 00:38:52,641 to be used by the advocates and judges as evidence in court. 501 00:38:52,721 --> 00:38:56,361 What details, what insights come out of this record? 502 00:38:56,441 --> 00:39:00,001 A great amount of detail about the facts of the case. 503 00:39:00,081 --> 00:39:02,041 Not only that, 504 00:39:02,121 --> 00:39:04,241 but the feelings that were involved 505 00:39:04,321 --> 00:39:06,681 and I think John Wedderburn's hurt feelings. 506 00:39:06,761 --> 00:39:08,441 He sees himself as a good master 507 00:39:08,521 --> 00:39:10,961 and that Joseph Knight is somehow betraying 508 00:39:11,041 --> 00:39:14,441 the good treatment that he was given. 509 00:39:14,521 --> 00:39:15,921 On the other hand, 510 00:39:15,961 --> 00:39:20,121 Knight's own strong feelings of wanting to be emancipated from his status. 511 00:39:20,201 --> 00:39:25,281 NEIL OLIVER: That's an amazing irony from our 21st-century perspective, 512 00:39:25,401 --> 00:39:29,481 that the slave owner would be indignant about his behaviour being questioned. 513 00:39:29,561 --> 00:39:33,201 Yes, that's right. He obviously felt he had strong rights in the case 514 00:39:33,281 --> 00:39:36,121 and that he'd done the decent thing, if you like. 515 00:39:36,201 --> 00:39:40,081 NEIL OLIVER: What aspects of that could you show me in the paperwork? 516 00:39:40,161 --> 00:39:44,441 DR TRISTRAM CLARKE: Well, I think one thing that we can pick out here 517 00:39:44,521 --> 00:39:46,801 is where Wedderburn talks about the time 518 00:39:46,881 --> 00:39:49,401 when Joseph Knight had read in the newspapers 519 00:39:49,521 --> 00:39:53,801 about the famous case decided by Lord Mansfield in England in 1772, 520 00:39:53,881 --> 00:39:56,601 which had appeared in the newspapers 521 00:39:56,681 --> 00:39:59,201 and it gave him an idea that he was now free, 522 00:39:59,321 --> 00:40:03,601 so Wedderburn claims that after this time, Knight becomes discontented and sullen, 523 00:40:03,681 --> 00:40:05,601 and is wishing to pack up and leave. 524 00:40:05,721 --> 00:40:09,241 - Discontented and sullen? - That's right. Presumably not speaking. 525 00:40:09,321 --> 00:40:10,921 Taking the huff, if you like. 526 00:40:11,001 --> 00:40:13,161 For having the temerity to want to be free. 527 00:40:13,241 --> 00:40:15,121 That's right, exactly. Exactly. 528 00:40:15,201 --> 00:40:17,841 There are other parts we can perhaps pick out here. 529 00:40:17,921 --> 00:40:22,841 This is Wedderburn referring to Knight's claim about his clothing 530 00:40:22,921 --> 00:40:27,721 and that, "He was clothed as well as the rest of Sir John's servants, 531 00:40:27,841 --> 00:40:31,881 "but his stockings were generally coarse, except four pairs, 532 00:40:31,961 --> 00:40:34,161 "and that he got no regular pocket money." 533 00:40:34,241 --> 00:40:38,881 - Pocket money! For a grown man. - Yes. Yes. Nothing for wages. 534 00:40:38,961 --> 00:40:43,481 NEIL OLIVER: It's quite interesting in a way, isn't it, 535 00:40:43,601 --> 00:40:48,121 that given that it was a society that still accepted slavery at that time, 536 00:40:48,201 --> 00:40:52,881 and yet his words are recorded in just as much detail 537 00:40:52,961 --> 00:40:55,041 as Wedderburn's. 538 00:40:55,161 --> 00:41:00,881 There's a demonstration that the court was recognising him already. 539 00:41:01,001 --> 00:41:06,281 Yes, as an individual with perfect rights to come before the court and make a claim. 540 00:41:34,441 --> 00:41:36,961 This is where the drama unfolded. 541 00:41:37,041 --> 00:41:39,481 The case was called from that little window. 542 00:41:39,561 --> 00:41:41,321 The judges sat in the alcoves. 543 00:41:41,441 --> 00:41:45,441 The advocates took the floor and everybody else stood and watched, 544 00:41:45,521 --> 00:41:47,681 Wedderburn and Knight included. 545 00:41:53,561 --> 00:41:56,761 The case, as predicted, provoked passionate debate. 546 00:41:56,841 --> 00:42:00,721 Counsel for Knight argued that he did not consent 547 00:42:00,801 --> 00:42:02,761 to give up his liberty in the first place 548 00:42:02,841 --> 00:42:04,761 and that stepping on to British soil! 549 00:42:04,841 --> 00:42:07,681 should give him the constitutional right to liberty 550 00:42:07,761 --> 00:42:12,041 that is offered to every man in any free country. 551 00:42:13,281 --> 00:42:15,841 Pandering to the pockets of Scotland's elite, 552 00:42:15,961 --> 00:42:19,601 Wedderburn's lawyers made an argument they believed few could reject. 553 00:42:19,681 --> 00:42:24,001 "Make a choice," they said. "Choose between liberty and money." 554 00:42:24,081 --> 00:42:28,761 They asserted that Scotland was "the first commercial nation in the world" 555 00:42:28,841 --> 00:42:30,921 and that we had "interwoven our interests 556 00:42:31,001 --> 00:42:33,561 "with those of our settlements in the New World", 557 00:42:33,641 --> 00:42:38,681 and that therefore "the institution of slavery is absolutely necessary". 558 00:42:38,761 --> 00:42:42,161 But the judges' decision took everyone by surprise. 559 00:42:42,241 --> 00:42:45,001 In spite of Wedderburn's appeal to collective greed, 560 00:42:45,081 --> 00:42:48,681 Scotland's top judges ruled for freedom. 561 00:42:57,081 --> 00:43:00,921 The Knight case sent a strong message across the Atlantic. 562 00:43:01,001 --> 00:43:04,001 Britain had ruled to free a lowly slave, 563 00:43:04,081 --> 00:43:06,161 yet it continued to deny America 564 00:43:06,241 --> 00:43:09,561 an equal relationship with its colonial master. 565 00:43:09,641 --> 00:43:12,881 Benjamin Franklin described the storm that was coming 566 00:43:12,961 --> 00:43:15,761 if America's grievances weren't recognised. 567 00:43:17,881 --> 00:43:22,121 He wrote, "Every act of oppression will sour their tempers, 568 00:43:22,201 --> 00:43:25,961 "lessen, if not annihilate the profits of your commerce with them, 569 00:43:26,041 --> 00:43:28,801 "and hasten their final revolt. 570 00:43:28,881 --> 00:43:31,921 "For the seeds of liberty are universally sown there, 571 00:43:32,001 --> 00:43:33,961 "and nothing can eradicate them." 572 00:43:36,881 --> 00:43:38,881 This was the warning bell. 573 00:43:38,961 --> 00:43:41,041 America had had enough. 574 00:43:48,241 --> 00:43:49,921 In Princeton, 575 00:43:50,041 --> 00:43:54,401 Dr Witherspoon couldn't help himself but get involved in the increasing unrest. 576 00:43:54,481 --> 00:43:57,601 He saw the matter as a deeply moral and religious one, 577 00:43:57,721 --> 00:44:01,561 and was convinced that it was in God's plan to free America from Britain. 578 00:44:01,641 --> 00:44:03,001 He wrote a public letter 579 00:44:03,081 --> 00:44:06,321 to all the Presbyterian churches in the Colonies, 580 00:44:06,441 --> 00:44:10,081 urging ordinary people to come together to reject Britain's shackles, 581 00:44:10,161 --> 00:44:13,721 with its crippling regime of taxation and control. 582 00:44:15,801 --> 00:44:21,521 Every parishioner from Georgia to Maine would have heard it read out in church. 583 00:44:21,601 --> 00:44:25,881 He urged all of Christian America to listen carefully. 584 00:44:26,001 --> 00:44:31,401 "We must think of America as a nation," he said, "and assert our rights as such." 585 00:44:31,481 --> 00:44:34,361 He knew that this wouldn't happen without a fight, 586 00:44:34,481 --> 00:44:39,561 but he argued that he preferred "war, with all its horrors, even extermination, 587 00:44:39,641 --> 00:44:44,961 "to slavery, riveted on us and on our posterity." 588 00:44:46,521 --> 00:44:52,121 In April 1775, British troops marched in to Lexington, Massachusetts, 589 00:44:52,201 --> 00:44:55,641 to control crowds demonstrating against British rule. 590 00:44:55,721 --> 00:44:59,001 Shots were fired and eight men were killed. 591 00:44:59,081 --> 00:45:01,401 It was the start of the American Revolution. 592 00:45:03,361 --> 00:45:05,881 Witherspoon had got the war he wanted. 593 00:45:09,761 --> 00:45:12,881 And so had William Cunninghame. 594 00:45:12,961 --> 00:45:15,001 Back in Glasgow, many Scottish merchants 595 00:45:15,121 --> 00:45:19,601 would never recover the debts owed to them by the American tobacco planters, 596 00:45:19,681 --> 00:45:24,441 but war with the Colonies just made Cunninghame wealthier. 597 00:45:27,161 --> 00:45:29,081 In the build-up to the conflict, 598 00:45:29,201 --> 00:45:32,961 Cunninghame had stockpiled as much tobacco as he could lay his hands on. 599 00:45:36,961 --> 00:45:39,361 Now fighting had cut off the supply, 600 00:45:39,441 --> 00:45:42,841 he started selling it at an astronomical price. 601 00:45:46,401 --> 00:45:50,361 Cunninghame might have been the talk of the merchant gentleman's club, 602 00:45:50,441 --> 00:45:53,961 but to Adam Smith, this was shameless war-profiteering. 603 00:46:01,041 --> 00:46:03,681 As the American Revolution broke out, 604 00:46:03,761 --> 00:46:06,881 Smith was working on a book about commerce. 605 00:46:10,401 --> 00:46:14,081 It was the sum of all his observations on Scotland's trade with America. 606 00:46:14,161 --> 00:46:16,761 But the war proved to be a turning point for him. 607 00:46:20,601 --> 00:46:24,361 The merchants' greed and William Cunninghame's profiteering 608 00:46:24,441 --> 00:46:28,121 began to sow doubts in Smith's mind. 609 00:46:32,201 --> 00:46:34,601 Cunninghame's behaviour appalled Smith. 610 00:46:34,681 --> 00:46:36,441 Despite his friendship with them, 611 00:46:36,561 --> 00:46:39,961 he began to paint an unflattering picture of the Glasgow merchants 612 00:46:40,041 --> 00:46:42,881 and their questionable moral practices. 613 00:46:42,961 --> 00:46:46,961 He attacked their monopolising spirit and even went so far as to say 614 00:46:47,041 --> 00:46:50,121 that if the government were composed entirely of merchants, 615 00:46:50,241 --> 00:46:54,081 "it would be the worst of all governments for any country whatsoever". 616 00:46:55,681 --> 00:46:59,801 The rest of society had not benefited as much as Smith had hoped. 617 00:46:59,881 --> 00:47:03,921 The money had gone into the bricks and mortar of great houses. 618 00:47:04,001 --> 00:47:06,321 Greed and vanity had blinded the merchants 619 00:47:06,401 --> 00:47:09,801 to any real self-regulation or social responsibility. 620 00:47:09,881 --> 00:47:12,841 Maybe it was more than just government taxation 621 00:47:12,921 --> 00:47:15,481 that provoked the American War of Independence. 622 00:47:15,561 --> 00:47:19,641 If the merchants hadn't displayed such rapacious greed for profit, 623 00:47:19,761 --> 00:47:24,001 if they hadn't pushed the tobacco growers into such huge debt, 624 00:47:24,121 --> 00:47:28,521 then perhaps America wouldn't have felt aggrieved enough to go to war. 625 00:47:31,321 --> 00:47:33,161 In Princeton, 626 00:47:33,281 --> 00:47:37,881 John Witherspoon believed that America was waging not only a just war, 627 00:47:37,961 --> 00:47:40,561 but a war that had God's providence. 628 00:47:40,641 --> 00:47:43,961 His stirring views and increasingly popular sermons 629 00:47:44,041 --> 00:47:46,161 drew the attention of the British. 630 00:47:46,241 --> 00:47:50,641 The college became known as "the seedbed of revolution" 631 00:47:50,721 --> 00:47:55,641 and British forces stormed Princeton, destroying everything in their path. 632 00:47:59,521 --> 00:48:04,401 Witherspoon evacuated the university just in time, and no-one was hurt. 633 00:48:04,481 --> 00:48:06,761 Cannon-fire wrecked many of the buildings. 634 00:48:06,841 --> 00:48:08,201 But to his horror, 635 00:48:08,281 --> 00:48:12,241 British troops damaged the one thing he cared most about - his library. 636 00:48:15,521 --> 00:48:20,001 But this setback only served to strengthen Witherspoon's religious faith 637 00:48:20,081 --> 00:48:24,921 and his resolve to fight for liberty and bring democracy to America. 638 00:48:26,841 --> 00:48:29,561 Everything Witherspoon had been working for 639 00:48:29,641 --> 00:48:32,721 was to culminate in one tightly-worded document 640 00:48:32,801 --> 00:48:36,441 that declared a new set of liberties for this new nation. 641 00:48:36,521 --> 00:48:40,241 It was called the Declaration of Independence. 642 00:48:45,401 --> 00:48:48,361 The wording was argued over to the finest detail. 643 00:48:48,441 --> 00:48:50,441 This was going to be a country 644 00:48:50,521 --> 00:48:54,041 whose very beginning was based on democracy and equality. 645 00:48:54,121 --> 00:48:58,921 Not everyone involved could agree to the revolutionary ideas held in it. 646 00:48:59,001 --> 00:49:04,201 But Witherspoon was there, behind the scenes, urging the process along. 647 00:49:04,321 --> 00:49:09,201 Witherspoon didn't just argue for independence and democratic freedom, 648 00:49:09,281 --> 00:49:12,481 he brought the pulpit onto the floor of Congress. 649 00:49:12,561 --> 00:49:14,721 The only clergyman present, 650 00:49:14,841 --> 00:49:18,761 Witherspoon argued that many Americans would hesitate to join the revolution 651 00:49:18,881 --> 00:49:22,161 unless their cause was seen to be just in the eyes of God. 652 00:49:22,241 --> 00:49:25,681 God must bless America. 653 00:49:27,081 --> 00:49:30,761 It was almost certainly Witherspoon who championed the line 654 00:49:30,841 --> 00:49:35,121 that forms the very last sentence in the document, which states, 655 00:49:35,201 --> 00:49:37,281 "And for the support of this declaration, 656 00:49:37,361 --> 00:49:40,761 "with a firm reliance on the protection of divine providence, 657 00:49:40,841 --> 00:49:43,681 "we mutually pledge to each other our lives, 658 00:49:43,761 --> 00:49:46,521 "our fortunes and our sacred honour." 659 00:49:48,961 --> 00:49:52,361 Now the Declaration not only proclaimed independence, 660 00:49:52,441 --> 00:49:55,801 it was a visible demonstration to the American people 661 00:49:55,881 --> 00:49:58,881 that it was God's will to back the revolution 662 00:49:58,961 --> 00:50:01,321 and free America from British tyranny. 663 00:50:10,201 --> 00:50:13,921 Witherspoon persuaded any remaining doubters to sign the Declaration, 664 00:50:14,001 --> 00:50:19,561 saying, "There is a tide in the affairs of men, a nick of time. 665 00:50:19,641 --> 00:50:21,881 "We perceive it now before us. 666 00:50:21,961 --> 00:50:25,761 "To hesitate is to consent to our own slavery." 667 00:50:30,921 --> 00:50:33,801 The fighting continued for another seven years, 668 00:50:33,881 --> 00:50:35,281 but in the end, 669 00:50:35,361 --> 00:50:37,001 the British conceded defeat. 670 00:50:44,161 --> 00:50:49,681 To Witherspoon, it seemed that divine providence had turned the tide. 671 00:50:53,721 --> 00:50:59,081 In 1783, a peace treaty was signed and America secured her independence. 672 00:51:09,281 --> 00:51:12,601 The ideas of John Witherspoon and Adam Smith 673 00:51:12,681 --> 00:51:14,641 had (it the fires of revolution. 674 00:51:14,721 --> 00:51:19,681 Both men were products of the Scottish Enlightenment 675 00:51:19,801 --> 00:51:24,001 and both had given the world a new moral philosophy by which to live. 676 00:51:24,081 --> 00:51:27,601 John Witherspoon had combined religion and politics 677 00:51:27,681 --> 00:51:32,241 to help bring intellectual and constitutional freedom to America. 678 00:51:32,321 --> 00:51:34,081 In his tenure at Princeton, 679 00:51:34,161 --> 00:51:38,681 he had introduced to his campus Native American and black students. 680 00:51:38,801 --> 00:51:42,961 He educated many of the next generation of American leaders. 681 00:51:43,041 --> 00:51:44,921 They included one future president, 682 00:51:45,001 --> 00:51:51,841 one vice-president, 39 congressmen and three Supreme Court judges. 683 00:51:54,321 --> 00:51:58,041 And here lies the man who chose Princeton over Paisley. 684 00:51:58,121 --> 00:51:59,521 He decided on America 685 00:51:59,561 --> 00:52:03,241 as the best place to fight for the principles of liberty and democracy, 686 00:52:03,361 --> 00:52:07,041 backing the country he believed had the best chance of delivering them. 687 00:52:07,161 --> 00:52:11,761 He continued as head of the college for another decade after independence, 688 00:52:11,841 --> 00:52:15,001 and he's buried here, in the cemetery at Princeton. 689 00:52:22,521 --> 00:52:25,641 John Wedderburn was a bundle of contradictions. 690 00:52:25,721 --> 00:52:29,481 A Christian man, whose past had taught him to look at the world 691 00:52:29,561 --> 00:52:31,681 from the position of the underdog, 692 00:52:31,801 --> 00:52:36,721 and yet he could not find it in his heart to give Knight his freedom. 693 00:52:38,281 --> 00:52:41,001 Wedderburn spent the rest of his life in Perthshire, 694 00:52:41,081 --> 00:52:44,601 living on the fortune that he built on the exploitation of others. 695 00:52:44,721 --> 00:52:49,801 He also achieved the long-held ambition of laying his Jacobite past to rest 696 00:52:49,881 --> 00:52:53,001 and restoring the good name of the Wedderburn family. 697 00:52:53,081 --> 00:52:57,041 He reinstated himself as the sixth baronet of Blackness. 698 00:52:57,161 --> 00:53:01,321 But it's a title that serves only to remind us of a much more shameful past, 699 00:53:01,401 --> 00:53:04,561 namely the blackness of Wedderburn's slaves 700 00:53:04,641 --> 00:53:08,681 and one slave boy in particular - Joseph Knight. 701 00:53:10,241 --> 00:53:12,481 Knight never saw Wedderburn again. 702 00:53:12,561 --> 00:53:16,881 As a free man, he married his sweetheart, Annie Thomson, 703 00:53:16,961 --> 00:53:19,401 and then simply disappeared. 704 00:53:21,881 --> 00:53:24,361 There's no record of him after the trial. 705 00:53:24,441 --> 00:53:27,481 But there's some speculation that he became a miner, 706 00:53:27,561 --> 00:53:30,321 where, amidst the coal dust that clung to everything, 707 00:53:30,401 --> 00:53:34,001 the colour of his skin no longer marked him out as different. 708 00:53:36,721 --> 00:53:41,401 In 1778, William Cunninghame got to build the house of his dreams, 709 00:53:41,481 --> 00:53:44,081 the ultimate symbol of his wealth and vanity, 710 00:53:44,161 --> 00:53:48,481 and paid for with the spoils of war and slavery. 711 00:53:48,601 --> 00:53:52,841 At £10,000, this was the most expensive house ever built in Glasgow, 712 00:53:52,921 --> 00:53:58,121 and now lives on as Glasgow's Gallery of Modern Art. 713 00:53:59,721 --> 00:54:02,201 In the same year as American independence, 714 00:54:02,281 --> 00:54:04,521 Adam Smith finally finished his book. 715 00:54:04,601 --> 00:54:06,401 In writing it, 716 00:54:06,481 --> 00:54:10,601 his theories about self-interest as a force of good had fallen apart. 717 00:54:10,681 --> 00:54:12,921 William Cunninghame's profiteering 718 00:54:13,001 --> 00:54:16,281 taught Smith that economics isn't just about making money, 719 00:54:16,361 --> 00:54:20,281 it's about the social responsibility that comes with it. 720 00:54:20,361 --> 00:54:24,321 In The Wealth Of Nations, Smith gave the world its first study 721 00:54:24,401 --> 00:54:28,401 of the moral and political dimensions of a country's economy. 722 00:54:28,481 --> 00:54:31,041 Its success was to mark Adam Smith 723 00:54:31,121 --> 00:54:34,161 as one of the Enlightenment's most influential thinkers, 724 00:54:34,241 --> 00:54:36,481 and the father of modern economics. 725 00:54:38,601 --> 00:54:40,601 On the last page of the book, he wrote, 726 00:54:40,681 --> 00:54:43,921 "It is surely time that Great Britain should free herself 727 00:54:44,001 --> 00:54:47,241 "from the expense of defending those provinces in time of war 728 00:54:47,361 --> 00:54:51,361 "and of supporting any part of their establishments in time of peace." 729 00:54:51,441 --> 00:54:55,561 He was right, of course. It was time to let America go. 730 00:54:55,641 --> 00:54:59,201 It reads like a diary of the build-up to the American Revolution, 731 00:54:59,281 --> 00:55:02,041 and it's every bit as much about a country's struggle 732 00:55:02,121 --> 00:55:05,601 for self-determination as it is about economics. 733 00:55:10,041 --> 00:55:13,241 In the end, there were no winners or losers. 734 00:55:13,321 --> 00:55:14,961 The new American Constitution 735 00:55:15,041 --> 00:55:17,921 made good its promises of rights and freedom for all, 736 00:55:18,001 --> 00:55:20,481 but it never occurred to the founding fathers 737 00:55:20,561 --> 00:55:23,481 to extend those same freedoms to slaves. 738 00:55:23,561 --> 00:55:26,841 It took a civil war to rid America of slavery, 739 00:55:26,921 --> 00:55:30,401 and it's struggled with the legacy ever since. 740 00:55:31,881 --> 00:55:34,201 And while Britain's vision of liberty 741 00:55:34,321 --> 00:55:37,641 remained bereft of democratic principle for decades to come, 742 00:55:37,761 --> 00:55:43,601 it abolished slavery and paved the way for other European nations to follow. 743 00:55:48,321 --> 00:55:50,921 And what of Scotland? 744 00:55:51,001 --> 00:55:53,201 In the wake of American independence, 745 00:55:53,281 --> 00:55:57,681 there was a feeling in the air of anticlimax, of dissatisfaction. 746 00:55:57,761 --> 00:56:00,561 Parallels were drawn between America and Scotland. 747 00:56:00,641 --> 00:56:02,001 It seemed as though 748 00:56:02,081 --> 00:56:05,561 all the best intellectual efforts of the Scottish Enlightenment 749 00:56:05,641 --> 00:56:09,121 had gone to providing America with the blueprint for liberty. 750 00:56:09,201 --> 00:56:12,081 But while Scotland thought and talked, 751 00:56:12,161 --> 00:56:16,161 it was America that had put those ideas into action. 752 00:56:26,841 --> 00:56:30,041 In truth, America had changed everything for Scotland. 753 00:56:30,121 --> 00:56:32,441 She had helped to lay the foundation stones 754 00:56:32,521 --> 00:56:36,241 for one of the first and most influential democracies in the world. 755 00:56:36,321 --> 00:56:37,841 As part of Great Britain, 756 00:56:37,921 --> 00:56:41,681 she had taken her first faltering steps on to the world stage, 757 00:56:41,761 --> 00:56:41,681 and she would never look back.