Pretty and picturesque is the view up the street that was
once "the Hill", with the rickety old roadway corkscrewing to the
top and the church spire rising over the houses, its slender outline giving
impressive dignity to the setting. At the foot of the little declivity, at the
point where the mail coach swung round from the Saracen's sits an old artistic
looking house bulging on the roadway. This, according to a venerable chronicle
of the district, is "the house the smugglers built". The man who
built it in 1710 and who first lived in it, we are told, was a mariner named
Robert Lusk, who became coal grieve to the Auchenharvie Coal Work. It sat
there alone while the Saracen's had still to come, when the street of the hill
was a bridlepath and the brae seawards took a precipitous dip to the water
edge. In those days and for a century later, many a gallon of the precious
Geneva was run ashore and brought up from "the Ferryboat Gut" to be
buried in its vaults. In the reign of the second George, a Kilbride ship, the
"Prosperity", put into Saltcoats for salt, with some more valuable
exchanges. The master delayed sailing on pretence of damages and the vessel
lay a month in the dock without suspicion. Towards the end of its time, a mob,
in sympathy with the smugglers, attacked and robbed the vessel, severely
beating the officer in charge, whose life was for a time despaired of. Such an
occurrence was nothing uncommon in the early days in Saltcoats, where
smuggling was cultivated with the zeal born of seafaring adventure and fortune
making, the most opulent being then engaged in the traffic. The struggle with
the Preventive men was fierce. More than once the streets, debouching on the
quayside, rang to the clatter of soldiery, the rattle of firearms and the
hoarse shouts of men in conflict. A stirring memory of a stirring time is that
of the loud infantry in their picturesque habiliments high mitred hats, red
coats, long gaiters and powdered wigs with ribboned tails, marching to defend
the officers of the Goverment
Such a scene was presented in the winter of 1730, when a
party of fifty soldiers poured into the town, all the little community in the
frenzy of combat and ready to defend to the last their illicit possessions
others were brought in from Irvine and Beith. The smugglers were not easily
vanquished and a great cargo was placed on board the "Moses" of
Saltcoats, bound for Drontheim, the master which was George Auld, a mariner of
daring. When the revenue officers came to inspect what should have been
tobacco, three-quarters of the store was only peat and stones. In the summer
of 1733, a revenue officer, named Hamilton, had charge of some brandy, when
the smugglers deforced and beat John Boggs in charge, and landed tobacco,
which was taken to the smugglers' private store house; and so large was the
haul that it took a whole week, with double-horsed conveyances, to carry it to
its destination. Speaking of "the house the smugglers built", a
veteran of better days says, "I saw the vaults myself and was down in the
depths of them, almost to the knees in water and I saw remains of the barrels
used by the smugglers". The house, so romantically reminiscent of rifled
ships and liquid spoil, came into the possession of Hannibal Lusk and, at the
end of that eventful century, to Captain Kirkwood. Ultimately, by the singular
irony of fate, it fell to the officers of Excise. So that which had been so
long the centre of adventure and "derring do" passed out of the old
world into the prosaic present.