In the year 1781 was born in Stevenston one Francis
Love. During his lifetime he was famous throughout the West of Scotland,
particularly in Masonic circles, as a poet of miscellaneous verses and
songs and was reputed to be a singer of no mean ability. In early life he
was apprenticed to the weaving-at that time a very thriving branch of
industry-and his whole subsequent life was spent in this occupation, which
furnished him with an honest livelihood. The facilities afforded him for
education were very limited and not a little of what he did possess was
acquired after schooldays were passed. He was chiefly noted for his close
adhesion to the principles of Freemasonry-principles which he believed
tended to promote that feeling of brotherly love which ought to exist
among all sections of the community. It is almost unnecessary to refer to
the great respect entertained towards the man by all sections of the
Masonic brethren-there is abundant and unmistakeable evidence of the fact.
Not only within the circle of the Stevenston Thistle and Rose Lodge, with
which he was connected for fifty years, holding all the various offices,
was he highly respected, but very many of the neighbouring Lodges
testified their esteem for him in the most tangible way.
During his connection with Stevenston Lodge, his
Ayrshire friends in Glasgow gave him an entertainment and presented him
with a silvermounted snuffbox containing money and many others, as can be
seen from his songs, conferred honours on him. He was also connected with
four different charitable societies in Stevenston and devoted a good deal
of his time to furthering their interests. He died on 11th July, 1860, his
age at death being 79 years. The various Masonic Lodges in Ayrshire
erected a handsome monument to his memory in Stevenston High Kirk
churchyard which marks the spot where his ashes are interred. It is to the
right of the main entrance yard taking the form of an obelisk. In 1863,
three years after he died, an edition of his poems was published and some
twenty years later the volume was not obtainable as there was a strong
demand in the district for copies. The brethren of Stevenston Thistle and
Rose Lodge undertook and published a second edition in September, 1886, of
which a large number must be in existence to this day. He was an
inveterate admirer of Robert Burns and pays tribute to him in various
songs and verse. During the first half of the century it was not
fashionable to be an admirer of Burns. His adherents were unpopular and
his faults were enlarged out of all proportion.
In 1848 Francis Love delivered a poem at the Irvine
Bums Club annual dinner in defence of Burns. Let me submit one verse.
Though Robin had his fau'ts we ken
He was the whale o' social men!
A' you that's fau'tless just come ben
An' cast a clod at Robin.
That is old philosophy-you find it in the New
Testament. 'He that is without sin let him cast the first stone.'
Some of his poems have a strong political flavour. 'The
Kilmarnock Burgh Election Ballad' and 'The Toon Meal Pock' which outlines
the conditions of poverty which were prevalent in Stevenston at the time
of the formation of the Anti-Corn Law League in 1839. One could be safe in
assuming from the poems of Francis Love that he was a strong supporter of
the Chartist movement and was of Liberal persuasion politically and played
a prominent part locally.
Nevertheless, the majority of his songs and poems have
a local flavour. 'The Stone Napper', 'Oor Ain Lodge', 'The Lassie O'
Ardeer' and 'Oor Ain Guid Toon' which is sung to the tune of 'Kenmore's on
an' Awa'.'
Francis Love, a weaver all his life, lived in the 'Wandhouse'
which was sited betwixt the Stevenston quarry and the Glasgow and South
Western Railway. Weavers, as a rule, occupied the dwellings on the Weavers
Brae (Townhead Street) as did miners make their abode in the Boglemart,
and the makers of the 'Jews Harp' in Schoolwell Street. It was in and
around the Wandhouse in the marshy ground that the miners' wives and
daughters gathered wands of reeds, which were made into creels. The creels
in turn were used by the womenfolk to carry the coals from the coalface to
the surface.
By James Clements Burgh Offices Stevenston
Part of the Love family went to America - see our Migration
Pages.