The experience of the
Wars of the Three Kingdoms meant strong opposition to standing armies in Scotland and England, forcing those who wanted a military career to serve in foreign armies. These formed a small and tight-knit group of professionals; during the
Jacobite rising of 1689, Livingstone, his commander
Hugh Mackay, and opponents
Alexander Cannon,
Thomas Buchan and
Viscount Dundee, had all served together in the Scots Brigade. (1640–1692), Commander in Scotland 1689-1690 and a long-time colleague in the Scots Brigade Livingstone, his father and brother Alexander were officers in Balfour's, one of three Scottish regiments in the Brigade; when the elder Thomas died in 1673, he inherited his commission and baronetcy. The Brigade fought throughout the 1672-1678
Franco-Dutch War, including
Cassel in 1677, where Thomas was wounded, and
Saint-Denis in 1678, just before the war ended. Livingstone was appointed Lieutenant-Colonel of Balfour's in 1684, and accompanied
William III when he invaded
England in the November 1688
Glorious Revolution.
James II went into exile after his army deserted, and Livingstone replaced
Lord Charles Murray as Colonel of one of its dragoon regiments; the Lieutenant-Colonel was his relative William Livingstone, later exiled for his part in the
1715 rising. Livingstone joined Mackay in Scotland in April 1689 during the 1689 Jacobite Rising; as cavalry, they were employed securing the roads between
Inverness and
Stirling and so missed the Jacobite victory of
Killiecrankie in July. Despite this setback, Mackay and Livingstone gradually gained control; in 1690, they led separate forces in a co-ordinated campaign that ended in Livingstone's victory at
Cromdale in May. They apparently wrote to each other in Dutch, presumably a precaution against interception by the Jacobites. Livingstone took over from Mackay as commander in Scotland on 10 November 1690, and was appointed to the
Privy Council of Scotland. He spent the next 18 months reducing Jacobite strongholds and asserting control of the
Scottish Highlands; the last of these actions was the
Massacre of Glencoe in February 1692. Although the nature of the action was widely condemned, there was limited sympathy for the
Glencoe MacDonalds; in a letter to
Lord Hamilton, Livingstone commented; 'It's not that anyone thinks the thieving tribe did not deserve to be destroyed, but that it should have been done by those quartered amongst them makes a great noise.' , scene of Livingstone's victory over a Jacobite force in May 1690 The 1693 Commission set up to investigate the massacre focused on whether orders had been exceeded, rather than their legality and Livingstone was cleared in their report of 10 July 1695. Livingstone remained in Scotland for most of the 1688-1697
Nine Years' War; in 1691, a group of Jacobite prisoners on
Bass Rock overpowered their guards and were only subdued in 1694, while a Scottish rising was part of the proposed invasion of England in 1692. However, by 1696, it was clear the war was coming to an end, James allegedly telling his confessor 'God does not want to restore me.' In December, Livingstone was made Viscount Teviot and Lord Livingstone of Peebles; 'Peebles' was already claimed and he later changed it to 'Hyndford' as a result. He was promoted
Major General and took over a Brigade in the Netherlands, shortly before the
Treaty of Ryswick in 1697. While automatically promoted
Lieutenant-General in 1703, this marked the end of his active service; he played no part in the
War of the Spanish Succession, selling his colonelcy to
Lord John Hay in 1704. The sale may have been to pay alimony to his estranged wife; although he had purchased lands in
East Lothian, these were also sold, and Livingstone spent most of his retirement in
Wimbledon, then a suburb of London. He died there on 14 January 1711, and was buried in
Westminster Abbey, his brother Alexander paying for an elaborate memorial which can still be seen. He published an account of Cromdale in May 1690, and a drill guide titled
Exercise of the Foot, with the evolution according to the words of command etc etc;. ==References==