Born in 1736, William Ogilvie was the only son of James Ogilvie of Pittensear, Morayshire, and of Marjory Steuart of Tannachy in the neighbouring county of Banff. "A born and bred patrician", There is no authentic account of Ogilvie's boyhood, according to his biographer, who assumes that until he left home for college he was brought up in the diminutive mansion-house of Pittensear and attended the Grammar School in
Elgin, the county town and cathedral city away. One dramatic incident in his childhood may have been defining: When the so-called Royal Army was passing through Morayshire in 1746
'Butcher' Cumberland's government troops on their way to the
Battle of Culloden, a short halt was made at Pittensear House, and three cannon shots were fired at it. One of these shots struck the front wall close to the dining-room window, and, we need not say, caused the inmates much alarm. William Ogilvie, then about ten years of age, in all probability witnessed that scene—a sad example of what even a Whig Government may do at the head of a mercenary army. He, without any doubt, surveyed the wreck after the storm had passed. We have it on the authority of old people still living near Pittensear, that his mother, who happened to be in childbed at the time, never recovered the shock of that day's proceedings, and that shortly thereafter she was laid in a premature grave. And a few years later, when his disconsolate and broken-hearted father had quitted life's stage, he was left alone, in place of both father and mother, as guardian to four orphan girls. Here we may trace the way in which, what we may call a motherly feeling towards all the children of men, was developed in his breast. Ogilvie on '
Grand Tour' would have had good opportunity to survey the broad continent of Europe and witness the condition of its people: his reformer eye would not have missed those circumstances and conditions that were to lead to the
French Revolution: The widow is gathering nettles for her children's dinner; a perfumed seigneur, delicately lounging in the
Œil de Bœuf, hath an alchemy whereby he will extract from her the third nettle, and call it rent. In 1761 Ogilvie was appointed Assistant Professor of Philosophy in
King's College, Aberdeen, and Regent in 1764. The following year he exchanged offices with the
Professor of Humanity, which class he taught until he retired in 1817. Ogilvie appears to have lived a somewhat reclusive life, remaining unmarried and childless. He is buried in the south transept of
St Machar's Cathedral in
Old Aberdeen, adjacent to his college: a discreet stone in the wall describes him as "William Ogilvie, Esquire of Pittensear, in the County of Moray, and Professor of Humanity in the University and King's College, Aberdeen, who died on the 14th February 1819, aged 83 years". His Times obituary called him "one of the most accomplished scholars of the age". ==The Book of Ogilvie—
Birthright in Land==