Charles Stuart of Dunearn

He resigned and left Cramond in May 1776, creating in 1781 an independent Anabaptist church in Edinburgh, which was somewhat short-lived.

He was President of the Royal Medical Society (a student organisation) in 1780 gaining his doctorate (MD) in 1781.

He was also Governor of the Edinburgh Orphan Hospital at Shakespeare Square at the east end of Princes Street.

[10] His daughter, named Alison Charles, married John Wilson Carmichael.

Based on her experiences in the Caribbean, she wrote the proslavery text Domestic Manners and Social Condition of the White, Coloured, and Negro Population of the West Indies (1833).

Cramond Kirk
The Stuart tomb in Greyfriars Kirkyard