I started looking for a William Johnston, and then realised that we are being confused by the abbreviated memorial inscription. The Trafalgar veteran is John Johnston, and William is his son. A bit of Googling shows the full inscription to be:
Quote:
Erected by William Johnston, in memory of his father, John Johnston, born at Clackleith, Sanquhar, 21st July, 1781 ; fought under Lord Nelson at Trafalgar in 1805; received a pension from the Admiralty in 1871; and died at Benston Cottage, Cumnock, 1st September, 1880; aged 99 years and 41 days.
The search then becomes easy, as John Johnston is the subject of a two-part article in the Nelson Dispatch by Rab Wilson, the first part of which appeared in the last issue. The second part is yet to be published, so we will learn more then.
John Johnston is the author of two poems about the Battle of the Nile and the Battle of Trafalgar, published by his friend A B Todd in 1874 as
'Lord Nelson - A Poem' together with a biographical sketch (which will appear in the next
Nelson Dispatch).
The following snippet about him is from
'Mid-Victorian poetry, 1860-1879: an annotated biobibliography' by Catherine W. Reilly:
Quote:
JOHNSTON, John (1781—1880). b. Clackleith, Sanquhar, Durnfriesshire, son of a sheep-farmer. He enlisted in the Royal Marines, 1802, serving on various ships including Terrible and Hibernia; at the Battle of Traflgar, on Colossus, he sustained a severe thigh wound; obtained his discharge, 1814. He opened a small school at Benston, Old Cumnock, Ayrshire; the Marchioness of Bute built him a cottage and a school, and provided a small salary; aged eighty he gave up teaching. Died at Benston Cottage, Cumnock. aged ninety-nine years, forty—one days.
Lord Nelson: a poem; by John Johnston. With a biographical sketch of his life by A.B. Todd. London: Elliot Stock. 1874. 45 pp.
According to A B Todd, John Johnston was born a gentleman, was well educated and a fine classical scholar, but somewhat of a wild youth so that he joined the Royal Navy as a common marine in 1802, unknown to his family. The family later hit hard times, and Todd rescued Johnston from poverty after he had given up school teaching by writing to the newspapers, raising a subscription for him, and applying to the Admiralty for a pension. He received a Greenwich Hospital pension of £27-7s in 1871.
Having said all that, the Ayshford Trafalgar Roll does not list John Johnston as a marine in the Colossus, or indeed in any other ship. There is a John Johnson, Carpenter's Crew in the Colossus, but born in Middlesex, and the wrong age. At Trafalgar there were 3 men named John Johnston, 2 named John Johnstone, and 23 named John Johnson. But none are a good match for this John Johnston. Of course he may have joined up under a false name.