Frances Douglas, Lady Douglas


Frances Douglas, Lady Douglas, formerly Lady Frances Scott, was the wife of Archibald Douglas, 1st Baron Douglas, and the mother of novelist Caroline Lucy Scott. Like her brother, Henry Scott, 3rd Duke of Buccleuch, she was closely acquainted with the novelist Walter Scott. She was an amateur artist, some of whose works have survived.
She was the daughter of Francis Scott, Earl of Dalkeith, and his wife the former Lady Caroline Campbell, who took the courtesy title of Countess of Dalkeith. Born three months after her father's death, she was reportedly shown little affection by her mother, who appeared "insensible to her merits", according to her own sister, Lady Mary Coke. A portrait of Lady Frances with her brothers was painted by Sir Joshua Reynolds in about 1758, and is thought to be the same work held by the National Gallery of Scotland.
In 1755, the Countess remarried, her second husband being the politician Charles Townshend, who took an interest in Frances as her step-father and supervised her education. In 1767, shortly before Townshend's death, Frances travelled to Scotland for her brother's wedding; she remained at Dalkeith Palace for some time, later visiting Ireland with her friend Viscountess Carlow.
On 13 May 1783, Frances married, as his second wife, Archibald Douglas, at Grosvenor Square, London.
The couple had six children:
Their family home was Bothwell Castle, where Sir Walter Scott first visited them in 1799. It was here that he first met Lady Louisa Stuart, a close friend of Lady Douglas. Lady Louisa later suggested that Scott had based the character of Jeanie Deans partly on Frances.
Lady Louisa's memoir of Frances was written for the benefit of her family and was not published until 1985. The National Archives holds correspondence between Frances and her friend Dorothy Bentinck, Duchess of Portland, dating between 1766 and 1771.