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Jean Armour
Jean Armour
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Jean Armour (25 February 1765 – 26 March 1834), also known as the "Belle of Mauchline", was the wife of the poet Robert Burns. She inspired many of his poems and bore him nine children, three of whom survived into adulthood.

Key Information

Biography

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Born in Mauchline, Ayrshire in 1765, Armour was second oldest of the eleven children of stonemason James Armour (died 1798) and Mary Smith Armour. She met Robert Burns on a drying green in Mauchline around 1784 when she chased his dog away from her laundry. According to Armour's testimony in 1827, she met Burns again at a local dance.

By the time Burns's first illegitimate child, Elizabeth "Bess" Burns (1785–1817), was born to Elizabeth Paton (1760 – c. 1799) on 22 May 1785, he and Jean Armour were in a relationship, and by the end of the year she was pregnant with his child. Her announcement, in March 1786, that she was expecting Robert Burns's baby caused her father to faint. The certificate of an informal marriage agreement between Burns and Armour was probably mutilated by the lawyer Robert Aiken at James Armour's behest, and he removed his daughter to Paisley to prevent local scandal. However, word had spread and the Mauchline Kirk recalled her on 10 June 1786 to admit that she was unmarried and pregnant and to confirm the name of the baby's father. Burns was called on 25 June to also admit his part in the affair.

Statue of Jean Armour in Dumfries

His letters from this period indicate that he intended to marry Jean Armour as soon as they realised she was pregnant, but had been discouraged by her reluctance to disobey her father's disapproval of the union. Additionally, at this point, Burns was romantically involved with 'Highland' Mary Campbell (1763–1786), who was also allegedly pregnant by him, and was considering a move to Jamaica. The emigration fell through, and Mary died in October 1786 before she could give birth. Believing he had been abandoned by Jean Armour, Burns set about having himself declared single again and transferred his property to his brother Gilbert Burns (1760–1827) in anticipation of a move. Believing that he was about to abscond, James Armour issued a warrant against him and Burns effectively went into hiding that summer – staying at the home of his aunt, the mother of his successful first cousin, Alexander Allan – when coincidentally his first volume of poetry, commonly called the "Kilmarnock Edition" was published.

Robert Burns

Jean remained with her parents in the village of Mauchline, and Robert at Mossgiel Farm. The couple continued to live apart even after the birth of their twins Robert (1786 – 1857) and Jean on 3 September 1786, and following the success of the Kilmarnock Edition, Burns moved temporarily to Edinburgh. He returned intermittently to Mauchline, during which time Jean became pregnant by him again. When Burns returned permanently on 23 February 1788 he found Jean was destitute and had been expelled from the family home. They reconciled their relationship, and Burns found her a place to stay. On 3 March she went into labour and delivered a second set of twins, two girls, one of whom died on 10 March, the other on 22 March.

In the light of Burns's new-found celebrity as a poet, James Armour relented and allowed his daughter to be married to him. Although their marriage was registered on 5 August 1788 in Mauchline, the parish records describe them as having been "irregularly married some years ago". She and Burns moved to Ellisland Farm where they stayed until 1791 when they moved to Dumfries, where both would live for the rest of their lives.

Jean Armour and Robert Burns had nine children together (he had at least another four by other women), the last of whom was born on the day of his funeral in July 1796. The legitimate siblings were Robert Burns Junior (b. 3 September 1786); Jean (b. 3 September 1786); William Nicol (b. 9 April 1791); Elizabeth Riddell (b. 1792); James Glencairn (b. 12 August 1794); Francis Wallace (b. 1789) and Maxwell (b. 25 July 1796). Short-lived unnamed twin girls (b. 3 March 1788) were also born to Robert and Jean.[1]

One of Jean's friends at Ellisland Farm was Jean Lorimer, her husband's heroine in a number of his songs under the name of Chloris. Jean lived at the nearby Kemmishall Farm with her father William and mother Agnes.[2]

Her widowhood and the straitened circumstances in which she found herself after Burns's death attracted national attention, and a charitable fund was collected for her and the children. She outlived her husband by 38 years, and lived to see his name become celebrated throughout the world. Twenty years after his death, his fame had reached such a point that his remains were removed from their modest grave in St Michael's Kirkyard, Dumfries, and placed in a specially commissioned mausoleum. Here, Jean Armour was buried when she died in 1834. Statues of Jean were erected in Mauchline in 2002, and in Dumfries, opposite St Michael's Kirk, in 2004.

Jean Armour Burns’s literacy and correspondence

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Some reports state incorrectly that Jean Armour was illiterate.[3] Burns commented on her reading his published works in addition to the Bible, and it is known that she did suffer intermittent paralysis a few years before her death in 1834.[3][4] James Armour was a man of some standing in the Mauchline community, and it is highly unlikely that he would have neglected the education of his children.[3]

James Glencairn Burns
Elizabeth 'Betty' Burns Thomson

Most of Jean's surviving letters were however written by an amanuensis, such as when John Lewars wrote several letters to Burns’s closest friends after his death on Jean’s instructions, including the letter to Frances Dunlop in which it is revealed that Frances did finally relent and write to Burns just before he died.[5]

Strong evidence for her literacy is indicated through Burns mentioning that he had received correspondence from Jean and in particular he wrote to her in 1788, thanking her in loving terms for a letter written to him.[5] A signature in the Session book of Mauchline Kirk does not resemble Burns’s handwriting style and is most probably Jean's.[3]

Elizabeth "Betty" Burns received letters from Jean in February and July 1833, however, although signed by Jean, they were written for her by an amanuensis.[5] She is known to have used the services of the aforementioned John Lewars, as well as James McLure, James Thomson and possibly a close friend, John McDiarmid.[5]

A series of her signatures exist on documents dating from 1786 to 1833 and these show a consistent execution.[4] Actual surviving letters wholly written by Jean include a letter to Lady Hastings in 1816 concerning her son James Glencairn Burns[6] and a second written in 1818, which implied that the Marchioness had travelled to Dumfries where Jean met her. She wrote to her son James Glencairn in 1818 regarding his engagement.[6] In 1816 she wrote to her friend Mrs Perochon, Frances Dunlop’s eldest daughter[7] and in 1804 she replied to a letter from Mrs. Riddell[8] who had asked after Robert Burns’s children. Letters dated in 1816, 1817, 1818 and 1821 to George Thomson also appear to have been written by Jean.[9]

A number of other letters exist that Jean is said to have written, the surviving evidence however is enough to suggest that although she often used an amanuensis, sometimes with considerable input to the phrasing of the text,[10] she was literate and quite capable of composing letters on her own behalf if she so desired.[9]

See also

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References

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Sources

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  • Jean Armour's birth and marriage dates derived from Scotlandspeople.gov.uk, the Official Government source for Births, Deaths and Marriages in Scotland.
  • Dirt and Deity: A Life of Robert Burns, Ian McIntyre, Harper-Collins, 1995. ISBN 978-0-00-215964-7.
  • The Complete Works of Robert Burns, Chambers, 1867.
  • The Burns Encyclopedia, Maurice Lindsay, Robert Hale, 1959
  • Burns. A Biography of Robert Burns. Mackay, James (2004). Darvel : Alloway Publishing. ISBN 0-907526-85-3.
  • Jean Armour. Mrs Robert Burns. Am Illustrated Biography. Westwood, Peter (1996). Dumfries : Creedon Publications.

Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jean Armour (25 February 1765 – 26 March 1834) was a Scottish woman best known as the wife of the poet , mother of nine of his children, and muse for several of his romantic songs and poems, including "Of a' the Airts the Wind Can Blaw" and "I Love My Jean." Born in , , to a stonemason father, she was renowned locally as the "Belle of Mauchline" for her beauty and charm during her youth. Armour met Burns around 1784 while he was working as a ploughman nearby, and their relationship quickly deepened, leading to her pregnancy with twins in 1786. An initial irregular marriage contract was rejected by her parents, causing a temporary rift that nearly prompted Burns to emigrate to ; however, they reconciled and formalized their union in 1788, by which time Armour had already borne four children. The couple settled first at Ellisland Farm near in 1788, where Burns worked as a and officer, before moving to the town in 1791 for his career. Armour supported Burns by managing their household amid his financial struggles and extramarital affairs, even raising his illegitimate daughter Elizabeth (known as ) from his affair with barmaid Ann after the child's mother died. Burns's death from rheumatic heart disease in July 1796 left Armour a widow at age 31, pregnant with their ninth child, Maxwell, who was born on the day of his funeral. Of their nine children, only three—, James, and —survived to adulthood. She resided modestly in for the remainder of her life, supported by funds raised from a memorial edition of Burns's poems published after his death and sales of his manuscripts, and was buried beside him in St. Michael's churchyard upon her death in 1834. Armour's resilience and earned her lasting recognition as a steadfast partner in Burns's tumultuous personal life, preserving his legacy through her family and recollections.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Jean Armour was born on 25 February 1765 in , , , as the eldest daughter of James Armour and Mary Smith. Her father, a master stonemason, contributed to local infrastructure projects such as bridges and properties in the region, providing the family with a modest but stable livelihood in the rural village. Mary Smith, her mother, was known for her affectionate and light-hearted disposition, supporting the household amid the challenges of 18th-century Scottish life. The family consisted of eleven children in total, with Jean as the second-born after her brother John, though three siblings died in infancy, leaving a core group that shaped her early familial bonds. This large household reflected the typical dynamics of a working-class in , where resources were limited but community ties were strong. James Armour's profession and adherence to and the local positioned the family within the respectable artisan class, neither wealthy nor impoverished. Jean's early childhood unfolded in the close-knit, Presbyterian environment of , a small agricultural dominated by the influence of the , where strict moral codes and communal worship governed daily routines. Local customs, including seasonal fairs and church-centered social gatherings, provided the backdrop for her upbringing near the village's Whiteford Arms inn, fostering a sense of tradition and restraint typical of rural 18th-century . From a young age, Jean earned a reputation in for her beauty and charm, described in contemporary accounts as a vivacious brunette with dark eyes, an enticing figure, graceful movements, a witty tongue, and a charming voice that made her a popular figure at local dances like the Penny Reels.

Youth in Mauchline

Jean Armour spent her formative years in the rural village of , , where she was born on 25 February 1765 as the second of eleven children to James Armour, a respected master stonemason, and Mary Smith. As the daughter of a tradesman in a community of around 1,000 inhabitants, Jean occupied a modest yet stable social position among 's working-class families, interacting regularly with local youth through shared village routines and gatherings. Her family's secure pew in the parish kirk underscored their standing, and she likely attended services weekly, immersing herself in the strict Presbyterian environment that shaped community life. Daily life for Jean revolved around typical duties in a bustling home, including assisting with chores such as spreading on the village bleaching-green and contributing to the domestic labor expected of young women in rural . Exposure to local farming came through proximity to agricultural struggles in the area, such as crop failures at nearby Mossgiel farm, which highlighted the economic of working-class existence. These experiences fostered her resilience, particularly amid the hardships of losing several siblings in infancy, a common tragedy in 18th-century . Jean was remembered by contemporaries for her vivacious personality, marked by confidence, spirited humor, and an easy, light-footed carriage that made her a standout among the "Mauchline Belles." She developed a musical early on, attending the local singing school where she honed a charming voice, a valued social grace in the era. Her love for and dancing was evident in recollections of her as a girl who was "always either or dancing," traits that animated her interactions. In the 1770s and early 1780s, Jean participated actively in Mauchline's social gatherings, including weekly Penny Reels held at Hugh Morton's , which provided cultural exposure through traditional Scottish and communal merriment. These events, alongside informal village dances, allowed her to engage with peers in a lively setting that contrasted with the kirk's austerity, helping shape her outgoing character before the age of twenty.

Relationship with Robert Burns

Courtship and Early Romance

Jean Armour first encountered in in 1785. According to one account, they met at the village bleaching green when Burns's dog disturbed her laundry, sparking an initial flirtation that blossomed amid the social circles of the village. Their romance deepened through clandestine meetings and affectionate exchanges in the following months, with Burns expressing his admiration through passionate poems inspired by Armour's allure. One such work, "The Rantin' Dog, the Daddie o't," composed in 1786, reflects the playful yet intense emotions of their early attachment, capturing the fervor of their secret . These poetic tributes, alongside rumored love letters, underscored Burns' growing devotion, though their relationship remained discreet due to the conservative social norms of rural . By early 1786, Armour discovered she was pregnant with twins, prompting a private vow that year, where the couple exchanged informal pledges before witnesses in an attempt to formalize their union under Scottish custom. However, financial uncertainties and Burns' precarious situation as a struggling led to his hesitation in proceeding further. Armour's , James Armour, a prosperous stonemason, vehemently opposed the match, viewing Burns as an unsuitable partner, and tore up the marriage documents to prevent the union. In the ensuing turmoil, James Armour banished his daughter to Paisley to conceal the pregnancy, while Burns, facing legal threats and emotional distress, fled to Irvine in late to learn flax-dressing in preparation for emigration to . This desperate plan, intended as an escape from scandal and poverty, was ultimately abandoned after the unexpected success of Burns' poetry volume Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect, allowing him to return and resolve the impasse with Armour.

Marriage and Shared Life

Jean Armour and Robert Burns formalized their union through an irregular marriage acknowledged before the kirk session on August 5, 1788, following Burns' return from earlier that year, where he had briefly pursued other romantic interests but ultimately recommitted to Jean. This acknowledgment, dating back to their private vows in 1786, was legally binding under Scottish custom, though the kirk reprimanded them for the delay and required public penance before granting full recognition. The couple's partnership, tested by earlier family opposition from Jean's father, thus transitioned from clandestine commitment to a socially accepted marriage, marking the end of their struggles. In June 1788, shortly after the acknowledgment, Burns leased Ellisland Farm near , envisioning it as a fresh start for farming and family life, with Jean joining him there by November after temporary accommodations. The rural setting demanded significant adjustments; Jean, accustomed to Mauchline's village rhythms, oversaw the construction of their home and managed the arduous farm tasks amid Nith River floods and poor soil, while Burns divided his time between plowing and . By November 1791, financial strains from the unprofitable farm prompted their relocation to a modest three-room house in ' Stinking Vennel, shifting to an urban environment where Burns focused more on his duties, allowing Jean to adapt to town life with easier access to markets and community. Throughout their shared years until Burns' death in 1796, Jean provided steadfast support for his role as an exciseman, appointed in 1789 and later promoted in , often managing the household and farm alone during his long rides of up to 200 miles weekly to collect duties. She handled household finances amid Burns' mounting debts from farm failures and generous loans to others, stretching his irregular earnings to sustain the growing family, which expanded to nine children through legitimate births during this period. Despite Burns' ongoing infidelities, including his son with servant Jenny Clow, born in 1788, whom Jean raised after the mother's death in 1792, she demonstrated remarkable tolerance, reportedly remarking that "our Rab should hae had twa wives," reflecting her enduring affection and pragmatic resilience in their partnership.

Family and Children

Pregnancies and Losses

Jean Armour endured seven pregnancies resulting in nine children between 1786 and 1796 during her relationship and marriage to , a period marked by significant personal and emotional challenges amid the harsh realities of 18th-century rural life. Her first pregnancy resulted in the birth of twins, Robert and Jean, on 3 September 1786 at her family home in , though the formal marriage would not occur until 1788. The infant Jean succumbed in infancy on 20 October 1787, leaving Armour to grieve while already pregnant again, an experience that underscored the profound emotional toll of such losses. In early March 1788, Armour gave birth to another set of twins at , but both daughters died shortly after birth—one on 10 March and the other on 22 March—compounding her sorrow during a time when Burns was absent in pursuing his literary career. This absence, often due to Burns' work as an excise officer or travels after 1789, strained their relationship as Armour managed these births and early motherhood largely alone on the or later at Ellisland. Subsequent pregnancies yielded single births: Francis Wallace on 18 August 1789 at Ellisland, who died on 9 July 1803 at age 13; William Nicol on 9 April 1791 at Ellisland; Elizabeth Riddell on 21 November 1792 in , who tragically died in September 1795 at nearly three years old following a prolonged illness; James Glencairn on 12 August 1794 in ; and Maxwell on 25 July 1796 in , who died on 25 April 1799 at age two. Maxwell was born just days after Burns's death. These child deaths—one in 1786-1787, two in 1788, one in 1795, one in 1799, and one in 1803—reflected the high and rates prevalent in 18th-century , where rates reached approximately 164 deaths per 1,000 live births in the 1790s, driven by limited medical interventions, poor sanitation, and infectious diseases. Despite the risks to her own and the recurring , Armour demonstrated remarkable resilience by continuing to bear children, supporting the family through farm labor and household demands in their modest rural settings.

Surviving Children and Household Management

Jean Armour and Robert Burns had three biological children who reached adulthood: their sons Robert, William Nicol, and James Glencairn. She also raised Elizabeth "Betty" Burns (1791–1873), the poet's illegitimate daughter with Ann Park, as part of the household after her mother vanished from the records. Robert Burns Jr. (1786–1857), the eldest surviving child and sole survivor of the couple's first twins, was educated at Dumfries Academy, the University of Glasgow, and the University of Edinburgh before pursuing a career in surveying and farming. William Nicol Burns (1791–1872), named after the poet's friend William Nicol, attended Dumfries Grammar School and joined the East India Company's army, rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel before retiring to Cheltenham, England. James Glencairn Burns (1794–1865), named in honor of the Earl of Glencairn—a patron of the poet—was educated at Dumfries Grammar School, joined the East India Company's army as a cadet in the 15th Bengal Native Infantry, attained the rank of lieutenant colonel, and later retired to Newfield near Newcastle upon Tyne after marrying Sarah Elizabeth Maitland in 1821. Elizabeth "Betty" Burns, integrated into the family from infancy, married handloom weaver and soldier John Thomson in 1808 and settled in Whitburn, where she raised several children. Armour played a central role in overseeing the education and of these children, emphasizing Presbyterian values and a strong in line with her own upbringing. She ensured the boys received formal schooling at local institutions like , supplementing this with guidance on their career paths, such as encouraging for William and James to provide financial stability. For , Armour provided a stable home environment, fostering her integration into the family and supporting her eventual marriage. Armour instilled in all the children a deep connection to their father's literary legacy, often through naming conventions that honored Burns's friends and supporters, like William Nicol and James Glencairn, to perpetuate his memory and social ties. In managing the household economy after Burns's death in 1796, Armour relied on her widow's allowance of £8 annually from the excise board—later doubled to £16 in 1805—supplemented by occasional gifts and sales of Burns's manuscripts—to support the family. Her practical skills in budgeting, clothing and , and engaging in local , such as selling or handmade , were essential to stretching limited resources amid rising costs in . This frugal approach allowed her to maintain the family home at 111 Mill Vennel, cover and apprenticeship fees, and provide apprenticeships or career starts for the children, ensuring their independence while preserving the Burns legacy through their upbringing.

Widowhood and Later Years

Challenges After Burns' Death

Following Robert Burns' death on July 21, 1796, at the age of 37, his widow Jean Armour, then 31, was left to care for six young children amid severe financial hardship, with the family's debts totaling approximately £100. The six included her four surviving legitimate sons and two of Burns's illegitimate daughters whom she raised as her own. The poet's estate provided minimal assets, including a library valued at £90 and an initial annuity of £10 per year from the Excise service, which proved insufficient to cover basic needs or the accumulated obligations from Burns' exciseman salary and personal loans. Jean's financial struggles intensified as she sold household possessions, including furniture and Burns' manuscripts, to stave off creditors and sustain the family. Public sympathy for the widow of Scotland's beloved led to charitable subscriptions organized by admirers, raising approximately £700 in the immediate years after 1796, with further funds—equivalent to over £8 million in modern values—generated through appeals and private patronage by 1800. Despite this support, the income remained precarious, hovering around £117 annually by the early 1800s when combined with the and interest from subscription capital. Emotionally, Jean endured the toll of sudden widowhood, compounded by societal scrutiny over Burns' extramarital affairs and the integration of his illegitimate children into her household. She briefly took in Elizabeth "Betty" , born in 1791 to Burns and hotel servant Ann , treating her as one of her own and providing care until Betty's in 1808; Jean reportedly remarked that Burns "should hae had twa wives" in reference to the girl's mother. The Presbyterian Church's ongoing moral oversight, rooted in earlier condemnations of Burns' lifestyle, fueled local rumors and gossip about the family's legitimacy, adding to Jean's isolation as a single mother in . Jean's resilience shone through her determination to shield her children from the , relying on her resourcefulness, family aid from Burns' brother Gilbert, and the growing public fund to maintain a modest but independent life in their home. This period of acute crisis, spanning the late , tested her fortitude but ultimately preserved the family's stability through collective benevolence.

Final Years and Death

By the 1810s, Jean Armour's financial situation had stabilized and improved through a combination of her and income from the sale of Robert Burns's manuscripts and books, which generated a capital sum of approximately £3,070 and yielded an annual income of around £117—sufficient to support her household without the immediate distress of her early widowhood. Support from admirers grew as Burns's fame spread, including charitable subscriptions and visits from members of emerging Burns clubs, which provided additional aid and recognized her as a living link to the . As matriarch of the family, Armour oversaw key milestones among her surviving sons, who established their own households through marriages in the late 1810s and early 1820s; for instance, her son William Nicol Burns married Catherine Adelaide Crone in 1824, and James Glencairn Burns married Sarah Robinson in 1818, leading to the arrival of grandchildren who brought joy to her later home in . These family developments solidified her role in guiding the Burns lineage amid growing public interest in their heritage. In the and , Armour's health declined due to increasing frailty associated with . She was cared for by family members in the Banks Street house she had shared with Burns, remaining there until her death on March 26, 1834, at the age of 69. Armour was buried beside her husband in St. Michael's Churchyard, , concluding a life deeply intertwined with his.

Literary Contributions and Legacy

Literacy and Personal Correspondence

Jean Armour received a more liberal education than was typical for girls in rural during the , benefiting from her status as the favored daughter of a stonemason father who encouraged her learning. Although formal schooling was limited, she acquired basic skills, including the ability to read and write in Scots English, likely through exposure to religious texts and family encouragement. Her proficiency is evidenced by her signature on legal documents and her later personal writings, which demonstrate a functional command of and despite the era's constraints on women's . Jean's personal correspondence, preserved in a small number of surviving letters, reveals her practical mindset, deep piety, and understated wit, often centered on . One notable example is her 1804 letter to Maria Riddell, a close friend of Burns, in which she provides updates on her surviving children—such as William Nicol remaining at home and studying at Glasgow College—while mourning the losses of Francis Wallace and infant Maxwell. This letter, rediscovered in a New York junk shop in 2009 and authenticated before its donation to the , underscores her role as a resilient navigating widowhood. Another key set of letters, documented in the Burns Chronicle, includes correspondence with family members in the early 1800s, offering advice on daily life and expressing affectionate concern; for instance, her writings to son William Nicol Burns, who served in with the from 1818, blend maternal guidance with religious reflections. Additionally, shortly after Burns's death in July 1796, Jean penned letters expressing profound grief, such as one reflecting on the sudden loss and her determination to raise their children amid hardship. These writings highlight Jean's prose style—simple and direct, yet infused with warmth, resilience, and a quiet humor that contrasts sharply with her husband's elaborate poetic flair. Her letters avoid ornamentation, focusing instead on tangible concerns like household management and familial duty, which portray her not merely as Burns's but as an intellectually capable in her own right. This body of work, though sparse, challenges earlier misconceptions of her illiteracy and affirms her self-reliant voice in private spheres.

Role in Preserving Burns' Works

Following ' death in 1796, Jean Armour played a pivotal role in authenticating and supplying original manuscripts, letters, and poems to early biographers, ensuring the accuracy of his literary output. She provided key materials to Dr. James Currie for his influential 1800 biography and edition of Burns' works, The Works of Robert Burns, which included personal anecdotes and documents from her possession, helping to establish a definitive collection while generating approximately £2,000 in profits for the Burns family through sales. Her cooperation extended to music publisher George Thomson, with whom she collaborated on the posthumous completion of A Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs for the Voice, incorporating Burns' song contributions and safeguarding their integrity against unauthorized alterations. Armour actively corrected prevailing myths about Burns' life, particularly countering exaggerated tales of his intemperance by stating publicly that she had never witnessed him intoxicated during their , thereby shaping a more balanced public perception of his character. Her , though modest, proved instrumental in these efforts, allowing her to review and endorse editions for factual accuracy. She approved subsequent publications, such as later iterations of Currie's , to maintain fidelity to Burns' legacy and protect the family's interests. In her public capacity, Armour hosted numerous visitors at her home in , sharing oral anecdotes, displaying artifacts like fragments of the poet's deathbed, and fostering a living connection to his memory for admirers from across and beyond. This grassroots preservation complemented her involvement in formal memorials; she supported the 1815 exhumation and transfer of Burns' remains to the dedicated mausoleum at St. Michael's Churchyard in , where she herself was later interred in , ensuring a dignified resting place that endures as a site of national commemoration.

References

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