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[618] The Argyllshire highlanders had joined Huske at
Falkirk on January 16th, and were present at the battle the
following day. Their colonel was John Campbell, younger, of
Mamore (1723-1806). In 1745 he was lieut.-colonel of the 54th
Regiment, but he commanded the Argyll Highlanders (militia)
throughout the Scottish campaign, and was present at Falkirk
and Culloden. He succeeded his father (see ante, p. 259) as
5th Duke of Argyll, 1770. He is best known to fame as the
husband of the beautiful Elizabeth Gunning, widow of the 6th
Duke of Hamilton, and as the host of Dr. Johnson and Boswell
at Inverary in 1773.
[619] At Prestonpans (21st September) seventy-seven
officers were taken prisoners. Some of these were allowed
entire freedom on parole, but a large portion of them had been
interned in Perthshire: they were kindly treated, and had given
their parole. In December a considerable number had been
removed to Glamis Castle, in Forfarshire, and to Cupar, Leslie,
Pitfirran, Culross, and St. Andrews in Fife. They were living
quietly in these places when about the second week in
January their retreats were raided and they ‘were forcibly
hurried off by a great number of people in arms and disguised,
whom they could not resist, and carried by the same violence
to Edinburgh.’ (Scots Mag., viii. 43.) Thirty-one officers arrived
at Edinburgh on 19th January, and Grossett was sent next day
to recover those mentioned in the text.
[620] The Duke of Cumberland arrived in Edinburgh on
30th January.
[621] Not identified.
[622] Letter xxv. p. 394.
[623] This officer may have been the second major of the
3rd (Scots) Guards, the only regimental officer of the name
who held the rank of colonel at this time.
[624] Letter xxviii. p. 395.
[625] Not identified.
[626] Letter xxix. p. 395.
[627] Should be Bligh’s regiment, the 20th, now the
Lancashire Fusiliers.
[628] Letter xxx. p. 396.
[629] Letter xxxi. p. 396.
[630] William, 8th earl, suc. 1720. In 1745 he was a captain
in the 3rd (Scots) Guards: he served on Cope’s staff at
Prestonpans; commanded the Glasgow (volunteer or militia)
regiment at Falkirk; was also colonel of the Edinburgh
regiment. In 1757 he was appointed Governor of Gibraltar,
where he died in 1761, being then a lieut.-general.
[631] Letter xxxiii. p. 398.
[632] This is that Thomas Smith who, in 1728, for an act of
consummate audacity acquired vast fame, became for a while
the darling of the British nation, and in the Navy received the
nickname of ‘Tom of Ten Thousand.’ Although only junior lieut.
of H.M.S. Gosport, while in temporary command he forced the
French corvette Gironde to lower her topsail as a salute to the
British flag when passing out of Plymouth Sound. For this
exploit he was summarily dismissed the service on the
complaint of the French ambassador, but, according to
tradition, was reinstated the following day with the rank of
post-captain (see Thackeray’s Roundabout Papers, No. 4, ‘On
Some Late Great Victories’). Modern investigation has
somewhat qualified the dramatic story of the reinstatement,
but not of the initial act. Smith was naval commander-in-chief
in Scotland from February 1746 to January 1747 when he
became rear-Admiral; in 1757, Admiral of the Blue. He
presided at the court-martial which condemned Admiral Byng.
He died 1761.
To those interested in Jacobite history his memory should
ever be cherished as the benignant guardian, if jailer, of Flora
Macdonald. When Flora was first made prisoner in Skye in the
second week of July, she was taken on board the ship of the
merciless Captain Ferguson (ante, p. 244), in which she was
detained for three weeks. Luckily for her, General Campbell
was also on board and treated Flora with great kindness. The
general handed her over to Commodore Smith, with whom she
remained a prisoner until her arrival in London in the middle of
November, a period of three and a half months. Home, in his
History, says that ‘this most worthy gentleman treated Flora
not as a stranger, nor a prisoner, but with the affection of a
parent.’ Bishop Forbes tells the same story: he ‘behaved like a
father to her, and tendered her many good advices as to her
behaviour in her ticklish situation.’ Smith permitted Flora to go
ashore in Skye to see her mother. When lying in Leith roads
he presented her with a handsome suit of riding clothes and
other garments, as well as an outfit for a Highland maid who
had hurriedly left Skye to accompany the lady in her captivity.
[633] Guild Hall Relief Fund. See Appendix.
[634] The 8th now The King’s (Royal Liverpool) Regiment.
[635] Apparently meaning ‘notify.’
[636] Eyemouth.
[637] A bylander or bilander is a two-masted ship, rather
flat-bottomed, used chiefly in the canals of Holland.
[638] Sic in copy, ‘and vissibly’ is probably a mistake for
‘invisibly.’
[639] Author of Medical Heroes of the ’Forty-five: Glasgow,
1897.
[640] Barclay acted as justice of the peace for Prince
Charles, enlisted men, and collected the excise.
[641] Maule was a writer in Stonehaven and procurator-
fiscal of Kincardine. He served as an ensign, probably in Lord
Ogilvy’s regiment.
[642] Dr. Lawson seems to have been the father of John
Lawson, junior, who served in the Jacobite army.
[643] Keeper of a public-house in Stonehaven.
[644] The occasion of this Memorial and the circumstances
attending its production will be found fully detailed in chap. vi.
of The Last of the Royal Stuarts, by Herbert M. Vaughan:
London, 1906.
[645] I am indebted to Miss Nairne, Salisbury, for this
translation.
[646] These lists make no pretence to completeness. They
are extracted from a manuscript Jacobite army list which I
have been compiling for many years. In it I have noted down
the name of every gentleman properly authenticated that I
have come across when studying the history of the period.
[647] Clanranald, Boisdale, Glengarry, and Bishop Hugh
Macdonald did not rise in arms, but were all imprisoned for
being concerned in the Rising.
[648] Interesting information on the raising of Fairburn’s
men is given by the French envoy, writing to the French
Foreign Minister: Lady Mackintosh, he says, ‘a bien été imitée
par une autre fort jolie personne de son âge, nommée Barbe
Gourdon, femme de Mekensie de Ferbarn, le plus
considérable des vassaux et des parens de milord Seaforth.
Celle-cy n’a pas banni son mari; mais, malgré luy, elle a vendu
ses diamants et sa vaisselle pour lever des hommes. Elle s’en
a ramassé cent ciquante des plus braves du païs, qu’elle a
joint à ceux de miladi Seaforth, sous la conduite de son beau-
frère.’
This ‘beau-frère’ may mean Kenneth, her husband’s
brother, or it may mean Barisdale who was married to her
husband’s sister. Young Lentron in the List of Persons
concerned in the Rebellion is termed a schoolboy. I find no
mention of this Barbara Gordon in the Mackenzie clan history.
[649] James Gordon, son of the laird of Glasterum,
Banffshire. Born 1664; died 1746; consecrated secretly as
Bishop of Nicopolis in partibus, 1706; Vicar-apostolic in
Scotland, 1718. Lord John Drummond, Clanranald, and
possibly Lady Clanranald (née Macleod) were Roman
Catholics.
[650] Frederick of Hesse Cassel was the consort of Ulrica,
sister and successor of Charles xii. He was crowned King of
Sweden 1720; died 1751. His nephew, Frederick, Prince,
afterwards Landgrave, of Hesse, married Princess Anne,
daughter of George ii., 1740: he brought Hessian troops to
Scotland in February 1746.
[651] Alexander Gordon of Auchintoul (Banffshire). Entered
the Russian service 1693; married the daughter of his
kinsman, Patrick Gordon of Achleuris, the celebrated General
of Peter the Great. Was a colonel at the battle of Narva (1700),
where he was captured and detained prisoner until Peter’s
victory at Pultowa (1709). Rose to be a Russian major-
general. Joined Mar’s Rising, 1715, and was made lieutenant-
general (October 1715); commander-in-chief (February 1716)
of the Jacobite Army on Mar’s leaving Scotland. Was at
Bordeaux, and too ill to join the attempt of 1719. Though living
in Banffshire in 1745, he felt too old to go ‘out.’ Died 1752. He
wrote a History of Peter the Great, published after his death, in
Aberdeen, 1755.
[652] Captain Wm. Hay, groom of the bedchamber to the
Chevalier.
[653] Robert (Gordon) but for the attainder Viscount of
Kenmure; eldest son of William, 6th Viscount, who was
executed for his share in the ’15. He was an ardent Jacobite;
he died in 1741, aged about thirty, and was succeeded by his
brother John, who joined Prince Charles at Holyrood, accepted
the command of a troop of horse, but deserted the following
day. See Murray’s Memorials, pp. 53, 227.
[654] Not identified; may be Nisbet of Dirleton and
Callendar of Craigforth.
[655] French Minister of Finance.
[656] Walter Stapleton, lieut.-col. of Berwick’s regiment;
commandant of the Irish picquets and brigadier in the French
army; wounded at Culloden and died of his wounds.
[657] Henry Ker of Graden, Teviotdale, heir of an ancient
family of moss troopers; b. 1702; served in the Spanish army,
1722-38, when he returned to Scotland; was aide-de-camp to
Lord George Murray and titular aide-de-camp to the Prince;
the best staff officer the Jacobites possessed. Captured in May
in the Braes of Angus; tried for his life, and in vain pleaded his
Spanish commission; sentenced to death but reprieved;
released in 1748; died a lieut.-col. in the Spanish service 1751.
(Leishman, A Son of Knox, p. 20.) Ker wrote an account of the
operations in the last two months of the campaign, printed in
The Lyon, i. 355.
[658] This statement of Daniel’s is opposed to all reliable
evidence, and the note in the Drummond Castle MS. is
correct. The desire of his enemies was to throw the blame of
the disaster on Lord George Murray. Even the Prince seems to
have talked himself into a similar belief (see post, p. 240). The
responsibility lay on Prince Charles himself, as is told in the
Introduction.
[659] Keppoch’s brother Donald, killed at Culloden. Donald
MacDonell of Tirnadrish (or Tiendrish), a cousin of Keppoch;
he was the only Jacobite officer taken prisoner at Falkirk. He
was executed at Carlisle in October.
[660] Alexander Mackay of Auchmony, who long afterwards
married Angusia, d. of Angus Macdonell, Glengarry’s son,
referred to on p. 277.
[661] The house of Gordon of Glenbucket at Tomintoul in
Strathavon.
[662] See ante, p. 118.
[663] His chamberlain or steward.
[664] For the authenticity of this manifesto, see ante, p.
132.
[665] Generally ‘Strathdearn,’ the valley of the Findhorn.
[666] ‘Clan Chattan,’ the Macphersons, Mackintoshes and
Farquharsons; probably here meaning the Macphersons.
INDEX
Abercromby, Francis, of Fetterneir, 164 n.
Aberdeen, rebels in, 285-6;
presbyterian ministers preach against the rebels, 202;
no election of magistrates during the rebellion, 119, 124;
requests aid from lord Loudoun, 134;
rebels demand £215 of levy money from Old Aberdeen, 135;
masters of King’s College taxed, 136;
public fast observed, 136;
rebels attempt to cause a mutiny among the Macleods, 140;
the rebels march to engage the Macleods, 140;
skirmish at the fords of Don, 143-4;
the rebels collect levy money, 147, 150;
the citizens maltreated and plundered by Macgregors, 148;
rebels march through the town in their retreat from Stirling, 149;
arrival of the duke of Cumberland, 151;
Bisset’s sermon on the good behaviour of the rebels, 189 and n;
popish and non-jurant meeting houses destroyed, 56;
Gordon’s hospital garrisoned by the duke of Cumberland;
the duke leaves the town, 159;
militia raised and governors appointed, 160;
military law paramount, 162;
rioting by the soldiers, 163 and n.
—— George Gordon, 3rd earl of, 123 and n.
Aberdeenshire, the rebellion of 1715, 130;
lord Lewis Gordon issues his burning order, 134-5 and n.
Abernethy presbytery testify to the loyalty of Mr. John Grant,
minister of Abernethy, 317.
—— brother of Mayen, 121.
Abertarff, 89;
the presbytery exonerate rev. John Grant of Urquhart, 316.
Aboyne, earl of, 131.
Achires. See Ogilvie.
Achoynanie. See Grant, Thomas.
Adams, Mr., cipher name for the king of France, 63.
Agnew, sir Andrew, 206 n.
Aird, 89.
Airlie, Anne, countess of, 35 n.
—— James, earl of, 35 n.
—— John, earl of, 35 and n.
Albemarle, William, earl of, 163 n, 417.
Alisary, South Uist, 250 n.
Alloa, operations of rebels at, 353-8.
Altimarlach, battle of, between Sinclair of Keiss and Campbell of
Glenurchy, 71 n.
Amelot de Chaillou, M., 9 and n, 10, 12, 14, 15, 47, 57.
Ancrum, William, lord, afterw. marquess of Lothian, his expedition
to Curgaff, 152 and n;
orders the destruction of houses where arms were found, 161-2
and n, 163;
is removed from Aberdeen because of the rioting of the soldiers,
163 n;
succeeded by lord Sempill, 164 and n.
Anderson, captain, 61 n.
Appin, 86.
—— laird of. See Stewart, Dugald.
Applecross, 75, 77.
Arbuthnott, Alexander, of Knox, commissioner of customs, 50 and
n, 381, 385.
Ardgour, 84.
—— laird of. See Maclean.
Ardloch, laird of. See Mackenzie.
Ardnamurchan, 82-3.
Argyllshire Highlanders at the battle of Falkirk, 363 n, 364.
Arisaig, 81, 229 and n.
Assynt and its proprietors, 73-4 and n.
Atholl, William, [Jacobite] duke of, 344 n, 410.
Auchengaul. See Crichton.
Auchlunkart (Auflunkart), 288, 290.
Auchmeddan. See Baird, William.
Auchmony. See Mackay, Alexander.
Auldearn, battle of, 76 n.
Avachy. See Gordon.
Eccleston, 169.
Edgar, David, of Keithock, 3 n.
—— James, secretary to the Chevalier de St. George, 32 n, 34-5;
letters from, to Murray of Broughton, 3 and n, 18-19, 30;
letters to, from Murray of Broughton, 20 and n-27, 37-41, 45 and
n.
Edinburgh, the provost declines to defend the town, 341;
in possession of the rebels, 342;
garrisoned by English troops, 345 and n, 351;
cannon for the city walls, 352;
crowded with Jacobite prisoners, 352 and n.
Edinburgh regiment, 372 n.
Edwards, J., cipher name of the Chevalier. See Stuart.
Eguilles, marquis d’, 100 n, 101 n, 223 n.
Elcho, David Wemyss, lord, 43 and n, 61, 173 n, 361 and n, 410.
Elgin, magistrates request the laird of Grant to march to their
assistance, 297 n;
Grant’s letter explaining why he is unable to come, 296 n.
Ellis, Mr., cipher name of the Chevalier. See Stuart.
Ellon, 158.
Elphingstone, 355-7, 384.
—- colonel. See Balmerino, lord.
Elsick. See Bannerman, sir Alexander.
Enzie, Banffshire, 92, 120 and n.
Errol, James, earl of, 121 n.
—— Mary, countess of, 121 and n.
Erskine, Anne. See Airlie, countess of.
—— James, lord Grange, 45 n, 90 n.