Clan Macpherson chief: I'm no
more than first among equals
The story of the Clan Macpherson, featuring our Clan Chief Sir William
Macpherson of Cluny and Blairgowrie, the 27th Hereditary Chief of Clan
Macpherson.
Your Scottish Ancestry: Clan
MacPherson (1992) VHS
A VHS transfer of Clan MacPherson from 1992. Clan MacPherson is a very old
highland Scottish clan. They are apart of the Clan Chattan Confederation,
along with the MacKintoshes, Davidsons, Shaws, etc.. Enjoy!
The Macphersons, the other principle branch of
the clan Chattan, are in Gaelic called the clan Vuirich or Muirich, from an ancestor of
that name, who, in the Gaelic MS of 1450, is said to have been the "son of Swen, son
of Heth, son of Nachtan, son of Gillichattan, from whom came the clan Chattan". The
word Gillichattan is supposed by some to mean a votary or servant of St Kattan, a Scottish
saint, as Gillichrist (Gilchrist) means a servant of Christ.
The Macphersons claim unbroken descent from the ancient chiefs of the clan Chattan, and
tradition is in favour of their being the lineal representatives of the chiefs of the
clan. However, this point has been sufficiently discussed in the history of the
Mackintoshes, where we have given much of the history of the Macphersons.
In was from Muirich, who is said to have been chief in 1153, that the Macphersons derive
the name of the clan Muirich or Vuirich. This Muirich was parson of Kingussie, in the
lower part of Badenoch, and the surname was given to his descendants from his office. He
was the great-grandson of Gillichattan Mor, the founder of the clan, who lived in the
reign of Malcolm Canmore, and having married a daughter of the thane of Calder, had five
sons. The eldest, Gillichattan, the third of the name, and chief of the clan in the reign
of Alexander II, was father of Dougal Dall, the chief whose daughter Eva married Angus
Mackintosh of Mackintosh. On Dougal Dall's death, as he had no sons, the representation of
the family devolved on his cousin and heir-male, Kenneth, eldest son of Eoghen or Ewen
Baan, second son of Muirich. Neill Chrom, so called from his stooping shoulders, Muirich's
third son, was a great artificer in iron, and took the name of Smith from his trade.
Farquhar Gilliriach, or the Swift, the fourth son, is said to have been the progenitor of
the MacGillivrays, who followed the Mackintosh branch of the clan Chattan; and from David
Dubh, or the Swarthy, the youngest of Muirich's sons, were descended the clan Dhai, or
Davidsons of Invernahavon. (This is the genealogy given by Sir Aeneas Macpherson. From
another MS genealogy of the Macphersons, and from the Mackintosh MS history, we find that
the son of Kenneth, the alleged grandson of Muirich, married a daughter of Ferquhard,
ninth of Mackintosh, cir 1410, so that it is probable Sir Aeneas has placed Muriich and
his family more than a century too early).
One of the early chiefs is said to have received a commission to expel the Comyns from
Badenoch, and on their forfeiture he obtained, for his services, a grant of lands. He was
also allowed to add a hand holding a dagger to his armorial bearings. A MS genealogy of
the Macphersons makes Kenneth chief in 1386, when a battle took place at Invernahavon
between the clan Chattan and the Camerons details of which can be found in the account of
the Mackintoshes.
In 1609 the chief of the Macphersons signed a bond, along with all the other branches of
that extensive tribe, acknowledging Mackintosh as captain and chief of the clan Chattan;
but in all the contentions and feuds in which the Mackintoshes were subsequently involved
with the Camerons and other Lochaber clans, they were obliged to accept of the
Macphersons' aid as allies rather than vassals.
Andrew Macpherson of Cluny, who succeeded as chief in 1647, suffered much on account of
his sincere attachment to the cause of Charles I. His son, Ewen, was also a staunch
royalist. In 1665, under Andrew, the then chief, when Mackintosh went on an expedition
against the Camerons, for the recovery of the lands of Glenluy and Locharkaig, he
solicited the assistance of the Macphersons, when a notarial deed was executed, wherein
Mackintosh declares that it was of their mere good will and pleasure that they did so; and
on his part it is added, "I bind and oblige myself and friends and followers to
assist and fortify and join, with the said Andrew, Lauchlan, and John Macpherson, all
their lawful and necessary adoes, being thereunto required". The same Andrew,
Lauchlan, and John, heads of the three great branches of the Macphersons, had on the 19th
of the preceeding November given a bond acknowledging Mackintosh as their chief. In 1672
Duncan Macpherson of Cluny, Andrew's brother, made application to the Lyon office to have
his arms matriculated as laird of Cluny Macpherson, and "the only and true
representative of the ancient and honourable family of the clan Chattan". This
application was successful; but as soon as Mackintosh heard of it, he raised a process
before the privy council to have it determined as to which of them had the right to the
proper armorial bearings. After a protracted inquiry, the council issued an order for the
two chiefs to give security for the peacable behaviour of their respective clans, in the
terms given in the account of Mackintosh. The same year Cluny entered into a contract of
friendship with AEneas, Lord Macdonald, and Aros, "for himself and taking burden upon
him for the haill name of Macpherson, and some others, called Old Clan-chattan, as cheefe
and principall man thereof".
It is worthy of note that this same Duncan made an attempt, which was happily frustrated
by his clansmen, to have his son-in-law, a son of Campbell of Cawdor, declared his
successor.
On the death, without male issue, of Duncan Macpherson, in 1721 or 1722, the chiefship
devolved on Lauchlan Macpherson of Nuid, the next male heir, being lineally descended from
John, youngest brother of Andrew, the above-named chief. One of the decendants of this
John of Nuid was James Macpherson, the resuscitator of the Oassianic poetry. Lauchlan
married Jean, daughter of Sir Ewen Cameron of Lochiel. His eldest son, Ewen, was the chief
at the time of the rebellion of 1745.
In the previous rebellion of 1715, the Macphersons, under their then chief Duncan, had
taken a very active part on the side of the Pretender. On the arrival of Prince Charles in
1745, Ewen Macpherson of Cluny, who the same year had been appointed to a company in Lord
Loudon's Highlanders, and had taken the oaths of government, threw up his commission, and,
with 600 Macphersons, joined the rebel army after their victory at Prestonpans. The
Macphersons were led to take an active part in the rebellion chiefly from a desire to
revenge the fate of two of their clansmen, who were shot on account of the extraordinary
mutiny of the Black Watch (now the 42d regiment) two years before.
Ewen Macpherson, the chief, at first hesitated to join the prince; and his wife, a
duaghter of Lord Lovat, although a staunch Jacobite, earnestly dissuaded him from breaking
his oath to government, assuring him that nothing could end well that began with perjury.
Her friends reproached her for interfering - and his clan urging him, Cluny unfortunately
yielded.
At the battle of Falkirk, the Macphersons formed a portion of the first line. They were
too late for the battle of Culloden, where their assistance might have turned the fortune
of the day; they did not come up till after the retreat of Charles from that decisive
field. Inthe subsequent devastations committed by the English army, Cluny's house was
plundered and burnt to the ground. Every exertion was made by the government troops for
his apprehension, but they never could lay their hands upon him. He escaped to France in
1755, and died at Dunkirk the following year.
Ewen's son, Duncan, was born in1750, in a kiln for drying corn, in which his mother had
taken refuge after the destruction of their house. During his minority, his uncle, Major
John Macpherson of the 78th foot, acted as his guardian. He received back the estate which
had been forfeited, and, entering the army, became lieutenant-colonel of the 3d foot
guards. He married, 12th June 1798, Catherine, youngest daughter of Sir Ewen Cameron of
Fassifern, baronet; and on his death, 1st August 1817, was succeeded by his eldest son,
Ewen Macpherson of Cluny, the present chief.
In Cluny castle are preserved various relics of the rebellion of 1745; among the rest, the
Prince's target and lace wrist ruffles, and an authograph letter from Charles, promising
an ample reward to his devoted friend Cluny. There is also the black pipe chanter on which
the prosperity of the house of Cluny is said to be dependent, and which all true members
of the clan Vuirich firmly believe fell from heaven, in place of the one lost at the
conflict on the North Inch of Perth.
The war-cry of the Macphersons was "Creag Dhu", the name of a rock inthe
neighbourhood of Cluny Castle. The chief is called in the Highlands "Mac Mhurich
Chlanaidh", but everywhere else is better known as Cluny Macpherson.
Among the principal cadets of the Macpherson family were the Macphersons of Pitmean,
Invereshie, Strathmassie, Breachachie, Essie, &c. The Invereshie branch were chiefs of
a large tribe called the Siol Gillies, the founder of which was Gillies or Elias
Macpherson, the first of Invereshie, a younger son of Ewen Baan or Bane (so called fromhis
fair complexion) above mentioned. Sir Eneas Macpherson, tutor of Invereshie, advocate, who
lived in the reigns of Charles II and James VII, collected the materials for the history
of the clan Macpherson, the NS of which is still preserved in the family. He was appointed
sheriff of Aberdeen in 1684.
George Macpherson of Invereshie married Grace, daughter of Colonel William Grant of
Ballindalloch, and his elder son, William, dying unmarried, in 1812, was succeeded by his
nephew George, who, on the death of his maternal granduncle, General James Grant of
Ballindalloch, 13th April 1806, inherited that estate, and in consequence assumed the name
of Grant in addition to his own. He was MP for the county of Sutherland for seventeen
years, and was created a baronet 25th July 1838. He thus became Sir George
Macpherson-Grant of Invereshie, Inverness-shire, and Ballindalloch, Elginshire. On his
death in November 1846, his son, Sir John, sometime secretary of legation at Lisbon,
succeeded as second baronet. Sir John died Dec 2, 1850. His eldest son, Sir George
Macpherson-Grant of Invereshie and Ballindalloch, born Aug 12, 1839, became the third
baronet of this family. He married, July 3, 1861, Frances Elizabeth, youngest daughter of
the Rev. Roger Pocklington, Vicar of Walesby, Nottinghamshire.
Tour of Newton Castle,
Blairgowrie
Jamie Macpherson - Statement -
The White Rose Guild
Jamie Macpherson, the 28th Chief of the Macpherson clan.
He is stating how important it is to preserve Scottish heritage and
traditions.
Another Account of the Clan
BADGE: Lus nam braoileag (vaccinium
vitis idaea) red whortleberry.
SLOGAN: Creag dhu!
PIBR0CH: Creag Dhubh Chlann Chatain.
GREAT
has been the discussion, since ever an interest came to be taken in these
things, regarding the origin of the famous Clan Chattan. Eager to derive
the clan from an antiquity as remote as possible, its historians have
claimed that it represents the early Catti of Gaul mentioned by Tacitus.
They aver that this tribe, driven from its native lands by the Romans,
settled in the remote north of Scotland, to which it gave the name of
Cattiness or Caithness. Fantastic stories are told also of early settlers
who took possession of a district in the north formerly infested by
dangerous numbers of wild cats, which the new settlers destroyed. Another
derivation of the name is from cat or catti, a weapon, and
still another from Catav—Gaelic, cad, high, and tobh, a
side, the high land of the Ord of Caithness. But the most probable appears
to be the theory of tradition which derives the name simply from
Gillecattan Mhor, "the big servant of St. Katan," who appears as
a fairly authentic personage of the time of Malcolm Canmore, and whose
ancestor, according to tradition, was one of the Gaelic settlers who came
over from Ireland to Scotland in those early centuries. The elder line,
descended from this Gilliecattan Mhor, came to an end in the person of an
only daughter named Eva, who in 1291 married Angus, the young chief of the
MacIntoshes. This individual received from his father-in-law not only part
of the old Clan Chattan lands of Glenlui and Loch Arkaig, but also, it is
said, an investiture as chief of Clan Chattan itself. There was, however,
it appears, a younger male line descended from Gilliecattan Mhor. The
representative of this younger line in the twelfth century was a certain
Muirich, priest or parson of the Culdee church at Kingussie. The priests
of this church were not bound to celibacy. Indeed one of the reasons for
the introduction of the Roman Church at that time was the abuse of the
office by the Culdee priests, who were accused of alienating the church
land in favour of their own families. The Macphersons are said to be
descended from Kenneth, son of Ewen Baan, second of the five sons of this
Muirich, from whom they take their names of Macmhurich, son of Muirich, or
Macpherson, son of the parson. It is through this descent that the
Macphersons claim to be chiefs of the old Clan Chattan, declaring that it
was not in the power of a Highland chief to transfer the chiefship through
a daughter to another family.
The Macphersons are said to
have acquired their possessions in Badenoch from King Robert the Bruce as
a reward for certain services in expelling the Comyns from that district,
but it is also possible that they had retained possession of some of the
lands of the old Culdee Church of which their ancestor Muirich had been
parson there. They emerge into history as a body of considerable strength
in 1370 or 1386. In one or other of these years, the Camerons, who had
retained actual possession of the old Clan Chattan lands of Glenlui or
Loch Arkaig in despite of the Mackintosh chiefs, had made a raid, four
hundred strong, on the Mackintosh lands in Strath Nairn, and were
returning home through Badenoch, when they were overtaken by Mackintosh,
supported by his relatives, the chiefs of the Macphersons and the
Davidsons.
The fact that Mackintosh
was in command has been claimed by his clansmen to prove that he was
recognised by the Macphersons and Davidsons as Chief of Clan Chattan. But
the fact that the personal quarrel was his might sufficiently account for
his leadership there, and it is significant that both the Macphersons and
the Davidsons found occasion to assert the seniority of their descent on
the spot. The question arising as to who should have the place of honour
on the right flank, the Macpherson chief claimed it as chief of the old
Clan Chattan, and the Davidson chief claimed it as head of the senior
cadet branch of that clan. Mackintosh assigned the post to the Davidsons,
and as a result the Macphersons straight-way withdrew their assistance. In
the battle which followed at Invernahavon, Mackintosh, thus weakened,
suffered defeat. There is a tradition that he then sent to the Macpherson
camp a minstrel who taunted these clansmen with cowardice, and that,
enraged in consequence, they flew to arms, attacked the Camerons, and
completely routed them.
According to some it was
the difference between the different septs of Clan Chattan at Invernahavon
which directly led to the famous fight of the "Threttie against
Threttie" before King Robert III. on the North Inch of Perth in 1396.
Some assert that the clansmen arrayed against each other in that fight
were the Macphersons and the Davidsons, but it seems more likely that the
battle really was between the Mackintoshes and the Camerons.
That the Macphersons
remained of consequence in Badenoch is shown by entries in the Exchequer
Rolls, which refer to supplies received by James II. from Hugh Macpherson
at Ruthven in that district in 1459. According to family tradition the
chief, Ewen Macpherson, was a staunch supporter of Queen Mary, while his
son Andrew Macpherson and his clan certainly took part in the battle of
Glenlivet in 1594, after defending the Earl of Huntly’s castle of
Ruthven successfully against the young Earl of Argyll, commanding the
invading forces of King James VI.
During the events which led
up to the battle of Glenlivet, and at the battle itself, the chief of the
Mackintoshes was ranged with his clan on the side of the Earl of Moray and
the King, while Macpherson with his men were on the side of the Earl of
Huntly. Andrew Macpherson, the young chief, was at that time only tenant
of Cluny, which property then belonged to the Earl of Huntly, and on 16th
May, 1591, Huntly had obtained from him and nine of the chief men of his
clan a bond securing their support. These circumstances may be taken as
illustrative of the rivalry which appears always to have existed between
the two great branches of Clan Chattan.
In the civil war of Charles
I.’s time the Macphersons played a gallant part on the side of the King.
From the register of the provincial synod of Moray it appears that Dougal
Macpherson acted as Captain of Ruthven Castle, and that Ewen Macpherson of
Cluny had joined with Alastair Macdonald, the Marquess of Huntly, and the
Great Marquess of Montrose in their daring military enterprise; that he
had been present at the battles of Tibbermuir and Aberdeen, in which he
had been in command of all the loyal forces of Badenoch. It was during one
of the headlong attacks of this campaign, when the little Royalist forces
were about to engage a party of the Covenanting Horse, that an incident
occurred which is related effectively by Sir Walter Scott. A gentlemen of
Clan Macpherson was noticed to be crouching somewhat in the rear, and
Macpherson of Nuid, taking the action to be one of cowardice, ran up to
him and indignantly upbraided him with setting so bad an example. The
clansman, however, answered, "I have only been fastening a spur to
the heel of my brogue, for I mean in a few minutes to be mounted on one of
these horses." And in a few minutes, sure enough, he had fulfilled
his intention.
It was shortly after this that the dispute
between the heads of the Mackintoshes and Macphersons as to the chiefship
of Clan Chattan found its way into a court of law. It was true that in
1609 Andrew Macpherson in Cluny had, with several other Macphersons,
subscribed a bond of manrent, undertaking to maintain and defend the Chief
of Mackintosh, "as it was of old according to the King of Scotland
his gift of chieftainrie of the said Clan Chattan granted thereupon, in
the which they are, and is astricted to serve Mackintosh as their captain
and chief." But such bonds were common instruments of the feudal
centuries for temporary purposes, and did not necessarily mean the
admission of a hereditary right. On the opposite side, in 1665, when the
Mackintosh chief was preparing an expedition to assert his rights to the
lands of Glenlui and Loch Arkaig against the Camerons, he asked the help
of the Macphersons, and to prevent their action being construed into an
admission that he was their chief, he executed a notarial deed declaring
that they did so merely of their own good will and pleasure, and added on
his own part, "I bind and oblige myself and friends and followers to
assist, fortify, and join with the said Andrew, Lachlan, and John
Macpherson, all their lawful and. necessary adoes, being thereunto
required." The trouble with the Camerons having, however, been
settled, Mackintosh proceeded again to assert his chiefship of Clan
Chattan, including the Macphersons. Once already the dispute between the
rival chiefs had been on the point of an appeal to arms. In 1660
Mackintosh had begun to erect a mill, which was likely to injure one
belonging to Macpherson of Cluny lower on the same stream. The fiery cross
was sent through the Macpherson country, and Clan Vurich rushed to arms,
stimulated by a traditional prophecy that at this time a great battle
should be fought between the rival clans. The Mackintoshes and Macphersons
faced each other at the site of the proposed mill. There Mackintosh,
finding himself inferior in numbers, sent for help, first to the chief of
the Grants and afterwards to the chief of the Farquharsons, but both of
these chiefs refused to take arms against their neighbour Macpherson. In
the end Mackintosh drew off his men, the Macphersons demolished the
half-built mill, and its erection was finally abandoned.
In 1672, to end the
dispute, Duncan Macpherson of Cluny applied for and obtained from the Lord
Lyon the matriculation of arms as "the laird of Cluny Macpherson and
the only and true representer of the ancient and honourable family of Clan
Chattan." He proceeded, however, to carry the assertion of his rights
too far. The Lyon Office had admitted him to be Chief of Clan Chattan. He
now undertook under an order of the Privy Council to be responsible for
the good behaviour of all the holders of his name; then, to protect
himself, issued a requisition to landowners of his name in Badenoch to
give him letters of relief undertaking to answer to him for the good
behaviour of themselves and their own people. These gentlemen, not being
his feudal vassals, naturally resented the assumption of feudal authority,
and appealed against it to the Privy Council, and that body thereupon
released him from his bond of cautionary and required him only to become
responsible for his own tenants and servants and the persons of his name
descended from his family, while the Laird of Mackintosh was required to
become responsible, among others for such of the name of Macpherson as
might be his feudal vassals. Further, at the instance of the Laird of
Mackintosh, the Lord Lyon withdrew Cluny’s previous matriculation of
arms, and granted him a coat as a cadet of the Mackintoshes. The right to
use supporters, the heraldic sign of chiefship, was also denied him, and
it was not till 1873 that this right was conceded by the Lyon Office, the
person to whom it was conceded being the late Ewen Macpherson of Cluny,
who succeeded in 1817 and died in 1885.
Meanwhile the Macpherson
chiefs paid little attention to the ruling of the Lord Lyon. In 1673 Cluny
signed a contract of friendship with Macdonald of Glengarry "for
himself and taken burden upon him for the haell name of Macpherson and
some others called Old Clanchatten as cheefe and principall man
thereof." It is true that in 1724, on consideration of receiving from
the Mackintosh chief certain lands about Loch Laggan, the chief of the
Macphersons signed an agreement renouncing in favour of Mackintosh all
claim to be chief of Clan Chattan; but this deed is open to the suggestion
that it refers only to the more modern Clan Chattan confederacy, which
originated with the heiress Eva and Angus Mackintosh in 1291. There can be
little doubt that if the descent from Muirich, parson of Kingussie, is
authentic, Macpherson of Cluny is the actual heir-male of the older Clan
Chattan chiefs, and since the battle of Invernahavon the existence of a
chiefship of the Macphersons can never really have been in doubt.
It was the chief, Duncan
Macpherson, who had the transactions with the Lord Lyon, who in 1680 at
last procured from the Marquess of Huntly the permanent ownership of Cluny,
which had been possessed by his ancestors only as removable tenants. At
the revolution in 1689, when Viscount Dundee opened his campaign in
Scotland for King James, Cluny Macpherson was commissioned by the Estates
to call together all the friends, kinsmen, vassals, and tenants under his
command or influence, and reduce them into troops, companies, or a
regiment, with power to name his inferior officers. Upon his death without
male descendants in 1722 the representation passed to Lachlan Macpherson
of Nuid, and it was he who signed the deed of 1724 above mentioned. In
1704 he married Jean, daughter of the famous Sir Ewen Cameron of Lochiel,
and from this pair the later Cluny Macphersons have descended.
Lachlan Macpherson of Cluny lived till
1746, but it was his eldest son Ewen who figured so conspicuously as the
Cluny Macpherson of the Jacobite rebellion of 1745. Only a short time
previously had occurred the tragic incident of the Black Watch, which is
one of the most pathetic in Scottish military history. The regiment, which
had been enrolled to keep order in the Highlands, was marched to London,
and a rumour spread that, contrary to its terms of enlistment, it was to
be sent abroad. Suddenly and secretly the whole body set off for the
north, but they were intercepted in Northamptonshire and marched back to
the Tower. After trial many of them were banished to the Colonies, and
three were shot, of whom two were Macphersons. This event had produced a
strong feeling among the clansmen against the Government of King George.
Before the landing of Prince Charles Edward, Cluny Macpherson had been
granted a commission in Lord Loudon’s regiment, but at the outbreak of
the rebellion in 1745 he was captured by the Jacobites, and, shortly after
the battle of Prestonpans, threw in his lot on the side of the Stewarts.
With a hundred and twenty Macphersons he took part in the march to Derby,
and at Clifton, during the retreat, it was he and his men who bore the
chief brunt of the Hanoverian attack. During the winter Macpherson and his
clan were allowed by the Prince to. remain at home, and they were only on
their way to rejoin the Prince’s army when at Dalmagerry, near Moy, they
were met by news of the defeat at Culloden.
Had Cluny with his six
hundred men reached the field in time it may well be believed they might
have changed the fortunes of that day. As it was, the issue meant ruin for
the chief. In the months which ensued his seat at Cluny was burned and his
estate was forfeited. For some months he lived with his cousin, the
younger Lochiel, in the famous hiding-place known as the cage on Ben
Alder, where for a time he afforded shelter to the hunted Prince himself;
[You can read this account here on pages 97
& 98 of the account of
Bonnie Prince Charlie] and when Charles finally left for France he
confided his military chest to the chief, and gave him a letter
acknowledging his services and promising reward. For nine years Macpherson
lived in caves and other hiding-places among his own people, whose
affection for him may be judged by the fact that none was ever tempted by
the Government reward to betray him. During these years, in 1750, his
wife, a daughter of the notorious Simon, Lord Lovat, gave birth to his son
and heir in a kiln for drying corn. When at last Macpherson escaped to
France in 1755 he carried with him the Prince’s military chest
containing a considerable sum of money, which he had preserved intact, and
his name remains among the most highly honoured of those who took part in
the unfortunate Jacobite cause.
Duncan Macpherson, the
chief born in the corn kiln, became Colonel of the 3rd Regiment of Foot
Guards, and the forfeited estates were restored to him in 1784. He married
Catherine, daughter of Sir Ewen Cameron of Fassifern, another famous
Jacobite, and died in 1817. His son Ewen was made a Companion of the Bath
in 1881. He died in 1885, having been chief of the Macphersons for
sixty-eight years, and the representation of the family has since been
held in succession by his three sons, Duncan, Ewen, and Albert, the last
of whom is the present chief.
Cluny Castle, Macpherson’s
seat, is a handsome modern building a few miles south-west of Kingussie.
Its chief treasures are several highly interesting relics of the clan and
of Prince Charles Edward Stewart. Among these last is the Prince’s
target, lined with leopard skin and richly and beautifully mounted with
silver trophies and ornaments. There are also the Prince’s gold-inlaid
pistols, and silver-mounted sealskin sporran, as well as his lace ruffles
given to Cameron of Fassifern, the farewell autograph letter already
mentioned, and a plate from which it was intended to print notes for the
use of the Jacobite army. Another relic is the Bratach-uaine, or green
banner of the clan, regarding which an old woman is said to have told the
Duke of Cumberland that if he awaited its arrival he would certainly meet
defeat. The Crios Breac, again, is a leathern belt of red morocco with
silver studs representing the Agnus Dei and head of St. John alternately,
and believed to have been brought from the Holy Land by one of the early
chiefs. But perhaps the chief treasure of the house is the Feadun Dhu or
Black Chanter of Clan Chattan, which is said to have fallen from heaven to
supply the loss of the chanter used by the piper who played in the famous
battle of the " Threttie against Threttie " on the North Inch in
1396, and on the preservation of which the prosperity of the house of
Cluny is believed by every true clansman to depend.
Of other famous members of
the Clan, two have been noted for their connection with Indian affairs.
Sir John Macpherson, Bart., began life as a writer in the service of the
East India Company at Madras in 1770, was dismissed for his conduct on a
secret mission to this country for the Nabob of the Carnatic, but was
reinstated in 1781. He was twice a member of the British Parliament,
became a member of the Supreme Council of Calcutta in 1782, and was
Governor General of India from 1785 to 1786, when he was created a
baronet.
Sir Herbert Taylor
Macpherson, as a Major-General of the Bengal Staff Corps, served under
Havelock at Lucknow, where he gained the V.C. in 1857. He commanded a
division in the Afghan War of 1878, was made K.C.B. in 1879, was present
at Tel-el-Kebir in 1882, and was Commander-in-Chief at Madras in 1886,
when he was sent to organise the pacification of Burma.
A more interesting
character than either, however, was Sir AEneas Macpherson, the historian
of the clan. Born in 1644, he became successively a writer and advocate,
and was Sheriff Depute of Aberdeen in 1684-5. As a Jacobite, after the
revolution he suffered imprisonment at home, and afterwards attached
himself to the court in exile at St. Germains, where he appears to have
been active as a confidential agent. Besides his history of the clan he
was the author of various interesting pamphlets and other papers, which
were printed by the Scottish History Society in 1902.
Most famous perhaps of all
was James Macpherson, the young tutor to Ross of Balnagown, who began by
collecting fragments of Gaelic poetry in the Highlands, and published
between 1760 and 1764 the famous translations of Ossian, which have given
rise to the greatest literary controversy the world has ever seen, and
which, whatever their authenticity, played a vital part in the origin of
the great Romantic movement in literature which followed their time. As a
historian, a pamphleteer, and a civil servant Macpherson acquired a
handsome fortune, and, returning to Scotland, purchased an estate of the
old clan lands on the Spey below Kingussie, where he built a fine mansion
named Belleville or Balavil. One of his daughters married the famous Sir
David Brewster, Principal of Edinburgh University, and their grandson, Mr.
Charles Julien Brewster-Macpherson, is the owner of Balavil at the present
day.
Rawlins Cross - MacPherson's Lament (Live) Performed live at the 2008
A-Channel New Years Eve celebrations at Halifax's Grand Parade, this tune is
probably our best known instrumental and one we've been playing regularly
since the very early days of Rawlins Cross. MacPherson, as the legend goes,
was a fiddler and a folk hero who was wrongfully hanged by the authorities
of the day. Please excuse the wonky tuning on the pipes and whistle here...
the weather was playing havoc with Ian's wind instruments!
MacPherson's Lament: Gordonstoun FREESTYLE
The
name Macpherson is ecclesiastical in origin, deriving from Duncan, Parson of Kingussie in
the 15th century, himself a descendant of Muriach, chief of Clan Chattan in 1173. Clan
Chattan was a confederation of clans united under one chief. Clan Macpherson originally
had their home in Badenoch but some time later settled in the Hebrides. There appears to
be several families of Macphersons but the family of Cluny emerged as the most important.
The Macphersons are mentioned in the Roll of Broken Clans in the Act of Parliament of
1594. Members of the clan were staunch supporters of the Stuart cause and although
involved in the last Jacobite Rising, they arrived too late to take part in the major
action at Culloden. Had they done so, they might well have encountered some of their
namesake among the Argyll Militia who were fighting on the Hanovarian side. After that
disaster, the house of Cluny was burned to the ground and for nine years the chief
remained in hiding on his own estate. In spite of a reward of Ł1000 he was never captured
and ultimately escaped to France in 1755. The Cluny estates were forfeited but restored in
1784. Cluny Castle was rebuilt but following the death of the 17th chief, the estate was
sold, although several acres have been settled in perpetuity as a clan rallying ground. As
a result of a legal battle at the close of the 17th century between the respective
chiefs of the Macphersons and Mackintoshes the former was stripped of the chiefship of
Clan Chattan which was given to the Mackintosh chief. To this day, a cadet of the
Mackintoshes is chief of Clan Chattan.