SEAFORTH, earl of,
a title (attainted) in the peerage of Scotland, conferred by James VI.
3rd December 1623, on Colin, second Lord Mackenzie of Kintail, to him
and his heirs male. He married Lady Margaret Seton, third daughter of
the first earl of Dunfermline, high-chancellor of Scotland, and had by
her two daughters. Having no male issue, at his death, 15th April, 1633,
his titles devolved upon his brother of the half-blood, George, second
earl of Seaforth.
This nobleman was one of
those who were opposed to the unconstitutional and high-handed attempt
of Charles I. to establish English episcopacy in Scotland. In 1639 he
joined a large body of the Covenanters assembled north of the Spey, who
were placed under his command. For the purpose of opposing their
advance, the Gordons crossed the river, but an agreement was entered
into between both parties that, on their repassing the Spey, Seaforth
and his men should also retire to their own country. Soon after, on
receipt of a dispatch from the earl (afterwards marquis) of Montrose,
containing the intelligence of the pacification of Berwick, he disbanded
his army, and returned home.
In February 1645, when
Montrose, then opposed to the Covenanters, was laying waste part of
Moray, a committee of the estates, consisting of the earl of Seaforth,
his brother the Hon. Thomas Mackenzie of Pluscardine, the laird of Innes,
Sir Robert Gordon, and others, was sitting at Elgin. On hearing of his
approach, they went notice through the town, by beat of drum,
prohibiting the holding of the fair annually kept there on Fastren’s
eve, lest the property brought into the town for sale might be seized by
Montrose’s soldiers. They also sent a deputation to treat with him, but
he refused to enter into any negotiation. Before, however, his answer
could be received, most of the gentry assembled in Elgin had fled from
the town in consequence of his rapid advance. The earl of Seaforth
remained, and, with his brother, Mackenzie of Pluscardine, Sir Robert
Gordon, the lairds of Grant and Findrassie, and several other gentlemen,
joined his ranks. On his departure from Elgin, on the 4th March, they
accompanied him across the Spey. He then allowed them to return home to
defend their estates, first exacting from them a solemn oath of
allegiance to the king. At the same time he made them come under an
engagement to return to him with all their forces as soon as they could
do so. The earl, notwithstanding, again went over to the Covenanters. In
a letter which he wrote to the committee of estates, at Aberdeen, he
stated that he had yielded to Montrose through fear only, and he avowed
that he would abide by “the good cause to his death.” (Spalding, vol.
ii. p. 301.) A detachment from the garrison of Inverness sent out to
take vengeance on those gentlemen who had joined Montrose, having
entered Elgin, took prisoners there, Mackenzie of Pluscardine and his
brother the Hon. Simon Mackenzie of Lochslin, and carried them to
Inverness, but they were soon released by the intercession of the earl,
who was suspected of having connived at their arrest. In June 1646, his
lordship was excommunicated by the General Assembly, for having joined
the marquis of Montrose. After the execution of the king in 1649, he
repaired to Charles II. in Holland, and was nominated by him principal
secretary of state for Scotland. He accompanied the king to Scotland,
and with Huntly, Athol, Middleton, and others, entered into a “bond and
oath of engagement,” in behalf of the king, and the maintenance of the
true religion, as then established in Scotland, the national covenant,
and the solemn league and covenant. This being sent to General Leslie by
Middleton, a negotiation was begun, which was concluded, on the 4th
November 1650, at Strathbogie, agreeably to a treaty between Leslie and
the chief royalists, by which the latter accepted an indemnity and laid
down their arms. The earl died, soon after, in 1651. By his countess,
Barbara, eldest daughter of Arthur, ninth Lord Forbes, he had, with two
daughters, two sons, Kenneth, third earl, and the Hon. Colin Mackenzie,
whose son, George Mackenzie, M.D., a physician practicing at Edinburgh,
was author of the Lives and Characters of the most eminent writers of
the Scots nation, in 3 vols. Folio.
In the beginning of 1650,
a royalist rising took place in the north, under the Hon. Thomas
Mackenzie of Pluscardine, brother of the earl of Seaforth, Sir Thomas
Urquhart of Cromarty, Col. John Munro of Lumlair, and Colonel Hugh
Fraser. At the head of a number of their friends and followers, they
entered the town of Inverness, on the 22d February, expelled the troops
from the garrison, and demolished and razed the walls and fortifications
of the town. They asserted that the parliament had sent private
commissioners to apprehend them, but the fact appears to be that the
insurrection took place at the instigation of Charles II., then at the
Hague, between whom and Pluscardine a correspondence had been previously
opened. General David Leslie was sent to the north with a force to
suppress the insurgents, and, on his approach, they fled to the
mountains of Ross. Urquhart, Munro, and Fraser, speedily entered into
terms, but Pluscardine would listen to no accommodation. Being obliged
to proceed into Athol, Leslie left a garrison in the castle of Chanonry,
and also three troops of horse in Moray, to watch his motions. On his
departure, Pluscardine descended from the mountains and attacked the
castle of Chanonry, which he retook. He was, thereupon, joined by his
nephew, Lord Reay, at the head of 300 men. He was also joined by Lord
Ogilvy and General Middleton, who induced him to advance southward into
Badenoch, where they were joined by the marquis of Huntly, and took the
castle of Ruthven. A portion of his men were surprised and defeated by
Leslie at Balveny, and Pluscardine and the rest, on giving security to
keep the peace, were allowed to return to their homes. In the Scots army
which invaded England under Charles II., and was defeated at Worcester
in 1651, the laird of Pluscardine was one of the colonels of foot for
Inverness and Ross.
Kenneth, third earl of
Seaforth, the elder son of the second earl, was excepted out of
Cromwell’s act of grace and pardon, 1654. His estate was forfeited, and
he was imprisoned till the Restoration. He had a commission of the
office of sheriff of Ross, 23d April 1662, renewed to him and Kenneth,
Lord Kintail, his elder son, 31st July 1675. He died in December 1678.
By his countess, Isabel, daughter of Sir John Mackenzie of Tarbat,
baronet, sister of the first earl of Cromarty, he had, with two
daughters, two sons, Kenneth, fourth earl, and the Hon. John Mackenzie
of Assynt.
Kenneth, fourth earl, was
nominated one of the knights of the Thistle on the revival of that order
by James VII. in 1687, and sworn a privy councilor. At the Revolution he
adhered to King James, and according to Douglas’ Peerage he followed him
to France and attended him to Ireland. He afterwards returned home, and
undertook to join Major-general Buchan at Inverness with a body of the
northern clans. On the approach of General Mackay to Inverness, after
the skirmish of Cromdale in 1690, the earl sent two gentlemen of his
clan to him, to endeavour to make his peace with the government. They
stated that although in honour he was bound to make appear as if he
favoured King James, they were authorized to assure him that he had
never entertained any design either of molesting the government or of
joining Major-general Buchan in his intended attack of Inverness, and
they offered, on the earl’s part, any security that might be required
for his peaceable behaviour in future. In reply, Mackay declared that no
security short of the surrender of the earl’s own person, as a prisoner,
would satisfy him, and that if he failed to comply, his territory would
be destroyed by fire and sword. Thereafter, Mackay was waited upon by
the earl’s mother, the countess-dowager of Seaforth, and Mackenzie of
Coul, who brought him a letter from the earl, stating that he would
accede to such conditions as might be agreed upon between them. It was
accordingly arranged that the earl should deliver himself into Mackay’s
hands, to be kept as a prisoner at Inverness till the privy council
should decide as to his future disposal, and to conceal this arrangement
from the Jacobite party, it was farther agreed that the earl should
allow himself to be seized as if by surprise, by a party of horse under
Major Mackay, at one of his seats during the night. The earl, however,
disappointed the party sent to apprehend him, in excuse for which, both
he and his mother, in letters to Mackay, pleaded the state of his
health, which they alleged would suffer from imprisonment. Irritated at
the deception practiced upon him, Mackay resolved to visit the earl’s
vassals “with all the rigour of military execution,” and accordingly
sent orders for a large body of men, to be placed under the command of
one Major Wishart, who was to harry the upper part of the earl’s
country, while Mackay himself, with his cavalry and three battalions of
foot, intended to lay waste the lower parts. Having, however, a warm
feeling for the earl’s friends, on account of their being “all
Protestants, and none of the most dangerous enemies,” as he says, and
being more desirous to obtain possession of the earl’s person than to
ruin his followers, he caused information of his intentions to be sent
to Seaforth’s camp, by some of his own party, as if from a feeling of
friendship to him. Contrary to Mackay’s anticipation, Seaforth
surrendered himself, and was committed prisoner to the castle of
Inverness. Mackay was directed by the privy council, by warrant, dated
7th October 1690, “to transport the person of Kenneth, earl of Seaforth,
with safety from Inverness to Edinburgh, in such way and manner as he
should think fit.” In consequence, he was entered a prisoner within the
castle of Edinburgh, on 6th November following, whence he was liberated
on 7th January 1692, on finding caution to appear when called upon. He
was bound not to go ten miles beyond Edinburgh. He was again imprisoned,
but made his escape, and was apprehended at Pencaitland on 7th May 1692,
and again kept in close confinement, within the castle of Edinburgh. He
was afterwards liberated, on giving security for his peaceable
behaviour. (Records of the Privy Council). He subsequently went to
France, and was by the exiled monarch created marquis of Seaforth. He
died at Paris in January 1701. By his countess, Lady Frances Herbert,
second daughter of the marquis of Powis, he had, with one daughter, two
sons, William, fifth earl, and the Hon. Colonel Alexander Mackenzie.
William, fifth earl,
engaged in the rebellion of 1715, and joined the earl of Mar at Perth,
with the northern clans, about the beginning of November of that year.
His march was at first impeded by the earl of Sutherland, at the head of
a considerable number of his own men, and of the Mackays, Rosses,
Monroes, and others, but he compelled them to disperse, and at Alness,
where he took up his quarters, he collected a large quantity of booty
from the lands of the Monroes. After spending some days there, he
proceeded to Perth with about 3,000 foot and 800 horse, having left a
sufficient force behind to protect his own country, and keep the loyal
clans in check. He was at the battle of Sheriffmuir, and afterwards was
dispatched to the north, for the purpose of collecting forces, and of
attempting the reduction of Inverness, which important town had been
captured for the government by a party of the Frasers, Grants, and
others, under the command of Simon Fraser of Beaufort, afterwards the
celebrated Lord Lovat. The earl afterwards retired into the island of
Lewis, where he collected a considerable body of his men. A detachment
of government forces under the command of Colonel Cholmondeley, was sent
against him, and on the appearance of this force, the earl crossed into
Ross-shire, whence he escaped to France. He was attainted by act of
parliament, and his estates forfeited. In April 1719, with the marquis
of Tullibardine and the earl Marischal, he landed in Kintail,
Ross-shire, with a party of Spaniards, and was joined by some
Highlanders, chiefly of his own clan. He was dangerously wounded in an
engagement with the government soldiers at Glensheil, in which he
commanded the Highlanders, and was carried on board a vessel by his
followers. With Marischal, Tullibardine, and the other officers, he
retired to the western isles, and thereafter escaped to France. Although
his estates were forfeited, so strong was the attachment of his clan,
particularly the Macraes and Maclennans, to his person and family, that
government found it impossible to collect the rents, and for some years
they were regularly went to the chief himself in his exile in France.
After the passing of the disarming act in 1725, General Wade, who had
proceeded to Inverness, for the purpose of carrying it into execution,
was waited upon by a body of about 150 gentlemen of the name of
Mackenzie, headed by Lord Tarbet, Sir Colin Mackenzie of Coul, and Sir
Kenneth Mackenzie of Cromarty. On the part of Seaforth’s tenants and
vassals, they stated that they would not give up their arms till they
knew how they were to be received; that their rents had for several
years been uplifted by Daniel Murdochson, the earl’s factor or servant,
and that they were not able to pay them a second time, but if they were
discharged of these rents, they would pay them in future to the
government, deliver up their arms, and live peaceably. Wade, who,
according to Lockhart, was “a good enough tempered man,” at once acceded
to this request, and told the deputation that if the clan performed what
had been promised, he would endeavour, in the next session of
parliament, to procure a pardon for Seaforth and his friends. After
being well entertained for two or three days at Inverness, the
deputation, accompanied by Wade and a small body of dragoons, went to
Castlebran, where the arms of the clan were delivered up, but not until
Murdochson had secreted all those of any value. (Lockhart Papers, vol.
ii. p. 196).
Wade seems to have been
as good as his word, for by letters patent, dated 12th July 1726, the
earl was by George I. discharged from the penal consequences of his
attainder, so far as imprisonment or the execution of his person was
concerned, and King George II. made him a grant of the arrears of feu
duties due to the crown out of his forfeited estates. He died in the
island of Lewis, 8th January 1740.
The eldest son, Kenneth,
Lord Fortrose, was chosen M.P. for the Inverness burghs in 1741, and for
Ross-shire in 1747 and 1754. During the rebellion of 1745-6, he showed
the utmost zeal in favour of the government. He died at London, Oct. 19,
1761, and was buried in Westminster Abbey. By his countess, Lady Mary
Stewart, eldest daughter of the 6th earl of Galloway, he had a son,
Kenneth, and six daughters. Mary, the 2d daughter, the 2d wife of Henry
Howard, Esq. of Arundel, had a son, General Kenneth Alexander Howard,
who, on the decease, without issue, of Richard Howard, 4th earl of
Effingham, in the peerage of England, Dec. 11, 1816, succeeded him as
11th Lord Howard of Effingham, and in 1838 was created earl of Effingham
in the peerage of Great Britain.
Kenneth Mackenzie, Lord
Fortrose’s only son, born at Edinburgh, January 15, 1744, purchased his
grandfather’s forfeited estate from the crown. He was created Baron
Ardelve and Viscount Fortrose in the peerage of Ireland, in 1766, and
earl of Seaforth, in the Irish peerage, in 1771. In 1778, he raised the
78th regiment, called Seaforth’s Highlanders, afterwards the 72d.
Appointed colonel, he accompanied the regiment to the East Indies, but
died on the passage in August 1781. By his countess, Lady Caroline
Stanhope, eldest daughter of the 2d earl of Harrington, he had one
daughter, Lady Caroline Mackenzie, married to Count Melford. As the earl
died without male issue, his titles became extinct, and his estates were
purchased by his cousin and heir-male, Colonel Thomas Frederick
Mackenzie Humberston, grandson of Hon. Colonel Alexander Mackenzie, 2d
son of Kenneth, 4th earl of Seafield. Colonel Mackenzie Humberston, with
4 daughters, had an only son, Major William Mackenzie, who married Mary,
only daughter of Matthew Humberston, a gentleman of an ancient family,
Lincolnshire, and had three sons and three daughters.
Colonel Thomas Frederick
Mackenzie Humberston, the Major’s eldest son, born in 1754, assumed the
surname of Humberston, on succeeding to that estate. Having raised a
battalion of foot, he embarked with it in spring 1781, for the East
Indies, with the rank of lieutenant-colonel. Appointed to a separate
command on the Malabar coast, he took the city of Calicut, as well as
every other place of strength in the kingdom. Tippoo Saib proceeded
against him, but was repulsed, and on attempting to force the fort of
Panami held by Humberston, defeated with great slaughter. In 1782 Col.
Humberston served with distinction under General Matthews against Hyder
Ali, and on that officer being superseded by Col. Macleod, accompanied
the latter from Bombay, in April 1783, when he sailed to assume the
command. Falling in with a squadron of large ships of war belonging to
the Mahrattas, their small vessel was attacked and taken possession of,
after a desperate engagement, in which the greater number on board were
killed. Among the wounded was Col. Humberston, who died of his wounds at
Gerish, a seaport of the Mahrattan, April 30, 1783, aged 28.
_____
SEAFORTH, Baron, a
title in the peerage of Great Britain, conferred in 1797, on Francis
Mackenzie Humberston, brother of Colonel Thomas Frederick Mackenzie
Humberston, above mentioned, whom he succeeded, on his death in April
1783, in his estates of Seaforth and Humberston. In 1784, he was elected
M.P. for Ross-shire, and in 1790 re-chosen. In 1792, letters of service
were issued to him to raise a regiment, and the Ross-shire Highlanders
were, accordingly, embodied, 10th February 1793. Of this corps, the
first regiment raised in the war against revolutionary France, he was
appointed lieutenant-colonel commandant. It was numbered the 78th, being
the same number as that of the regiment raised by the last earl of
Seaforth in 1779. In 1794, a second battalion was raised by him. Mr.
Humberston was appointed lord-lieutenant of Ross-shire, and created a
British peer, by the title of Lord Seaforth, Baron Mackenzie of Kintail,
to him and the heirs male of his body, 26th October 1797. Having
resigned the command of the 78th foot, his lordship was, in 1798,
constituted colonel of the Ross-shire regiment of militia. In November
1800, he was appointed governor of Barbadoes, and early the following
year he sailed for that island. During his administration a planter
having killed one of his own slaves, was tried for the murder, and
acquitted, the law considering that such an act was not murder. When
proved, which was very seldom the case, the crime was punishable only by
a fine of £15 currency. Lord Seaforth resolved to put an end to the
practice of slave-killing, which was not unfrequent on the island. He
procured an act from the Barbadian legislature making it felony to kill
a slave, and, thereupon, sailed to England, to obtain for it the
sanction of the crown. Soon after his return, another slave was killed
by his owner. The latter was tried, convicted, and sentenced to be
hanged for murder, under the new act. At the time appointed, the
condemned prisoner was brought out for execution, but so strong was the
public feeling against the new law that the ordinary executioner was not
to be found. The governor then required the sheriff to perform his
office, either in person or by deputy, but, after some excuses, he
absolutely refused. His lordship then addressed the guard of soldiers,
stating that “whoever would volunteer to be executioner should be
subsequently protected, as well as rewarded then.” One presented
himself, and it thenceforth became as dangerous to kill a slave as a
freeman in Barbadoes. His lordship’s introduction of this law rendered
him very unpopular in Barbadoes, and he quitted that island in 1806. In
1808 he became lieutenant-general in the army. He died 11th January
1815, in his 60th year. With six daughters, he had four sons, all of
high promise, who all predeceased him. His eldest daughter, the Hon.
Mary Frederika Elizabeth, married at Barbadoes, in November 1804, Sir
Samuel Hood, K.B., one of the commissioners for Trinidad, elected M.P.
for Westminster in 1806. After his death she took for her second husband
Mr. Stewart Mackenzie. Referring to Lord Seaforth’s death and his having
outlived the last of his sons, Sir Walter Scott, in a letter to Mr.
Morritt, M.P., dated 19th January 1815, says, “What a pity it is he
should have outlived his promising young representative. His state was
truly pitiable; -- all his fine faculties lost in paralytic imbecility,
and yet not entirely so but that he perceived his deprivation as in a
glass darkly. Sometimes he was fretful and anxious because he did not
see his son; sometimes he expostulated and complained that his boy had
been allowed to die without his seeing him; and, sometimes, in a less
clouded state of intellect, he was sensible of, and lamented his loss in
its fullest extent.” He then refers to a prophecy that when there should
be a deaf Caberfae, the house of Seaforth should fail. The chief of the
clan Mackenzie was called Caberfae in the Celtic, from a stag’s head
forming the crest of the family. It is stated in a note to the above
passage in Lockhart’s Life of Scott, (Edition in 1 vol. 8vo, 1845, p.
307), that the prophecy alluded to, is also mentioned by Sir Humphrey
Davy in one of his Journals. “It connected the fall of the house of
Seaforth not only with the appearance of a deaf Caberfae, but with the
contemporaneous appearance of various different physical misfortunes in
several of the other great Highland chiefs; all of which are said – and
were certainly believed both by Scott and Davy – to have actually
occurred.” Mr. Morritt “heard the prophecy quoted in the Highlands at a
time when Lord Seaforth had two sons both alive and in good health – so
that it certainly was not made après coup.” In Scott’s Poetical Works,
(p. 647, Ed. 1841), are some verses on Lord Seaforth’s death. His eldest
daughter, the Hon. Mrs. Stewart Mackenzie, succeeded to the family
estates. |