The Earl of Seaforth, having engaged in the Rebellion
of 1715, and been included in the subsequent Act of attainder, forfeited
his estate and title. His grandson, Kenneth Mackenzie, repurchased the
property from the Crown, was created an Irish Peer by the title of Lord
Viscount Fortrose, and, in the year 1771, restored to the ancient title
of the family, as Earl of Seaforth. In gratitude for these favours, he
made an offer to his Majesty, in the year 1778, of raising a regiment on
his estate, which in former times had been able to furnish 1000 men in
arms whenever the Chief required their service. Whether in poverty and
exile, or in possession of rank and fortune,
Seaforth experienced no difference of respect, or disinterested and
effectual support. [An instance of this will
be seen in the Appendix, volume first, where 400 of
Lord Seaforth's followers, or rather those who had been so when
he was in possession of his estate and
honours, marched to Edinburgh, to lodge a sum of money,
part of their rents, to be remitted to his Lordship when in exile
in France in 1732.] On
the present occasion, the offer was accepted, and, in the month
of May of that year, 1130 men assembled at Elgin, immediately after Lord
Macleod's Highlanders had marched to the
south. They were principally raised by gentlemen of
the clan of "Caber Fey," as the Mackenzies are called,
from the stag's horns on the armorial bearings of
Seaforth. [The arms and crest of the
Mackenzies were assumed in consequence of Kenneth, the ancestor of the
family, having rescued Alexander II. King of
Scotland, from a wounded stag, which had attacked him. The animal,
furious from pain, ran in upon the King, threw him down, and would have
gored him on the spot, had it not been for the prompt assistance of
Kenneth Fitzgerald, who, happening to be in sight, run up, and
dispatched the deer. In gratitude for this assistance, the King gave him
a grant of the castle and estate of Ellen Dounan, and thus laid the
foundation of the family and clan Mackenneth, or Mackenzie, so called
from the name of their ancestor, who was an Irishman, by birth. The
crest is a stag's head and horns. It is a curious circumstance that the
last Lord Seaforth's life should have been endangered in the same manner
as that in which the first of the family saved the King's. Lord Seaforth
was attacked by a hart in the parks of Brahan Castle; but, being a
powerful man, and possessed of great strength of arm, he closed on the
animal, and, seizing him by the horns, pressed his breast against the
deer's forehead. A long and desperate struggle
ensued, till he was relieved by a game-keeper, who was attracted to the
spot by the bellowing of the hart. His Lordship was bruised; but not
materially injured. The late Mr West painted the rescue of King
Alexander. The figures are portraits, in full size, of persons on the
Seaforth estate, his Lordship being one of the number. Mr West told me,
the last time I saw him, that he considered this painting the best of
his earlier pieces.] After
being reviewed at Elgin, they marched southward for embarkation.
Of this number, 500 men were from Lord Seaforth's own
estate, and about 400 from the estates of the Mackenzies of Scatwell,
Kilcoy, Applecross, and Redcastle, all of whom had sons or brothers in
the regiment. The officers from the Lowlands brought upwards of 200 men,
of which 43 were English and Irish.
The clan of Macrea had long been faithful followers
of the Seaforth family, and, on this occasion, the name was so general
in the regiment, that it was known more by the name of the Macreas than
by any other. So much was this the case, that a memorable, but too
common occurrence in Highland corps, which took place in Edinburgh, is
still called in Scotland "The affair of the Macreas." This unfortunate
misunderstanding proves the absolute necessity of preserving the utmost
fidelity in transactions, or engagements, with soldiers. Independently
of the dishonour that attaches to all breaches
of promise, it is quite evident that the evils of the example are great
and manifold, and that, according all the known principles of human
nature, fidelity cannot be expected from those
who believe themselves to have been deceived.
In the month of June the corps was inspected by
General Skene, and embodied under the denomination of Seaforth's
Highlanders, or the 78th regiment. The whole were found so effective,
that not one man was rejected. There being several supernumeraries, they
were formed into a recruiting company, a measure the more necessary, as
the corps was ordered for the East Indies, which destination was much
more fatal to troops at that time than now, when the voyage is shortened
by less than one-half, the quality of the provisions much improved, and
the accommodation allowed, in ships employed as transports, greatly
enlarged.
In the month of August the regiment marched to Leith
for embarkation ; but on its arrival there the men began to show
symptoms of dissatisfaction. The transactions that took place on this
occasion I have noticed in another place. [See
Appendix - Mutinies of the Highland Regiments.] It is sufficient
here to remark, that, after full attention was paid to their claims, the
men embarked with much cheerfulness, and with a more complete
re-establishment of their confidence, as their Colonel, the Earl of
Seaforth, was to accompany them on service.
The intention of sending them to India having been
postponed, they landed in Guernsey and Jersey in equal divisions,
whence, at the end of March, they were removed to
Portsmouth, where, on the 1st of May 1781, they embarked for the
East Indies, amounting to 1110 rank and file, all in high health, and
well disciplined. But however hardy their constitutions, and however
capable of active exertions on land, they did not withstand the diseases
incident to a voyage of eleven months, in bad
transports, and living on food so different from that to which they had
been accustomed. Lord Seaforth died, suddenly, before they reached St
Helena, to the great grief and dismay of his poor Highlanders, who
looked up to him as their main sup-port. The loss of their Chief [The
sudden and unexpected death of this spirited nobleman made a deep
impression on the minds of his faithful followers, who knew that it was
on their account alone he had determined to forego the comforts of a
splendid fortune and high rank to encounter the privations and
inconveniences of a long voyage, in a Newcastle collier fitted up as a
transport, and the dangers and fatigues of service in a tropical
climate. He was succeeded in his estate, and in the command of the
regiment, by his cousin, Colonel Humberstone Mackenzie, of the 100th; on
whose death, in 1783, his brother, Francis Humberstone Mackenzie, the
late Lord Seaforth, succeeded to the family estate.] was
naturally associated in their thoughts with the recollections of home,
with melancholy remembrances of their absent kindred, and with
fore-bodings of their own future destiny; and so strong was this.
feeling, that it was believed to have materially contributed to that
prostration of mind, which made them succumb: more easily to the effects
of disease.
Before they reached Madras, on the 2d of April 1782,
2S0 men had died of the scurvy; and out of 1100 who had sailed from
Portsmouth, only 390 men were fit to carry arms when they were landed.
The pressure of the service not admitting of delay, those who were able
to march were moved up the country under the command of Major James
Stuart, and joined the army under Sir Eyre Coote, in the be- ginning of
May, at Chingleput. Many still being weak from the effects of the
scurvy, and more liable to be affected by the heat on account of the
impure state of their blood occasioned by the salt provisions, on which
they had so long subsisted, they suffered extremely on this march. "This
regiment was composed of men sinewy and robust, which rendered them much
more susceptible of the sun's violence than those of more slender
habits." [Colonel Munro's India.]
General Coote found them so unfit for active service,
that he ordered the corps into quarters, leaving the
few who were healthy attached to the 73 or Macleod's Highlanders,
the only European corps then with the army. In the month of October the
health of the 78th was so much established, that upwards of 600 men were
fit for duty, and ever afterwards they preserved their health and
efficiency in a remarkable manner. The colours, which had been laid up,
were again unfolded; and, in April 1783, the regiment joined the army
under Major-General James Stuart for the
attack of Cuddalore, as has already been noticed in Lord Macleod's
Highlanders. [As there were two officers of
the same name on this service, it may be mentioned, that Major-General
James Stuart was of the family of Torrance, and brother
of Andrew Stuart, the author of the celebrated Letters to Lord
Mansfield. Colonel James Stuart was of the family of Blairhall, and died
a Lieutenant-General, and Colonel of the corps he had so long commanded.]
This army consisted of the 73d and 78th Highlanders, and the 101st
regiment, with a considerable body of Native troops, and was
subsequently reinforced by a detachment of Hanoverians under Colonel
Wagenheim. On the 6th of June, the army took up a position on sandy
ground two miles distant from the garrison, with its right on the sea,
and the left resting on the Bandipollum hills, having a second line in
reserve in the rear. The enemy, commanded by Monsieur Bussy, assumed an
intermediate position, nearly parallel, and half a mile in front of the
fort. On the 13th of June a general attack was made on the enemy's
position in front of the garrison. After a severe conflict, which lasted
from four o'clock in the morning till near five in the evening, the
enemy were driven from their principal defences, on their right; when a
cessation of firing took place as if by mutual consent. It was the
intention of General Stuart to renew the attack next morning, but the
enemy retired within the garrison in the course of the night. In this
affair, the 78th lost Captain George Mackenzie, and 23 rank and file,
killed; and 3 sergeants, and 44 rank and file, wounded.
On the 25th of June, the enemy made a sally on the
British lines, but were repulsed at every point, losing 150 men in
killed and prisoners, including, among the latter, the Chevalier de
Dumas, who is said to have been inconsolable because he was not wounded;
probably wishing to found upon that circumstance a good excuse for his
capture. [Among the wounded French prisoners
was a young sergeant, whose ap-pearance and manners attracted the notice
of Colonel Wagenheim, who took him to his tent, and treated him with
much kindness, till he recovered, and was released. Many years
afterwards, when the French army, under General Ber-nadotte, entered
Hanover, General Wagenheim attended his levee. He was immediately
accosted by Bernadotte, who asked him if he recollected a wound-ed
French sergeant to whom he showed kind attention at Cuddalore. After
some recollection, the General answered, that he did remember a very
fine] young man of that description, but he had lost all sight of him,
and would now be happy to hear of his welfare. " That young sergeant,"
said Bernadotte, "was the person who has now the honour to address you,
and who is happy of this public opportunity of acknowledging, and will
omit no means within his power of testifying, his gratitude to General
Wagenheim."]
Hostilities now ceased with France, but continued
against Tippoo. Colonel Fullarton, who had marched to strength-en the
army before Cuddalore, was ordered again to the southward, being
reinforced by Seaforth's, and the 101st regiment, with some additional
battalions of Native troops; the whole forming an united force of more
than 13,000 men. Colonel Fullarton was occupied with this army for some
months in keeping down some refractory chiefs, and, in October, he moved
on Palacatcherry, seizing, without difficulty, on some intermediate
forts. It will be seen, in the proceedings of the second battalion of
the 42d, in the year 1782, that Colonel Humberstone Mackenzie had made
an attempt on this place, but was induced to desist. The ar-my
encountered much fatigue on their march, during which, a detachment of
Grenadiers and Eight infantry, under the Honourable Captain (afterwards
General Sir Thomas) Mait-land, was extremely useful, by acting on the
flanks, and pre-serving a communication through thick woods and a broken
country. Early in November they reached the place, which was immediately
besieged with such judgment and spirit, that the enemy surrendered on
the 15th; an event accelerated by a gallant dash of Captain Maitland and
his flank corps, who, taking advantage of a shower of rain, from which
the enemy had taken shelter, advanced unperceived by them, and quickly
overpowered and drove them through the first gateway, which they left
open; but the second being shut, Captain
Maitland's farther advance was checked. However, with the same spirit
with which he had ac-nuired this post, he defended it till he was
reinforced, upon which, the enemy became so much alarmed, that they
immediately surrendered a garrison capable of a long defence under more
resolute troops. Leaving a small garrison in the place, Colonel
Fullarton marched back to Ttinchinopoly and Coimbatore.
In the course of this year the regiment was again
unfortunate in the loss of Colonel Humberstone Mackenzie, who died of
wounds received in an action at sea, on the passage from Bombay. [Colonels
Macleod and Humberstone had gone to Bombay, and, on their return in the
Ranger sloop, accompanied by Major Shaw, on the 7th of April 1783,
they fell in with a Mahratta fleet off Geriale. In a vain attempt
to resist so superior a force, the Ranger was taken, and almost every
man on board either killed or wounded. Major Shaw was killed, and
Colonel Humberstone so severely wounded, that he died a few days
afterwards, in his twenty-eighth year, "universally lamented as a young
man of superior accomplishments, and great promise in his profession."
Colonel Humberstone was succeeded in the command
of the regiment by Major-General James Murray, from the half-pay of the
77th regiment.]
In consequence of the peace, the 91st, 100th, and
102d regiments, were ordered home for reduction, in 1784; such of the
men as chose to remain in the country were to receive a bounty of ten
guineas. Seaforth's regiment having been raised on the condition of
serving for three years, or during the war, those of the men who stood
to this agreement, were allowed to embark for England, while those who
preferred staying in the country received the same bounty as other
volunteers. The number of men who claimed their discharge reduced the
regiment to 800 men, but so many Highlanders volunteered of those who
had enlisted with Colonel Humberstone Mackenzie, in the 100th, and the
other regiments ordered home, that the strength of the corps was
immediately augmented to 800 men; and, in 1785, a detachment of 200
recruits, from the North, joined the regiment.
The following year the number was changed to the 72d,
in consequence of the reduction of the senior regiments. Success
continued to attend the recruiting service of this respectable corps.
Another considerable detachment of recruits joined in 1789; so that, in
the year 1790, when war commenced with Tippoo, the 72d, still under the
command of Colonel Stuart, was upwards of 1000 strong, the men being
healthy, seasoned to the climate, well disciplined, and highly
respectable in their moral conduct. In this state they formed part of
the army under Major-General Meadows, in July 1790. Their first service
was under Colonel Stuart, with other troops, ordered to attack
Palacatcherry, which, in the preceding war, had been the scene of
success and disappointment to a corps now destined to sustain a second
disappointment. The detachment being overtaken by the rains, which fell
in almost unprecedented abundance, Colonel Stuart got so entangled among
the mountain streams, that, for a short period, he could neither proceed
nor retire:—when the waters abated he returned to head-quarters.
After a short rest, the same officer, with the same
troops under his command, was again detached against Dindegul, before
which place he arrived on the 16th of August. This is one of those
insulated granite rocks, so common in that part of India. The fort on
the summit had been lately repaired, and mounted with fourteen guns, the
precipice allowing only of one point of ascent. The means of attack,
both in guns and ammunition, were very deficient. However, a small
breach was made on the 20th, and Colonel Stuart, judging that more loss
would be sustained by delay than by an immediate attack, resolved to
attempt an assault, small as the breach was;
as, besides other difficulties, he was short of ammunition. Accordingly,
on the evening of the 21st, the attempt was made. The defences were
unusually complete, and the resistance more firm then had been
experienced on any former occasion. Every man who reached the summit of
the breach was met and forced down by triple rows of pikes from the
interior of the rampart. After a bold, but fruitless effort, they were
repulsed with considerable loss. But the enemy were so intimidated, and
dreaded so much the consequences of a second, and, perhaps, successful
attempt, that they surrendered next morning; ignorant of the want of
ammunition, the real cause of the premature attack.
From this service Colonel Stuart was again directed
to proceed against Palacatcherry, the season being now more favourable
than on the former occasion. The fortifications of this place had been
much strengthened since its capture by Colonel Fullarton in 1783, and
the guns and ordnance stores necessary for the attack were, therefore,
on a more extended scale. On the 21st of September, two batteries were
opened within 500 yards of the place, and, the same day, a practicable
breach was made. Every preparation was completed in the course of the
night for an assault the following morning, but before day-light the
enemy demand-ed terms of capitulation, which were granted, and the usual
protection to prisoners and private property promised and secured.
Colonel Stuart, having left the place well provisioned and in a
respectable state of defence, marched back, and, on the 15th of October,
joined the army in the neighbourhood of Coimbatore. From this period
Colonel Stuart, with his regiment, followed all the movements of the
army, till the 29th of January 1791, when Lord Cornwallis arrived and
assumed the chief command.
In the preceding service and marches, the casualties
of the regiment were few. The subsequent operations of the 72d were,
along with the 71st, in the second attack of Bangalore, the first attack
of Scringapatam, and the attack on Sundidroog and Ootradroog, the fall
of the last of which places was accelerated by the promptitude of
Captain John M'Innes of the 72d, who, being ordered out with a small
party to reconnoitre, and observing a favourable opportunity, turned
this duty into an assault, scaled the walls, and carried the place
without loss.
In the same manner the service of the regiment is
connected with that of the 71st and 75th, in the second attack on
Seringapatarn, and afterwards down to the conclusion of the war with the
Sultan. While this corps, when on service, was under the command of so
respectable and judicious an officer as Colonel Stuart, the Colonel at
home was equally unremitting in his exertions to promote the welfare of
his regiment, and attentive to the promotion of his officers, and the
supply of good and efficient men to support the character of the
regiment. From 1783 downwards, they received a full compliment of
excellent recruits from Scotland. General Murray had established a party
at Perth, whose success was such, that one sergeant enlisted 273 men.
This affords a proof of what may be done, under proper encouragement,
and when men qualified for the duty are employed. When a man of address
and knowledge of human nature meets with proper encouragement,
recruiting has seldom failed in the North.
In the year 1793, the regiment was employed on the
expedition against Pondicherry, and, in 1795, formed part of the force
under their old commander Colonel, now Major-General James Stuart, in
the capture of Ceylon. This was the last service of the regiment in the
East at that period. In 1797, they were removed from Ceylon to
Pondicherry, when orders were received, in December, to draft the
regiment, then 800 strong, into the corps on that station, and for the
officers, non-commissioned officers, and invalids, unfit for service, to
embark for England. This was one of the last instances in the East
Indies of enforcing, as that of the 42d and 79th Highlanders in the West
Indies was the first instance of relaxing the system of drafting and
transferring soldiers without their consent—a system which deprived men
of nearly all hopes of ever revisiting their native land, and every good
soldier of the great incitement to regular conduct. The suppression of
this unfeeling practice encourages him to preserve regular habits, and
to be careful of his constitution, as he has now a prospect of
revisiting his native country, of enjoying the reward of his service,
and that his good character will meet with the approbation of his
friends and countrymen.
The skeleton of the regiment embarked at Madras in
January 1798, and, after a short passage, landed at Gravesend. From
thence they were ordered to Perth, where they arrived in August, under
the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Hugh Fraser, who had gone out the
third eldest Captain, and remained constantly with the regiment. Soon
after they reached Perth, Major-General James Stuart, who had so long
commanded them in India, was appointed Colonel in room of General
Williamson, who had succeeded General Murray in 1794.
During two years that the regiment was quartered in
Perth, recruiting was not successful. Whether it was that the emaciated
appearance of the few permitted to return home, did not hold out much
encouragement to the young men,—or the observation, that none of the
great number of men who had left Perth to join the regiment returned
with it,—or the great drain of men from the Highlands at this period;
from one or other of these causes, or probably from all combined, the
corps did not recruit 200 men in three years. However, when removed to
Ireland in 1802, the ranks were filled up to 900 with young men from the
Scotch Fencible regiments, then reduced. This opportunity was eagerly
embraced by Colonel Macfarlane, who succeeded to the command by the
death of Lieutenant-Colonel Fraser. He was now at the head of an
efficient body of young men, which formed a "fine regiment, possessing
as pure and true a spirit as any corps. One-fourth of the men and
officers were English and Irish, and three-forths Scotch Highlanders;
and, singular as it may seem, the former were as fond of the kilt and
pipes as the latter, and many of them enter-ed completely into the
spirit of the national feeling." And, "in all the solid essential
qualities which form the character of the British soldier, they were
perfect."
This regiment formed a part of the expedition, under
Sir David Baird, against the Cape of Good Hope, on which occasion they
maintained the long established character of the corps. The loss by the
enemy was trifling, being 2 privates killed, and Lieutenant-Colonel
Colquhoun Grant, Lieutenant Alexander Chisholm, 2 sergeants, and 34
privates, wounded.
Agreeably to the general orders of 1809, the
designation of Highland, and the ancient garb, were altered along with
the other corps, and the uniform was the same as that of the line till
the year 1823, when the corps received a new designation of "The Duke of
Albany's Highlanders," and reassumed the plaid and bonnet, but with
tartan trews instead of the kilt or belted plaid.