IT will not be considered
strange that I should be unable to refer to many events in the history
of the distant isle. From a letter addressed by Sir Roderick Macleod,
alias “Rory More,” to Lord Binning, and dated “Dunvegane, 18th of June
1615,” it appears that a raid was made on St Kilda towards the beginning
of that year, by a certain Coll Macgillespick, son of Sir James
Macdonald (of the family of Colonsay), and father of Alister Macdonald,
lieutenant to the Marquis of Montrose during the civil wars. The
adventurous invader was popularly called “Coll Keitach,” or Left-handed
Coll, from. which his son Alister took the designation of “McColl
Keitach,” abridged to Colkitto. After referring to an accident which he
met with at Stirling, in the month of April, during a visit to the south
of Scotland, Sir Roderick informs his correspondent' that, “in the mean
tyme of my absence, Coill Makgillespick and his companie come (from
Islay) to the north illes, and stopped the first night at the yle of
Carnis (Canna?), and thereafter passed directlie to North Wyest, Donald
Gorme his lands, where he was reseat (received), and his men enter-teaned;
and Mackintoshe’s dochtor, Donald Gorme’s wyff, beeing for the tyme in
that countrey, togidder with young Donald Gorme, Makkenyee’s
good-brother, send to the said Coill, being scant of vivers, four horse
lead (load) of meat, in the witche there wes two swyne, one salted and
one unsalted; and the said Coill and his com-panie wes perswaded, moved,
and requested by the said Donald Gorme’s wyff and young Donald and clann
Neill vaine, the special tenants of North Wyest, to pass to a yle of
myne called Zirta, a day and a night sailing from the rest of the north
yles, far out in the ocean sea, and to that effect directed two of the
tenants of North Wyest to be there guyd and pylat there, for they wer
unknowen thameselves there. And coming to the ylle, they slew all the
bestiall of the ylle, both cowes, and horses and sheep, and took away
all the spoolyee of the yle, onlie reserved the lyves of the enhabitants
thereof. And when all wes done, they returned to North Wyest againe,
where they randered there guyde and pyllats againe, and gave to the
enhabitants thereof all and whole the spoyle of my yle. And afore my
comeing to the yles, the said Coill Mak-gillespick passed away south to
I la againe."
The letter concludes with
a commendation of Lord Binning “ to God’s most holie tuition,” and is
signed “ Zor lo. homble servitor at powar, Sr Rorie Makcleud.”
It is not a little
singular that, twenty-six years later (1641), the same Coll
Macgillespick again found his way to St Kilda, in the capacity of a
refugee, “having made himself obnoxious to the law.” In briefly alluding
to the circumstance, Macaulay speaks of him as “ Colonel ” instead of
Coll Macdonald. The event, however, is more fully described by Buchan,
who informs us that “ Coll Macdonald alias Ketoch being defeat in
battle, losing his right hand, and his army, which he had raised for the
Popish interest, routed, was forced with a few to flee for his life; and
getting his foot in a vessel, comes to land in St Kilda, whom, when the
inhabitants saw, they run away from him and his men into a cave in some
remote corner of the island, where they thought they might be most safe
from him, whom they thought to be an enemy come to destroy them; but he
sending some few of his men after them, told them of his friendly
designs, and he himself, advancing gradually, enforces what his men had
said, by telling them he had no hostile design against them, and that
though he had, he was not in condition to effect it, since he wanted the
right hand (showing them the stump); so pulling out his mull, and giving
them a snuff, with which, and some other significations of kindness,
they came to be delivered of their former fears; so that he lived in
safety and quietness with them for the space of three quarters of a
year.” It further appears that on his finding that the inhabitants were
not properly instructed in the Lord’s Prayer, Decalogue, and Creed, Coll
rebuked the priest, whom his flock wished to depose; but when the matter
was referred to Coll for his adjudication, he solemnly declared that he
had never heard of a priest being deposed for ignorance!
In alluding to the
hospitality of the natives of St Kilda, Martin mentions the wreck of “a
company of French and Spaniards” at Rokol in the year 1686. It appears
that they came in a pinnace to St Kilda, where they were plentifully
supplied with barley-bread, butter, cheese, solan geese, eggs, etc.
“Both seamen and inhabitants were barbarians one to another, the
inhabitants speaking only the Irish tongue, to which the French and
Spaniards were altogether strangers. Upon their landing, they pointed to
the west, naming Rokol to the inhabitants; and after that they pointed
downward with their finger, signifying the sinking and perishing of
their vessel; and they showed them Rokol in the sea-map, far west off St
Kilda. This, and much more, the masters of these ships told to a priest
in the west island, who understood French.” The author further states
that the pinnace which carried the seamen from Rokol was so low that the
crew added a foot of canvas all round, and began to work at it on
Sunday, much to the annoyance of the inhabitants, who plucked the
hatchets and other instruments out of their hands, and did not restore
them till Monday morning.
The same year (1686)
there was an earthquake on the island of Borrera, which lasted only a
few minutes, and “was very amazing to the poor people, who never felt
any such commotion before or since.”
About the year 1695, “a
cock-boat came from a ship for water, being favoured with a perfect
calm.” The crew discovered an endless number of eggs upon one of the
adjacent islets; and, having secured a liberal supply, one of the seamen
was “so careful as to put them into his breeches, which he put off on
purpose for this use! Some of the inhabitants of St Kilda happened to be
in the isle that day. A parcel of them were spectators of this
diversion, and were offended at it, being done without their consent;
therefore they devised an expedient which at once robbed the seamen of
their eggs and breeches. They found a few loose stones in the
superficies of the rock, some of which they let fall down
perpendicularly above the seamen, the terror of which obliged them
quickly to remove, abandoning both breeches and eggs for their safety;
and those tarpaulin breeches were no small ornament there, where all
wore girded plaids! ”
Towards the end of the
seventeenth century, a native of St Kilda, called Roderick, pretended to
have been commissioned by John the Baptist “with new revelations and
discoveries.” Immediately after landing, on-the 1st of June 1697, Martin
and his companion, the minister of Harris, proceeded to examine the
inhabitants regarding the doings of the false prophet; and one and all
of them expressed their abhorrence of the miserable delusions and
immoral deeds which he had practised for several years. Martin describes
him as “a comely, well-proportioned fellow, red-haired, and exceeding
all the inhabitants of St Kilda in strength, climbing, etc.;” and
although, like the rest, “illiterate,” he had the reputatipn of being a
poet, and of being endowed with the faculty of second-sight Besides a
very strict fast on Fridays, he imposed a number of extraordinary
penances upon the simple-minded inhabitants; commanded every family to
slaughter a sheep upon the threshold of their houses; forbade the use of
the Lord’s Prayer, Creed, and Ten Commandments; and privately taught the
women a “devout hymn,” assuring them that if they fully complied with
the new revelation they would be carried to heaven upon white horses!
His villanous designs were at length discovered by the ground-officer’s
wife, and ultimately his influence entirely disappeared. In due course
he was carried off by Martin and the minister of Harris to that island,
and afterwards removed to Skye, where he made a public confession of his
false teaching and wicked acts.
About the year 1724 a
“contagious distemper” swept away the greater part of the inhabitants of
St Kilda. According to Macaulay, the distemper in question was smallpox,
by which one of the islanders was seized during a visit to Harris, where
he died. “Unluckily one of his friends carried his clothes away next
year, and these, it is thought, communicated the infection at Hirta.” He
further informs us that very few escaped the visitation, only four
adults surviving out of twenty-four families, with the burden of twenty
- six orphans. Their lives appear to have been providentially spared, in
consequence of their having gone to one of the adjacent islands for the
purpose of catching gannets; and owing to the “universal confusion and
mortality ” which ensued at home, and their boat having been brought
back to St Kilda before the distemper assumed an epidemic form, the
fowlers were obliged to be absent from about the middle of August till
the following Whitsunday. Macaulay states that smallpox had never
previously visited St Kilda; and up to the publication of his work in
1764 the disease had not again appeared in the island.
The most painfully
interesting event connected with the history of St Kilda is doubtless
the story of Lady Grange’s enforced confinement on the lonely rock. It
is embraced in a comparatively recent communication to the Society of
Scottish Antiquaries by Dr David Laing, who enumerates the principal
accounts of the abduction. Rachel Cheisley, daughter of the assassin of
Sir George Lockhart of Camwath, Lord President of the Court of Session,
and sister of Major Cheisley of Dairy, near Edinburgh, married, about
the year 1709, the Hon. James Erskine of Grange, second son of Charles,
tenth Earl of Mar, who in 1707 was raised to the Scottish bench under
the title of Lord Grange, and became Lord Justice-Clerk three years
afterwards. After a matrimonial career of upwards of twenty years,
resulting in a family of eight children, they agreed to live apart; and
shortly afterwards, on the plea that she might prove a dangerous spy
upon his proceedings, Lord Grange resolved upon his wife’s removal from
Edinburgh. As usually happens in such cases, there appear to have been
faults upon both sides; and as, in those primitive days, discordant
couples were unable to resort to the peaceful procedure of the Divorce
Court, the suspicious husband took the law into his own hands, and, with
the aid of a party of Highlanders, he succeeded in getting the poor
woman carried off in a most brutal manner, a little before midnight of
the 22d of January 1732. It is generally believed that the notorious
Lord Lovat was a party to the transaction, although he boldly denies
having been concerned in it, in a curious letter from which an extract
was given by Dr Laing. She was transported, by successive night
journeys, to the island of Hesker, near Skye, where she was detained for
two years. In 1734 she was conveyed to the still more remote island of
St Kilda, and after spending about eight years in that desolate region,
was removed, through the instrumentality of her friends, to Assynt, in
the county of Sutherland, and thence to the island of Skye, where she
ended her unhappy life in May 1745. Dr Laing’s paper was illustrated by
several autographs, of which the most curious is a letter addressed by
the unfortunate woman to the Lord Advocate (Charles Erskine), afterwards
Lord Tinwald and Lord Justice-Clerk, dated “St Kilda, Jan. 20, 1738,”'in
which she gives an account of her treatment. A facsimile of a portion of
the letter, embracing the date and signature, accompanies Dr Laing’s
original communication. At a still more recent date (May 14, 1877), Dr
Laing favoured the Society of Antiquaries with a notice of another
original letter, addressed by Lady Grange to her husband, in July 1730,
in which she meekly says: “Since you are angry with me, and will not
live with me, I promise that if you’ll allow me a hundred pounds yearly,
. . . and if you’ll drop the process of separation you have raised
against me, ... I will retire and live by myself for five years from the
date hereof.”
Mr John Lane Buchanan
erroneously asserts that Lady Grange terminated her miserable life at St
Kilda. He states that a poor old woman told him that when she served her
there “ her whole time was devoted to weeping, and wrapping up letters
round pieces of cork, bound up with yarn, to try if any favourable wave
would waft them to some Christian, to inform some humane person where
she resided, in expectation of carrying tidings to her friends at
Edinburgh.” He also mentions that her detention at St Kilda would never
have been heard of had Lady Grange not prevailed on the minister’s wife
to go to Glenelg for the purpose of posting a letter concealed under her
clothes, which thus found its way to her friends.
A more recent writer (Mr
L. Maclean) informs us that on the occasion of his visit to St Kilda in
1838, he inspected the ruins of the hut occupied by Lady Grange,
accompanied by the grandson of Finlay M‘Donald, who attended her in her
exile. It measured about twenty feet by ten, and, like the rest of the
cottages, was divided in the centre by a partition of rude loose stone.
“In one of these apartments sat Finlay M‘Donald every night for seven
years, and Lady Grange in the other,—for she never slept at night. . . .
She had acquired the Gaelic tolerably well, and took pleasure in
listening to the native tales and romances of Finlay. Through the day
she slept, except when she took a solitary ramble to converse with grief
and the roaring ocean. Finlay had made for her a seat of twisted straw—a
luxury in St Kilda. This seat she carried with her when she went,
leaving twelve shillings with Finlay in lieu of it." Contrary to the
statement of Mr Maclean, which he makes on the authority of his guide,
Mr Sands says that she never learned Gaelic. He adds that the house in
which she lived was demolished a few years ago, that it belonged to the
steward, and was exactly like the existing old cottages, but a little
larger. “ A dearth happened to prevail during the whole time she
remained on the island ; but she got an ample share of what little food
there was. The best turf was provided for her fire, and the spot where
it was got is still called the Lady’s Pool.”
My friend Captain Thomas
has recently sent me a poetical “Epistle from Lady Grange (under the
name of “Matilda”) to Edward D-, Esq., written during her confinement in
the island of St Kilda,” and published in Edinburgh in 1799. In the
“advertisement” prefixed to the poem—which extends to nearly 350
lines—the author states that the “hint” on which the epistle is founded
occurs in the reference to Lady Grange’s exile in Boswell’s ‘Journal of
a Tour to the Hebrides/ and that “ the additional circumstances
introduced are mere fictions of the imagination.” The general tone of
the epistle is very warm and passionate. The simple and guileless
maidens of St Kilda remind the unhappy exile of the bright scenes of her
childhood; and in the pathetic allusions to her later career, she
introduces the “unpitying father,” the “reluctant wife,” and the “fell
tyrant,” to whose tender mercies she had been heartlessly consigned. The
following allusion to her sea-girt prison, and the avocations of the
islanders, occurs towards the middle of the poem. The “rocky plain" the
“straggling ivy,” and the “cormorant’s downy nest,” are good examples of
the “fictions of the imagination.”
“Far from the crimes and
follies that I trace,
Kind Nature holds me ’midst her favourite race.
—Escaped the severed world by happy stealth,
A skiff their navy, and a rock their wealth,
Rough as the stormy element they brave,
Fearless they ride upon the heaving wave.
For them the ocean rears her finny store,
And rustling legions cloud the darkening shore :
Pure from the rock the dimpling fountains play,
And wind and glitter to the orient ray;
Nor haughty Wealth, with proud contemptuous sneer,
Nor Poverty, the child of Wealth, is here.
When now the morning trembles o’er the main,
Brown Labour calls them to the rocky plain;
With patient toil each tills his little spot,
And Freedom pours contentment on their lot.
O’er the steep rock, with straggling ivy drest,
Clambering, they seek the cormorant’s downy nest.
As up the fractured crevices they wind,
They mark their dwindled partners far behind.
When the sun, sinking in the western deep,
Resigns the world to night and balmy sleep,
O’er the high cliff their dangerous trade they urge,
Below, tremendous roars the boiling surge;
As pendent from the straining cord they play,
I mark their slow-descending form decay.
The solan birds are hushed in deep repose,
Fearless of danger from their hovering foes.
The sentinel betrayed, no signals fly,
And the death-fated squadrons gasp and die.
Till scared, the remnant start with hollow croak,
And, wildly wheeling, mourn their plundered rock.
When gathering clouds the blackening sky deform,
And sweeping whirlwinds swell the heaving storm,
While far at sea their solitary skiff,
The faithful matrons climb the shelving cliff;
With tears of love and anguish heaven implore,
To guide the labouring bark to Kilda’s shore.
Each marks her shroudless husband, pale aghast,
Rise from the deep, and ride the driving blast.
—The storm is hushed, the prospering breezes play,
They mark the whitening canvas far away:
With faithful hearts (the only wealth they boast),
They hail the storm-tossed nation to the coast.
Up springs the jovial dance, the festive lay,
And night repays the labours of the day.”
After the departure of
Lady Grange about the year 1742, a wide gap seems to occur in the annals
of St Kilda; at least I am unable to record any event of the smallest
importance during the long period of eighty-five years. The day after my
return from St Kilda (3d July 1877) I had an interview at Obbe with
Donald M'Kinnon, precentor in the parish church of Harris, who is a
native of St Kilda, and whose brother still resides on the island. He is
an intelligent man of about sixty years of age, and, inter alia, he
related the two following incidents :—
Somewhere about fifty
years ago (1827), the “ Laird of Islay” landed at St Kilda from his
yacht, and falling in love with a girl called Marion Morison, promised
to return, for the purpose of marrying her, in the course of a year.
This he duly did in a vessel carrying a few small guns, the sight of
which so alarmed the inhabitants that they took refuge among the rocks,
and the faithful suitor, like “Young Mivins” of ‘Bon Gualtier,’ was
obliged to depart, a disappointed bachelor! The girl composed a “Lament”
in commemoration of the event, the tune of which the precentor hummed.
He heard her sing the air, and distinctly remembers her appearance, and
her “ long, flowing hair.” A somewhat similar occurrence is said to have
taken place very recently; and at the present moment, something more
than a tendresse is believed to exist between the latest male sojourner
in St Kilda, and one of its comely, fair-haired maidens, whose name I
must forbear to disclose.
About Christmas 1839, the
“Charlotte” of Hull, Captain John Bremman (?), was wrecked on the islet
of “Rockhall,” about 200 miles due west of St Kilda, to which reference
has already been made in connection with a previous catastrophe of the
same kind. Eighteen of the crew found their way in a boat to a cave in
the west bay of St Kilda, where they remained for two days and nights,
and were ultimately discovered by a herd-boy who happened to notice the
boat in the neighbourhood of the cave from the summit of an adjacent
cliff. M'Kinnon descended with the aid of a rope, and brought up the
mariners one by one, after which they were taken round by the natives,
in their own boat, to the village on the east bay, where they were
clothed, housed, and fed by the islanders. After remaining on St Kilda
for eleven days, M'Kinnon accompanied them in their boat to the island
of Pabbay, in the Sound of Harris, whence they went to Portree. They
left their boat with M'Kinnon, who sold it for about £g, and returned to
St Kilda in another. The captain promised to see that the St Kildans1
should be liberally remunerated for their hospitality and assistance,
but they never received a farthing! This is probably the same event
which is referred to by Mrs M'Vean of Killin, in her ‘ Reminiscences of
St Kilda.’1 She states that “ a party of English sailors were once
shipwrecked on the uninhabited part of the island, .where they remained
for a whole day and night without discovering that it was peopled. At
last they saw a woman coming across the hill to the glen in which they
were; and as soon as she observed the strangers, she rushed away in the
greatest alarm. She did not fail, however, to send some men to ascertain
who they were, when it was discovered that one of the poor fellows had
broken his leg, and was in great pain. He was carried, as gently as
possible, to the nearest hut and lowered into one of the odious
wall-beds. The poor sailor afterwards told the minister that ‘ he
thought the savages were lowering him into a well! ’ Fortunately, Mr
M'Kenzie was able to set the broken limb, having previously had a good
deal of experience in surgical cases, connected with accidents in
fowling expeditions.”
Mrs M'Vean alludes to the
impression produced upon the islanders by the first appearance of a
steamboat.
Roma. I have occasionally
met with St Kildaites, but never with St Kildese, which the phraseology
of a celebrated southern island might seem to justify,—Malta—Maltese.
Greatly alarmed by the
unwonted sight, they rushed into the manse to inform the minister that
“a ship on fire” was approaching their shores! Their terror and
amazement was not a little increased by the music of a brass band on
board the vessel; and when the passengers landed, all the inhabitants
fled to the rocks, except a few of the bravest of the male sex, who
anxiously watched the movements of the strangers.
During the last twenty
years, the remote island has been occasionally visited by Government
steamers, private yachts, and other vessels. In July 1860, the Duke of
Athole and Mr Hall Maxwell accompanied Captain (afterwards Admiral)
Otter in H.M.S. “ Porcupine,” and remained two days on the island. It is
said that the Duke partook of the “ brew” made from the flesh of the
fulmar, and that he slept on the floor of one of the cottages, which is
still pointed out as his place of shelter. About a fortnight after the
Duke’s sojourn, Captain and Mrs Thomas visited St Kilda in the same
vessel, and were three days on shore. Shortly after the departure of the
“ Porcupine,” Mr John E. Morgan, author of the article in ‘Macmillan’s
Magazine ’ already referred to, touched at St Kilda in the “Falcon”
cutter yacht of 25 tons, and, along with a friend, spent six hours on
the island.
In June 1861 (and in the
same month ten years later), the census of St Kilda was taken by Mr
Alexander Grigor, lately Examiner of Registers for the Northern District
of Scotland. On the former occasion he was conveyed to the island in the
“ Porcupine,” and in 1871 in the “Jackal” gunboat.
In the summer of 1863,
Mrs Thomas again accompanied Captain Otter to St Kilda in the gunboat
“Seagull,” and spent about twenty hours on shore. Not many weeks before
their visit, an event occurred which spread a painful gloom over the
little island. In the year 1861, a fine large boat, fully equipped, and
which cost about £60, was sent to St Kilda, with the view of encouraging
the inhabitants to extend their fishing operations. This boat was named
the “Dargavel,” in honour of Mr Hall Maxwell’s visit to the island the
previous year. Early in April 1863, the boat left St Kilda in a
favourable wind, with seven men and one woman on board, and when last
seen from the heights of the island, was careering onward at a rapid
speed. Towards night the wind changed to the south, blowing very hard,
and it was supposed that the little craft must have gone out of its
course, several miles to the north of the Sound of Harris. Nothing more
was known regarding the lamentable occurrence, except the loss of the
boat and all its occupants, as was supposed to be clearly indicated by
certain articles of clothing cast ashore at Maelsta, on the west coast
of Lewis. The sad intelligence was conveyed to the islanders by three
London smacks, about a month after the disappearance of the boat; and it
is unnecessary to add that the sorrow produced among the surviving
friends by the announcement was of no ordinary kind. Mr Sands mentions
that the three skippers came on shore, where they played “quoits” with
flat stones, and mocked the poor natives when they gave expression to
their grief. The catechist (Mr Kennedy) did not think of noting the
names of the smacks; but the islanders assert that the crews belonged to
London, and that one of their number could speak Gaelic. Towards the end
of May, some of the clothes of the missing men, “torn as if in a
scuffle,” were brought to St Kilda by the factor (Mr M'Raild), who
informed the inhabitants that they “ had been found in a cave in Lewis;
” and on the occasion of his first visit, Mr Sands heard some of the St
Kildans express their belief that the lost crew had been murdered. At
the time of the occurrence, however, Sir John Macleod, then proprietor
of the island, caused an investigation to be made in Lewis, but without
eliciting any information. Three of the seven men were married, and
besides their widows, left seven children. The other four were skilful
fowlers, in the prime of life, and were survived by mothers, sisters,
and other dependent relatives. The boat contained cloth, salt-fish, and
other native produce to the value of upwards of £80, as well as some
money in notes, which the owners wished to exchange for gold. The
solitary female passenger was Betty Scott, wife of Malcolm M‘Donald, and
a native of Lochinver, in Sutherlandshire, who went to the island as
servant to the Rev. Neil Mackenzie. With the exception of Mr Kennedy,
the catechist, she was the only islander who could speak English; and
being in other respects intelligent and superior, was sometimes called
the “Queen of St Kilda.” Unlike the Orcadians, the St Kildans are not
good sailors, and the want of nautical skill was probably the chief
cause of the disaster. A crew of about the same number visited the “
Long Island ” the previous year in the same boat, and were nearly lost
in the neighbourhood of Balranald, North Uist. On that occasion also
they had a good deal of produce, which they sold to advantage.
A remarkable circumstance
connected with the loss of the “Dargavel’’ has lately caused a
considerable amount of excitement both in St Kilda and the “Long
Island.” Towards the end of 1875 a letter was received by the minister
of Harris from a firm in the Transvaal Republic, in which it was stated
that Donald M'Kinnon, supposed to be one of the missing crew, had
recently died of fever, at Pilgrim’s Rest, Lydenburg gold-fields,
leaving property amounting to about £40, which it appears has been
lodged in a bank at Stornoway. If the deceased was really the Donald
M'Kinnon of the “ Dargavel,” it certainly seems strange that he should
never have written to acquaint his father and other relatives in St
Kilda of his fate. On the assumption that he actually survived till
1875, it is of course quite possible that others of the crew may be
still alive; and possibly the question relative to the identification of
the deceased may require to be settled by the law courts. It is,
however, reported that it has now been proved, to the satisfaction of
the authorities in South Africa, that the Donald M'Kinnon who died at
Pilgrim’s Rest was a native of Lewis, and not of St Kilda.
On the night of 7th April
1864, after beating about for several days in very dense fog, the ship
“Janet Cowan” of Greenock, 831 tons burthen—Captain James M'Kirdy —on
her passage from Calcutta to Dundee with a cargo of jute, was wrecked on
the rocks of St Kilda. Encouraged by the calmness of their captain, the
entire crew contrived to leave the disabled vessel in their boats; but
owing to the darkness of the night, and the heaviness of the surf, they
were compelled to lie off the island till the following morning. At
daybreak only the poop of the vessel was to be seen; and as no
landing-place could be discovered near the wreck, the crew rowed round
the island, and about ten o’clock found a point on the northeast side,
where they managed to land and to haul up their boats. None of the
inhabitants being visible, they resolved to traverse the island in
detached parties in hopes of finding some of the natives, which they
succeeded in doing in the course of the day. They afterwards made more
than one attempt to recover something from the wreck, but all that could
be saved was a cask containing a few pieces of meat, from the forward
part of the ship. The gale continued for several days, and on the 10th
the captain observed from one of the cliffs that only the bow remained
upon the rocks. After being seven days on the island, although it was
still blowing fresh, feeling that he and his crew were proving a heavy
burden on the supplies of the islanders, Captain M'Kirdy resolved to
make an attempt to reach the mainland; and having procured the loan of
an open fishing-boat, the shipwrecked mariners embarked, at 5 a.m. of
the 14th April, some in the borrowed boat, and the rest in one of the
ship’s boats, and steered for Lewis, the wind being from the south. When
about half-way across, as the ship’s boat seemed likely to be swamped by
the heavy sea which the captain was obliged to take the fishing-boat,
and to cut being towed astern. About the island of Scarp, off nd
re-embarking next h Tarbert in Harris, .nd made their way to course of
the summer inhabitants a supply of :fs, along with a purse and crew,
besides pay-hing-boat to the island, I may mention Mr Bouverie
Primrose, secretary to the Board for Manufactures, etc.; Mr Walker of
Bowland, Chairman of the Board of Supervision; the Rev. Eric J.
Findlater of Lochearnhead, on three different occasions; Captain
Macdonald of the Fishery cruiser “Vigilant;” the Commissioners of
Northern Lighthouses in the “Pharos;” Sir William and Lady Baillie of
Polkemmet, with the late Mr Baird of Cambusdoon, in August 1874; Sir
Patrick-Keith Murray in his yacht “Crusader,” in July 1875 ; Dr
Murchison of Harris, on two occasions, during the same year; Lord and
Lady Macdonald, in the yacht “Lady of the Isles,” accompanied by Miss
Macleod of Macleod, the Rev Archibald M'Neill, minister of Sleat, and Mr
Macdonald, Tormore, on the 15th of June 1877; and the pleasant party, of
which I had the good fortune to form one, in the s.s. “Dunara Castle,”
245 tons, on the 2d of July 1877. Probably the longest sojourner in St
Kilda, with the exception of Lady Grange and the various ministers and
catechists, is Mr John Sands of Ormiston, who first spent seven weeks on
the island in 1875—from 3d June to 19th July, when he was taken off in
the yacht “Crusader;” and, secondly, eight months in 1876-77—from 21 st
June to 2 2d February, when he got a passage in the gunboat “ Jackal,”
as afterwards mentioned. Towards the beginning of the present year, the
captain and eight of the crew of the Austrian barque “Peti Dubrovacki,”
880 tons, en route from Glasgow to New York, spent about five weeks in
St Kilda, at the close of Mr Sands’s second sojourn. On the 17th of
January, Mr Sands was startled by the appearance of a boat in the bay.
Accompanied by some of the natives, he hastened to the shore, and at a
certain point of the rocks where there seemed to be less surf than
elsewhere, the islanders threw ropes to the occupants of the boat, who,
however, declined to be drawn ashore. Putting about his craft, the
captain made for the shore in front of the village, and the foreigners
forthwith leapt into the water and swam to land, where they were
received by the natives. In the course of a few minutes the boat was
dashed to pieces on the rocks. The disabled vessel lay on her beam-ends,
about eight miles west of St Kilda. She was not visible the day
following, and doubtless went to the bottom with the seven members of
the crew who had remained on board. The rescued mariners were billeted
among the islanders, the minister taking charge of the captain, and were
most hospitably treated. An attachment is said to have sprung up between
one of the foreigners and a damsel of St Kilda, and although neither
understood the language of the other, they both fully comprehended the
signs and tokens of love. The scene at parting was of the most affecting
character. On the 30th of January, a life-buoy belonging to the lost
ship, with a small sail and bottle containing a letter attached to it,
was launched from the island, in the hope of its reaching some civilised
portion of the kingdom. With the aid of the Gulf Stream it drifted to
Birsay in Orkney, and was forwarded to Lloyd’s agent in Stromness on the
8th of February. On the 17th of February—a month after the shipwreck—the
Austrian skipper made a bargain with the natives to be taken along with
Mr Sands, in their own boat, to Harris. While they were patiently
awaiting the advent of settled weather, H.M.S. “Jackal”appeared in the
bay, on the morning of the 22d, having been despatched in consequence of
the tidings received at Stromness; and the Austrians and Mr Sands were
forthwith conveyed to Greenock. Within ten days of their arrival, the
Austro-Hungarian vice-consul at Glasgow published the following letter
from the captain of the lost barque; and a subsequent representation to
his Government resulted in the transmission of ;£ioo from Vienna to the
Board of Trade, for behoof of the “warm-hearted islanders:”—
“Captain Chersonaz, on
behalf of himself and the other survivors of the ill-fated vessel *Peti
Dubrovacki,* lately wrecked near the island of St Kilda, wishes to
express, in this the only way that lies in his power, his warmest thanks
to the inhabitants of that island for the gallant manner in which they
afforded immediate assistance to them in their distressed condition, and
for the generous hospitality displayed towards them. Even when
provisions became scarce, the natives shared what they had, and did
everything in their power to make their enforced stay comfortable.
“Captain Chersonaz also
begs to acknowledge, with deepest gratitude, the humanity and
promptitude of the Government in despatching the steamer “Jackal” to
their rescue; and desires to convey to the commander, officers, and crew
of that steamer his keen sense of the very kind and hospitable treatment
he and his companions received at their hands whilst on board. This was
all the more welcome in consequence of the destitute condition in which
they were found, having lost everything with the exception of the
clothes they had on.
Signed “Basilio Chersonaz,
“Late captain of the Austro-Hungarian barque
The facts relative to the
ecclesiastical history of St Kilda will be found in a subsequent
chapter. |