The name of Drummond may be derived originally
from the parish of Drymen, in what is now the western district of Stirlingshire. The
Gaelic name is Druiman, signifying a ridge, or high ground.
An ancestor of the noble family of Perth thus fancifully interprets the origin of the
name: Drum in Gaelic signifies a height, and onde a wave, the name being given to Maurice
the Hungarian, to express how gallantly he had conducted through the swelling waves the
ship in which Prince Edgar and his two sisters had embarked for Hungary, when they were
driven out of their course on the Scottish coast. There are other conjectural derivations
of the name, but the territorial definition above mentioned appears to be the most
probable one.
The chief of the family at the epoch of their first appearing in written records was
Malcolm Beg (or the Little), chamberlain on the estate of Levenax, and the fifth from the
Hungarian Maurice, who married Ada, daughter of Malduin, third Earl of Lennox, by Beatrix,
daughter of Walter, lord high steward of Scotland, and died before 1260.
Two of his grandsons are recorded as having sworn fealty to Edward the First.
The name of one of them, Gilbert de Dromund, "del County de Dunbretan", appears
in Prynne's copy of the Ragman Roll. He was Drummond of Balquapple in Perthshire, and had
a son, Malcolm de Drummond, who also swore fealty to Edward in 1296, and was father of
Bryce Drummond, killed in 1330 by the Monteiths.
The other, the elder brother of Gilbert, named Sir John de Dromund, married his relation,
a daughter of Walter Stewart, Earl of Menteith, and countess in her own right.
His eldest son, Sir Malcolm de Drummond, attached himself firmly to the cause of Bruce.
King Robert, after the battle of Bannockburn, bestowed upon him certain lands in
Perthshire. He married a daughter of Sir Patrick Graham of Kincardine, elder brother of
Sir John Graham, and ancestor of the family of Montrose. He had a son, Sir Malcolm
Drummond, who died about 1346. The latter had three sons, John, Maurice, and Walter. The
two former married heiresses.
Maurice's lady was sole heiress of Cencraig and of the stewardship of Strathearn, to both
of which he succeeded.
The wife of John, the eldest son, was Mary, eldest daughter and co-heiress of Sir William
de Montefex, with whom he got the lands of Auchterarder, Kincardine in Monteith, Cargill,
and Stobhall in Perthshire. He had four sons, Sir Malcolm, Sir John, William, and Dougal;
and three daughters - Annabella, married, in 1357, John, Earl of Carrick, high steward of
Scotland, afterwards King Robert the Third, and thus became Queen of Scotland, and the
mother of David, Duke of Rothesay, starved to death in the palace of Falkland, in 1402,
and of James the First, as well as of three daughters; Margaret, married to Sir Colin
Campbell of Lochow, Jean, to Stewart of Donally, and Mary, to Macdonald of the Isles.
About 1360, in consequence of a feud which had long subsisted between the Drummonds and
the Menteiths of Rusky, the residence of the family seems to have been transferred from
Drymen, in Stirlingshire, where they had chiefly lived for about two hundred years, to
Stobhall, in Perthshire, which had some years before come into their possession by
marriage.
Sir Malcolm Drummond, the eldest son, succeeded to the earldom of Mar in right of his
wife, lady Isabel Douglas, only daughter of William, first Earl of Douglas. His death was
a violent one, having been seized by a band of ruffians and imprisoned till he died
"of his hard captivity". This happened before 27th May 1403. Not long after his
death, Alexander Stewart, a natural son of "the Wolf of Badenoch", a bandit and
robber by profession, having cast his eyes on the lands of the earldom, stormed the
countess' castle of Kildrummie; and, either by violence or persuasion, obtained her in
marriage. As Sir Malcolm Drummond had died without issue, his brother, John, succeeded
him.
John's eldest son, Sir Walter Drummond, was knighted by King James the Second, and died in
1455. He had three sons: Sir Malcolm his successor; John, dean of Dunblane; and Walter of
Ledcrieff, ancestor of the Drummonds of Blair-Drummond (now the Home Drummonds, Henry
Home, the celebrated Lord Kames, having married Agatha, daughter of James Drummond of
Blair-Drummond, and successor in the estate to her nephew in 1766); of Cairdrum; of
Newton, and other families of the name.
The eldest son of the main stem, that is, the Cargill and Stobhall family, Sir Malcolm by
name, had great possessions in the counties of Dumbarton, Perth, and Stirling, and died in
1470. By his wife Marion, daughter of Murray of Tullibardine, he had six sons. His eldest
son, Sir John, was first Lord Drummond.
Sir John, the eldest son, was a personage of considerable importance in the reigns of
James the Third and Fourth, having been concerned in most of the public transactions of
that period. He died in 1519.
By his wife, lady Elizabeth Lindsay, daughter of David, Duke of Montrose, the first Lord
Drummond, had three sons, and six daughters, the eldest of whom, Margaret, was mistress to
James the Fourth. Malcolm, the eldest son, predeceased his father. William, the second
son, styled master of Drummond, suffered on the scaffold.
William had two sons, Walter and Andrew, ancestor of the Drummonds of Bellyclone. Walter
died in 1518, before his grandfather. By Lady Elizabeth Graham, daughter of the first Earl
of Montrose, he had a son, David, second Lord Drummond, who was served heir to his
great-grandfather, John, first lord, 17th February 1520. Of his two sons, Patrick, the
elder, was third Lord Drummond; James, the younger, created, 31st January 1609, Lord
Maderty, was ancestor of the viscounts of Strathallan.
Patrick, third Lord Drummond, embraced the reformed religion, and spent some time in
France. He died before 1600. He was twice married, and by his first wife, Elizabeth,
daughter of David Lindsay of Edzell, eventually Earl of Crawford, he had two sons and five
daughters.
The elder son, James, fourth Lord Drummond, passed a considerable portion of his youth in
France, and after James the Sixth's accession to the English throne he attended the Earl
of Nottingham on an embassy to the Spanish court. On his return he was created Earl of
Perth, 4th March 1605. John, the younger son, succeeded his brother in 1611, as second
Earl of Perth.
The Hon John Drummond, second son of James, third Earl of Perth, was created in 1685
Viscount, and in 1686 Earl of Melfort; and his representative Captain George Drummond, duc
de Melfort, and Count de Lussan in France, whose claim to the earldom of Perth in the
Scottish peerage was established by the House of Lords, June 1853, is the chief of the
clan Drummond, which, more than any other, signalised itself by its fidelity to the lost
cause of the Stuarts.
Another Account of the Clan
BADGE: Lus mhic
Righ Bhreatinn (thymis syrpillum) mother of
thyme.
PIBROCH: Spaidsearachd
Duic Pheart, the Duke of Perth’s March, and the Lady Sarah Drummond.
IN view of the recent devastating war with
Austria-Hungary, it is curious to remember that, according to tradition,
one at least of the great historic houses of Scotland derives its descent from Hungarian stock. The commander of the vessel in which Edgar
the Atheling, with his mother and his sisters Margaret and Isabella, set
sail for Hungary to escape the usurpation of Harold, is said to have
been Maurice, son of George, son of Andrew, King of Hungary. As every
Scotsman knows, the vessel was driven into the Firth of Forth, and the
Princess Margaret presently became the wife of the mighty Canmore,
Malcolm III., King of Scots, with far-reaching effects on the subsequent
history of Scotland. The King, it is said, made Maurice Steward or Thane
of Lennox, a title still held by the Drummond chief, and bestowed upon
him the lands of Drymen on the Endrick, from which his descendants took
their name, and which they continued to possess for some two hundred
years. It is said to have been in commemoration of their ancestor’s
achievement in bringing Queen Margaret to Scotland that, when coats of
arms came into existence, the Drummonds adopted the device of three bars
wavy, or and gules, representing the sunset waves of the North Sea. In
the time of Alexander II., Maurice’s great-great-grandson, Malcolm Beg
Drummond, further secured the status of his family by marrying Ada,
daughter of the Earl of Lennox, and granddaughter of the High Steward of
Scotland; and his grandson, Sir John Drummond of that ilk, Thane of
Lennox, appears in history as a stout defender of Scottish liberty
against the usurpation of Edward I. of England. He was summoned to
Parliament as one of the greatest barons of the kingdom. It was his son,
again, Sir Malcolm Drummond, who suggested to King Robert the Bruce the
strewing of caltrops in the way of the English cavalry
at the battle of Bannockburn. "Gang warily," the family motto
adopted by his descendants, is said to bear reference to that
suggestion. For his services on that occasion he obtained from the King
certain lands in Perthshire, which had the effect of removing the family
seat from Loch Lomondside to the central district of Scotland.
It was a few years later
that the house made its first alliance with the Royal family. Margaret
Logie, the beautiful, imperious second wife of Bruce’s son, David II.,
was a daughter of the house of Drummond. Though she was the widow of John
de Logie, who had been executed for his part in the great Soulis
conspiracy against King Robert the Bruce, King David was infatuated with
the spell of her beauty, and could refuse her nothing; and with her
extravagant pilgrimages to Canterbury and the satisfaction of such
personal spites as that by which she induced the King to cast the Steward
and his sons into prison, she led David a pretty dance, till he divorced
her at Lent in 1369. Hereupon she collected her wealth, betook herself to
the Papal Court at Avignon, and continued to make trouble till her death
shortly afterwards.
Meantime, by the marriage
of Sir John Drummond, grandson of the Drummond who fought at Bannockburn,
to Mary the daughter and heiress of Sir William de Montifex, the family
had come into possession of Stobhall on the Tay and large possessions in
Perthshire, and a further alliance with the royal house was made when Sir
John’s eldest daughter Annabella became the wife of King Robert III.,
and was crowned with him at Scone in September, 1390. Through this
marriage all the succeeding Kings of Scotland and of Britain have been
descended from the House of Drummond, and there is Drummond blood in the
veins of most of the crowned heads of Europe.
Annabella’s elder
brother, Sir Malcolm, married Isabel Countess of Mar, sister of the Earl
of Douglas who fell at Otterburn. Sir Malcolm was murdered by Alexander
Stewart, natural son of the fierce Wolf of Badenoch and grandson of Robert
II., who forcibly married the Countess and assumed the title of Earl of
Mar, fighting under that name at Harlaw and Inverlochy. Annabella’s
younger brother, Sir John, who succeeded as Chief of the Drummonds, was
Justiciar of Scotland.
But the house had not yet
reached the summit of its fortunes. The Justiciar’s great-grandson,
another Sir John Drummond, of Cargill and Stobhall, was a distinguished
statesman in the reign of James III., and for his services as Ambassador
Extraordinary to England, to arrange the marriages of the King and his
sons with princesses of the House of York, was made a Lord of Parliament
in 1487.
Drummond, however, had
secret hopes of seeing another daughter of his house seated on the
Scottish throne. The King’s eldest son, the Duke of Rothesay, then a lad
of sixteen, had already shown a striking partiality for Lord Drummond’s
eldest daughter, the Lady Margaret, and when the prince took arms against
his father, Lord Drummond appeared upon his side. After the fall of James
III. at Sauchieburn, the young prince, now King James IV., embarked with
his young mistress upon a wonderful life of royal revels and gaiety. At
Linlithgow Palace a splendid succession of shows and theatrical
entertainments, of hunting parties by day and dances and masked balls at
night, were got up for the pleasure of the youthful pair, while James
lavished priceless gifts upon his lovely young mistress. Deeply enamoured,
and in his youthful ardour, James, it is said, became affianced to the
beautiful girl, and intended to make her his queen, and the advances of
the royal lover appear to have received every encouragement from her
father, Lord Drummond, both at Court and at the family seat of Stobhall on
the Tay. Something of the ardour of the time and the glamour of the royal
love match is to be read in the stanzas of a poem of the period, "Tayis
Bank," preserved in the Bannatyne Manuscript. The poet, who might be
the royal lover himself, describes the spot at blossom time:
Quhair Tay ran
down with stremis stout,
Full strecht under
Stobschaw;
and he describes in the
most exuberant language the charms of the lady herself:
This myld, meik,
mansuet Mergrit,
This perle polist
most quhyt,
Dame Natouris deir dochter discreit,
The dyamant of delyt;
Never forniet was to found on feit
Ane figour more perfyte,
Nor non on mold that did hir meit,
Mycht merk hir wirth and myte.
The nobles of Scotland,
however, had other views for their sovereign’s future. So long as the
alliance with the fair Lady Margaret
remained only a distraction, they were prepared to regard it as a mere
sowing of wild oats, but when the lady gave birth to a daughter, and it
was rumoured that she had been secretly married to the King, they became
seriously alarmed. Their desire was that James should marry a daughter of
the English royal house, and when it became clear that the Lady Margaret
Drummond was a definite obstacle to the match, her fate appears to have
been sealed. Lord Drummond was just then building his new mansion of
Drummond Castle in Strathearn, and one morning after breakfast there, in
1501, the Lady Margaret, with her sisters, Lady Fleming and Sybilla, were
seized with sudden sickness, believed to have been caused by poison, and
in a few hours were dead. The three lie buried in a curious vault covered
with three fair blue marble stones joined close together about the middle
of the choir of the Cathedral Church of Dunblane. At that time the family
burying-place at Innerpeffray had not yet been built.
Whatever his sins in
conniving at this affair, Lord Drummond was to see much sorrow in the
years that remained to him. His eldest son Malcolm died before him
unmarried, and his second son William, Master of Drummond, had a darker
fate. At that time the Drummonds were endeavouring to set up a barony
burgh of Drummond, and the market cross which they actually procured for
the purpose is still to be seen beside the Town House of Crieff. But the
Murrays of Auchtertyre had a similar ambition, and the cross of Crieff set
up by them is also to be seen a stone-cast away. The rivalry came to a
head when the Abbot of Inchaffry commissioned Murray of Auchtertyre to
poind some cattle of the Drummonds for the payment of a debt. William,
Master of Drummond, raised his clan to avenge the insult. He was met by
the Murrays at the little hill of Knockmary, but, reinforced by a body of
Campbells, the Drummonds put the Murrays to flight. The latter took refuge
in the little kirk of Monzievaird, at Auchtertyre, and the Drummonds,
having failed to find them, were on the point of returning to their own
territory, when a Murray, seeing his chance, was ill-advised enough to
shoot an arrow from a window of the kirk, and kill his man. Thereupon the
Drummonds, heaping brushwood round the little straw-thatched fane, set it
on fire, and burned to ashes the church itself and eight score of the
Murrays concealed inside. For this deed the Master of Drummond was
arrested, tried at Edinburgh, and, notwithstanding his father’s
importance and influence, was duly executed. His son Walter, who, on his
father’s death, also became Master of Drummond, likewise died before his
grandfather, and it was his son David, great-grandson of the first Lord,
who, on the death of the latter in 1519, succeeded as second Lord
Drummond.
Meanwhile a third son of
the first Lord, Sir John Drummond of Innerpeffray, had distinguished
himself among the Scottish soldiers of fortune abroad, and had become
captain of the Scots Guards of Henry II. of France, Several considerable
families of the name are descended from him, but most interesting perhaps
is the fact that, through the marriage of his second daughter to the
Master of Angus, he became grandfather of the Earl of Angus of James V.’s
time, and, by the marriage of that Earl of Angus to Queen Margaret, widow
of James IV., became ancestor of Henry, Lord Darnley, husband of Mary
Queen of Scots, and ancestor of all the later monarchs of Britain.
To the end of his days the
first Lord Drummond continued to play a highly distinguished part in
Scottish history. He was the ambassador sent to the English Court by James
IV. before the battle of Flodden, to secure the necessary delay for his
master’s warlike preparations; and, along with the Earl of Huntly and
the Earl Marischal, after the fall of James, he gave valuable support to
the party of the Regent Queen Margaret and her husband, the Earl of Angus,
against the faction headed by the Earl of Arran. It must have been with
tragic feelings that, four years before his own death, he learned of the
death on Flodden’s fatal field of James IV., whom he had loyally served,
and whom he had once hoped to look upon as a son-in-law.
David, the second Lord
Drummond, himself married a princess of the Scottish royal house,
Margaret, daughter of Alexander, Duke of Albany, and granddaughter of King
James II. By her, however, he had no children. By his second wife, Lilias,
daughter of Lord Ruthven, he had two sons, Patrick the elder of whom
became the third Lord Drummond, while James the second son was in 1609
created Baron Maderty, and became ancestor of the Viscounts Strathallan,
who were to succeed to the chiefship of the family through this link three
hundred years later.
Meanwhile the elder line of
the Drummonds was to continue a highly distinguished and romantic career.
James, the fourth Lord, after acting as ambassador for James VI. to the
Court of Spain, was in 1605 created Earl of Perth. The earldom was created
with remainder to heirs male whatsoever, and its first heir was the Earl’s
brother John. This chief of the Drummonds was a Royalist officer in the
short brilliant campaign of the Marquess of Montrose. He married Lady Jean
Ker, daughter of the first Earl of Roxburghe, through which marriage his
fourth son William became second Earl of Roxburghe and ancestor of the
three first Dukes of that name. The third Duke of Roxburghe, with whom the
line of Drummond Dukes of Roxburghe ended, was the famous book collector,
after whom a certain well-known book binding takes its name.
Meanwhile the Earl of Perth’s
eldest son James succeeded to his father’s own earldom. By Lady Anne
Gordon, daughter of the Marquess of Huntly, he had two sons, both of whom
played a distinguished part on the Jacobite side at the time of the
Revolution and after. The elder brother James, fourth Earl of Perth, was
Chancellor of Scotland, passed with his royal master to France at the
Revolution in 1689, and was created Duke of Perth by James VII. at St.
Germains in 1695. His son James, Lord Drummond, having taken part in the
Earl of Mar’s rebellion in 1715, was attainted, and therefore could not
succeed to the Earldom of Perth, which accordingly became dormant at his
father’s death in the following year; but by the Jacobites he was styled
the second Duke of Perth, that title having been confirmed in France by
Louis XIV. in 1701, on the death of King James, at the same time as the
titles of the Dukes of Berwick, Fitz James, Albemarle, and Melfort, all of
which were Jacobite dukedoms in the same position.
The second Duke had two
sons, and it was the elder of these, James, the titular third Duke, who
was head of the family at the time of the last Jacobite rebellion. He was
living with his mother at Drummond Castle, when it became known that
Prince Charles Edward had landed in the West Highlands. The Government of
George II. knew his sympathies, and sent an officer, his neighbour,
Captain Murray of Auchtertyre, to effect his arrest. The family were at
dinner when Captain Murray arrived, and the Duke insisted upon deferring
business until the meal was over, This being done, after a glass of wine
the Duke proposed that they should join the ladies, and politely opened
the door to allow his guest to pass first. He did not, however, follow
him, but, closing the door and turning the key, escaped by another exit,
and in a few moments was galloping away to join the Prince. He was wounded
at Culloden, and died on the passage to France on board the French frigate
La Bellone a month later.
Something of the Jacobite
ardour of the family can be gathered from the fact that, after the cause
was finally lost, his mother caused the fine lake at Drummond Castle to be
formed to cover up for ever with its waters the stables which had been
polluted by the Hanoverian cavalry of the Duke of Cumberland.
The second Duke’s
brother, Lord John Drummond, had also taken an active part on the Prince’s
side. Sir John Cope, who was afterwards to earn unenviable fame by his
defeat at Prestonpans, had encamped in the park of his house of Ferntower,
near Crieff, and on the way northward to Culloden the Prince himself had
lodged both at Drummond Castle and at Ferntower. Lord John was therefore
attainted along with his elder brother, and the Drummond estates were
forfeited in 1746. It was for him that the famous regiment of Royal Scots
in the French service was raised. He died without issue in 1747, and was
succeeded in turn by his uncles, John and Edward, as fifth and sixth
titular Dukes of Perth. Edward, however, died without children in 1760,
and with him ended the whole male line of James fourth Earl of Perth, by
the attainder of whose son James, Lord Drummond, in 1715, the Earldom of
Perth had become dormant.
This title was now revived
in the person of James Drummond, grandson by his first wife of John,
second son of the third Earl. This John Drummond had been General of the
Ordnance and principal Secretary of State for Scotland in the time of
Charles II., and had been raised to the peerage as Viscount Melfort in
1685 and as Earl of Melfort in 1686. Like his brother, the fourth Earl of
Perth, he had followed James VII. to France, and had been made Duke of
Melfort at the Jacobite Court in 1692, with succession to the children of
his second wife, the title being confirmed as above mentioned by Louis
XIV. in 1701. By an Act of the Scottish Parliament, the Earldom of Melfort
was attainted and forfeited in 1695, but he continued to be known as
titular Duke of Melfort. His third son William was Abbé-prieur of Liége,
and his fourth son, a Lieutenant-General in the French Army, and Grand
Cross of St. Louis, was ancestor of three generations of distinguished
officers in the French service who bore the title of Comte de Melfort.
The Duke’s eldest son by
his first wife, James Drummond of Lundin, as already mentioned, came in as
chief of the Drummonds in 1760. He was served heir to the last Earl in
1766, and thereupon assumed the title of Earl of Perth. His son, James
Drummond, eleventh Earl of Perth, had the Drummond estates in Strathearn
restored to him by the Court of Session and Parliament in 1785. At his
death in July, 1800, however, these estates passed to his only daughter,
Lady Willoughby de Eresby, whose grandson, the Earl of Ancaster, possesses
them at the present day.
Meanwhile John Lord Forth,
eldest son by his second wife of the first Duke of Melfort, had succeeded
as second titular Duke of Melfort, and inherited the Melfort estates which
had been granted to his father by James VII. He married the widow of the
Duke of Albemarle, who was countess and heiress of Lussan in her own
right, and he had two sons, the younger of whom, styled Lord Louis
Drummond, was second in command of the Royal Scots at Culloden, and became
a lieutenant-general in the French service, Grand Cross of St. Louis, and
Governor of Normandy.
It was his grandson James
Louis, fourth Duc de Melfort, and Comte de Lussan, a general in the French
service, who on the death of the eleventh Earl of Perth in 1800 became
twelfth Earl of Perth and Chief of the Drummonds. He died nine months
later, and was succeeded in all these titles by his brother, Charles
Edward. In 1803 the latter began proceedings in the Court of Session to
assert his claim, but had the action dismissed for a technical reason,
and, as he was a Roman Catholic prelate, he could not bring his claim
before the House of Lords. After his death in 1840, however, his nephew,
George Drummond, established his pedigree before the Conseil d’Etat of
France and the Tribunal de Ia Seine, and his right of succession to the
French honours of Duc de Melfort and Perth, Comte de Lussan, and Baron de
Valrose. He was sixth Duc de Melfort and fourteenth Earl of Perth, and by
Act of Parliament in 1853, was restored to the honours of his house
in this country as Earl of Perth and Melfort, Lord Drummond of Cargill and
of Stobhall and Montifex, Viscount Melfort and Forth, and Lord Drummond of
Rickertown, Castlemaine, and Galstown, Thane of Lennox, and hereditary
Steward of Strathearn.
On the death of this Earl
at a great age in 1902, however, the entire male line of Patrick, third
Lord Drummond, became extinct, and the chiefship of the clan, along with
the family honours, was inherited by Viscount Strathallan, representative
of James, Lord Maderty, second son of David, second Lord Drummond, of the
time of King James III.
The first Lord Maderty was
raised to the peerage by James VI. in 1609, and, like all others of the
Drummond family, his house remained steadfast supporters of the Stewart
cause in Scotland. His second son, Sir James Drummond of Machany, was
Colonel of the Perthshire Foot in the Engagement to rescue Charles I. in
1648, and Sir James’s grandson, Sir John Drummond, was forfeited in 1690
for his adherence to the cause of James VII. at the Revolution. His eldest
son William, however, in 1711 succeeded his distant cousin of the elder
line as fourth Viscount Strathallan.
Meanwhile David, the third
Lord Maderty, who married a sister of the Royalist Marquess of Montrose,
was also a supporter of the cause of Charles I.; and William, the fourth
baron, held a high command like his cousin in the ill-starred Engagement
of 1648. Later he fought at Worcester in the cause of Charles II., and,
though taken prisoner, managed to escape and join the Royalist remnant in
the Highlands, till it was dispersed by Morgan in 1654. He then joined the
army of Russia, and attained the rank of lieutenant-general, but at the
Restoration returned to this country, and was appointed a Lord of the
Treasury and General of the Forces in Scotland. As a reward of his
loyalty, he was in 1686 created Viscount Strathallan. It was at the death
of his grandson, the third Viscount, that William Drummond of Machany
succeeded to the title as above mentioned.
Having taken arms for
Prince Charles Edward, this lord was slain at Culloden, and his name,
along with that of his eldest son, was included in the Bill of Attainder.
It is interesting here to
note that, while Strathallan was thus engaged in the Jacobite turmoils of
the North, his brother Andrew was busy founding the well-known banking
house of Drummond and Company, London, purchased the estate of Stanmore in
Middlesex, and founded an important family there.
Meanwhile the
representation of the family was continued by the son and grandson of the
attainted fifth Viscount. The grandson, who was a General and Governor of
Dunbarton Castle, in 1810 petitioned fruitlessly for a restoration of the
family honours. At his death in 1817, his cousin, James Drummond, son of
William, second son of the fourth Viscount, became representative of the
Strathallan family. The family honours were restored to him by Act of
Parliament in 1824, and a new chapter in the family history opened. This
second son, Sir James Drummond, G.C.B., was a Lord of the Admiralty,
Officer of the Legion of Honour, and Knight of the Medjedie, while his
third son, Edmond, was Lieutenant-Governor of the North-West Provinces of
India, and his great-grandson is the eleventh Viscount, now Earl of Perth,
and Chief of the Drummonds. His lordship succeeded his father, the tenth
Viscount Strathallan, in 1893, and his cousin, the fourteenth Earl of
Perth, and Drummond Chief, in 1902.
It is a long and strange
tale, this, of a race which several times intermarried with the Scottish
royal house, and several times ruined itself by giving that house its
loyal and strenuous support; but there are few families or clans which,
with so long a record, have so little to stain the honourable blazon of
their arms.
Another account of the clan...
The
name Drummond is thought to have originated from Drymen or Drummond in Stirlingshire.
Tradition traces the Drummond family to Hungarian origins. Maurice, son of George a
younger son of King Andrew of Hungary is said to have accompanied Edgar Atheling, heir to
the English throne from Hungary to England. They were shipwrecked on the shore of the
Forth and one of Atheling's sisters, Margaret married Malcolm III from whom Maurice
received the estates of Drymen. However the first rec ords show that the son of Malcolm
Beg who was Steward of the Earldom of Strathearn in 1255, also called Sir Malcolm, was the
first to take the name of Drummond. Drummonds were staunch supporters of the Royalist
cause, playing an important role in the Scots victory at Bannockburn in 1314. Margaret
Drummond married King David II in 1369; Annabella Drummond was wife to King Robert III and
mother of James I. In 1488 the Barony of Drummond was created; later generations added the
titles Earl of Perth, Lord M adderty and Viscount Strathallan. The family continued their
allegiances during the Jacobite risings of 1715 and 1745 which resulted in their lands
being forfeited in 1746. The 4th Viscount Strathallan fell at Culloden. The lands were
eventually restored by the General Act of Restoration of the Forfeited Highland Estates
and remain in the possession of the family today, the chiefship being vested in the
Strathallan branch of the family. The old Drummond estate passed through an heiress to the
Earls of Ancaster.
Clan Crest carved by
Andrew Howe |