The name
Ferguson is an Anglicization of the Gaelic "Macfhearghus", son of Fergus a
personal name of old Celtic origin. Although often considered as one clan, there are at
least four main families of this name spread throughout the country in Argyllshire,
Ayrshire, Fife, Perthshire and Aberdeenshire. Of the Highland Fergusons, those from
Argyll, held the estate of Glenshellich and were hereditary sheriffs of Strachur,
following the Campbells. In the roll of 1587, they are named as among the septs of Mar and
Athole, where their proper seat as a clan originally lay, having chiefs and captains of
their own. The family sold the lands in 1801 to meet debts and the direct line is
now extinct. In Perthshire, there were Fergusons in Atholl and Balquhidder who in keeping
with many of their neighbouring clans (e.g. MacGregors) were of constant trouble to the
King's authority. However many Perthshire Fergusons were strong supporters of the Stuart
cause and fought under Montrose, Bonnie Dundee and with the Atholl Brigade at Culloden. On
the other hand, many of those from Argyll, Aberdeenshire and the Lowlands supported the
Hanoverian cause often fighting opposite their namesakes. Although the Fergussons of
Kilkerran were technically Lowland and unrelated to the Highland Fergusons, the head of
the family began to be regarded as senior from the 18th century onwards. Today Fergusson
of Kilkerran is regarded as chief of the whole name. One of the most distinguished
soldiers of this century was Sir Bernard Ferguson, 1st Lord Ballantrae and
Governor-General of New Zealand from 1962 to 1967.
Another Account of the Clan
BADGE: Ros-greine (helium
thymum mari-folium) Little sunflower.
ABOUT
the year 1900 the
present writer, in his quiet dwelling in the neighbourhood of Loch Lomond,
was surprised one evening by a visit from a handsome young Highlander in a
grey kilt, who stated that he had walked all the way from Keppoch in
Lochaber in the hope of finding employment. At a venture the writer
suggested that his vjsitor might be of the well-known race of the
MacDonalds of Keppoch; but the suggestion was met instantly with the
somewhat disconcerting reply: "MacDonald!
The MacDonalds have only been in Keppoch for four hundred years; my people
have been there for many many hundred years before that." On being
asked who his people might be, the young adventurer replied that his name
was MacFhearguis. At the request to write down the name, he had some
difficulty in doing it, but he
had no difficulty whatever in describing a long line of ancestry which
stretched back through Fergus, son of Erc, and a long line of Irish kings,
to no less a person than Scota, the daughter of Pharoah himself. The young
man explained that a large part of the district now held by Cameron of
Lochiel had originally belonged to his race, and that the original
Cameron, who was not a Gael but a Briton from Dunbartonshire, who had got
his name, "Cam-shron" or "crooked nose," from damage
to that feature accruing from his warlike disposition, had originally
acquired a footing in the country by fighting the battles, and marrying a
daughter, of the MacFhearguis chief. The immediate ancestor of the young
man from Keppoch, it appeared, had fought at Culloden, and, being exiled
to America, there married an Indian princess. The son of the pair had
returned to this country and had become the ancestor of the midnight
rambler.
At present (1923) there
is living in New York a claimant to the Chiefship of the clan, who signs
himself "Clann
Fhearguis of Strachur," who has been the hero of many strange
adventures, and avers that his ancestors possessed lands on Loch Fyneside.
Whatever the authority for
the various parts of the statement as given by the astonishing young
Highlander above mentioned, it is certain, so far as Gaelic tradition can
go, that the first important settlement on these shores from the north of
Ireland was made in the year 503 by three brothers, Lorn, Fergus, and
Angus, sons of Erc, of the Royal Scottish race; so Clan Fergusson can
claim a sufficiently high antiquity for its name, though it may be
difficult to prove direct descent from these early Scoto-Irish chiefs.
This traditional origin of
the clan name was turned to amusing and useful account on one historic
occasion. In 1583, after the escape of King James VI. from the Earl of
Gowrie and other lords of the English faction who had made him prisoner at
the Raid of Ruthven, he summoned a number of hostile ministers of the Kirk
to appear before him at Dunfermline. Their reception was anything but
friendly, and the situation was only saved by the quaint humour of one of
them, Mr. David Ferguson. The King, he averred, ought to listen to him if
no other, for he had relinquished the crown in his favour. Was not he,
Ferguson, the descendant of Fergus, the first Scottish king, and had he
not cheerfully resigned the title to his Grace, as he was an honest man,
and had possession. By this, and more to like effect, mixed with some
subtle flatteries of the King’s literary performances, he turned James’s
wrath aside and secured a peaceful dismissal.
In the sixth century a
holder of the name played a part which has had far-reaching effect upon
the later Christian history of Scotland. In the early Life of St. Mungo or
Kentigern, it is related how in the year 543 that Saint, himself a
member of the royal British race, having left the household of his early
protector, St. Serf, at Culross, came, at Carnock near Stirling, to the
door of a certain holy man, Fregus or Fergus, then on the point of death.
This holy man directed Kentigern to place his body after death upon a car,
to harness to it two unbroken bullocks, and to take it for burial whither
the bullocks might lead. With his sacred charge Kentigern made his way to
a place then known as Cathures, now Glasgow, and at a little
burying-ground on the banks of the Molendinar, which had been consecrated
by St. Ninian 150 years before, he buried the body. The spot is now
covered by Blackadder’s Aisle, on the south side of Glasgow Cathedral,
which is otherwise known, from the fact just narrated, as Fergus’ Aisle.
Within a few yards of it Kentigern raised his early chapel and cell, and
from that spot spread the Christian gospel through the whole province of
the Strathclyde Britons, before he died in 603.
Meantime there had been at
least one other King of Scots of the name of Fergus, which, as a matter of
fact, is said to be derived from the Gaelic Fear, a man, Gais, a
spear, and to be cognate to the English name Shakespeare; so the Clan
Fergus might claim descent from several royal forebears, as well as from
Fergus, Lord of Galloway, in 1165, whose wife was a daughter of Henry I.
of England. The first solid mention of the name in more modern history,
however, is in the charter by which King Robert the Bruce conferred
certain lands in Ayrshire on " Fergusio filio Fergusii," who was
ancestor of the family of Kilkerran, of which Lieut.General Sir Charles
Fergusson is the head at the present hour. Families of the name, it is
true, were to be found in other parts of the country, and Thomas, Earl of
Mar, granted a charter of the lands of Auchenerne in Crotharty to Eoghan
or Ewen Fergusson, who appears in the confirmation granted by David II. at
Kildrummie Castle in 1364 as " Egoni Filio Fergussii." There
have been Fergusons for six centuries in Balquhidder, represented now by
those of Immerveulin and of Ardandamh, the latter in Laggan on Loch
Lubnaig in Strathyre. Fergussons were also to be found in Mar and Athol,
where, in the clan map included in Brown’s History of the Highlands, the
neighbourhood of Dunfallandie is given as the country of Baron Fergusson.
Dunfallandie is still in possession of this ancient family, who have owned
it since the time of King John Baliol.
It is difficult to say who
claimed the chiefship in those early centuries, although in the roll drawn
up in 1587 the Fergussons appear among the "clanis that hes capitanes,
cheiffis, and chiftanes quhome on they depend." The most notable
family of the name, however, since the days of Bruce has undoubtedly been
that of Kilkerran. Another noted family has been that of Fergusson of
Craigdarroch in Glencairn parish, one of whom remains famous as the victor
in the tremendous drinking bout celebrated in Robert Burns’ poem,
"The Whistle." This family definitely claims descent from
Fergus, the powerful Lord of Galloway of the twelfth century, already
mentioned.
From the Fergus Fergusson
of Robert the Bruce’s time, the lands of Kilkerran descended to Sir John
Fergusson, Knight, of the days of Charles I., when the family suffered
considerable reverses of fortune, and had their lands alienated.
Presently, however, John Fergusson, son of Simon Fergusson of Auchinwin,
the youngest son of Sir John, acquired great reputation and fortune as an
advocate, advanced the funds for clearing the family estate, and in 1703
was created a Baronet of Nova Scotia. Sir James, the eldest son of the
first baronet, was also a noted lawyer, who became a judge of the Court of
Session and Court of Justiciary in 1749, under the title of Lord
Kilkerran. He married the only child of Lord Maitland, son of the fifth
Earl of Lauderdale, and grandson of the twelfth Earl of Glencairn, and of
his nine sons and five daughters, the fourth son George also became a Lord
of Session as Lord Hermand. The eldest son, Sir Adam Fergusson, who was an
LL.D., represented Ayrshire in Parliament for eighteen years and the city
of Edinburgh for four.
Sir Adam’s nephew and
successor, Sir James Fergusson, married the second daughter of the famous
Sir David Dairymple, Bart., Lord Hailes, who himself had married a
daughter of Sir James Fergusson, Bart., Lord Kilkerran, and his eldest son
and successor, Sir Charles, married the second daughter of the Right Hon.
David Boyle, Lord Justice General of Scotland, and aunt of the seventh
Earl of Glasgow. The son of this pair was the late Right Hon. Sir James
Fergusson, Bart., P.C., K.C.M.G., of Kilkerran, who, among his many
distinguished offices was Governor of Bombay, Governor of South Australia,
and of New Zealand, as well as M.P. for Ayrshire and Under-Secretary of
State for India and for the Home Department. To the end of his life he
took an active part in public affairs, and was chairman of a commission
for the furtherance of cotton-growing in the British colonies when he was
killed in the great earthquake at Jamaica in 1907. His wife was a daughter
of the Marquess of Dalhousie, and his son, Lieut.-General Sir Charles
Fergusson, Bart., of Kilkerran, the present head of the family, is a very
distinguished soldier.
Sir Charles joined the
Grenadier Guards in 1883, became Adjutant in 1890, and, at the outbreak of
the Sudan War in 1896, transferred to the Egyptian army, and served with
the 10th Sudanese Battalion throughout the campaign of 1896-7-8. During
this campaign he was severely wounded at Rosaires, was five times
mentioned in despatches, had the brevets of Major, Lieut.-Colonel, and
Colonel, and received the D.S.O. and the medal with eight clasps. He
commanded the 6th Sudanese Battalion in 1899, and the garrison and
district of Omdurman in 1900, and closed his record in Egypt as
Adjutant-General from 1901 to 1903. Afterwards he commanded the 3rd
Battalion of the Grenadier Guards from 1904 till 1907, was
Brigadier-General on the General Staff of the Irish Command from 1907 till
1908, and Inspector of Infantry from 1909 till 1913. He is a Justice of
the Peace, a Deputy Lieutenant of Ayrshire, and a Commander of the Bath.
In 1901 he married Lady Alice Mary Boyle, second daughter of the Earl of
Glasgow, by whom he has three Sons and one daughter. At the outbreak of
the great European War Sir Charles was appointed to the command of the
Second Division of the British Expeditionary Force in France, receiving
the rank of Lieut.-General, and he was throughout actively and gallantly
engaged in the arduous work of the campaign at the Front.
Among other celebrated
people of the name of Fergusson a few out of a long list may be noted
here. One of the most famous was David Ferguson, the Reformer, already
referred to, who died in 1598, who was first a glover, then a minister at
Dunfermline, who preached before the Regent against the taking away of
church property, was Moderator of the General Assembly twice, and one of a
deputation which administered one of the numerous admonishments to King
James VI. He cornpiled a collection of Scottish proverbs, and wrote a
curious critical analysis of the Song of Solomon. There was Robert
Ferguson, "the Plotter," who died in 1714. He took an ardent
part in the controversy about the legitimacy of the Duke of Monmouth, was
one of the chief contrivers of the Rye House Plot, was chaplain to
Monmouth’s army, and accompanied William of Orange in his landing in
1688. He afterwards became a Jacobite, and was committed to Newgate, but
never brought to trial. More famous still was Robert Fergusson, the
Scottish poet and exemplar of Burns, who died in 1774, and for whom Burns
erected a tombstone in Canongate Churchyard. There was also Adam Fergusson,
the Professor of Philosophy at Edinburgh, in whose house, the Sciennes at
Edinburgh, Sir Walter Scott as a boy had his memorable meeting with Robert
Burns. At the death of Robert Burns’ friend, the Earl of Glencairn, in
1796, Professor Ferguson made a claim to the earldom before the House of
Lords as lineal descendant of and heir general to Alexander, created Earl
of Glencairn in 1488, and to Alexander, Earl of Glencairn, who died in
1670, through the latter’s eldest daughter, Sir Adam’s
great-grandmother, Lady Margaret Cunningham, wife of John, Earl of
Lauderdale, and mother of fames, Lord Maitland, above referred to. But the
Lords decided "although Sir Adam Ferguson has shown himself to be
heir general to Alexander, Earl of Glencairn, who died in 1670, he hath
not made out a right of such heir to the dignity of the Earl of Glencairn."
Last who may be noted was
Sir Adam Ferguson, son of the above and long a familiar friend of Sir
Walter Scott, who as a Captain of the 101st Regiment read the Sixth Canto
of The Lady of the Lake to his company in the lines of Torres
Veciras, afterwards became keeper of the Regalia of Scotland, and was
knighted in 1822. Regarding him Lockhart in his Life of Scott recounts
an amusing incident in which the poet Crabbe was concerned. He quotes the Life
of Crabbe, in which that poet describes how on this occasion he met
"Lord Errol, and the MacLeod, and the Fraser, and the Gordon, and the
Ferguson," and conversed at dinner with Lady Glengarry. In a note
regarding the allusion to Fergusson, Lockhart says:
"Sir Walter’s
friend, the Captain of Huntly Burn, did not, as far as I remember, sport
the Highland dress on this occasion, but no doubt his singing of certain
Jacobite songs, etc., contributed to make Crabbe set him down for a chief
of a clan. Sir Adam, however, is a Highlander."
Septs of Clan Fergus:
Fergus, Ferries, MacAdie, MacFergus, MacKerras, MacKersey.
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