The Macneills consisted of two independent branches, the
Macneills of Barra and the Macneills of Gigha, said to be descended from brothers. Their
badge was the sea ware, but they had different armorial bearings, and from their
circumstances, joined to the fact that they were often opposed to each other in the clan
fights of the period, and that the Christian names of the one, with the exception of
Neill, were not used by the other, Mr Gregory thinks the tradition of their common descent
erroneous. Part of their possessions were completely separated, and situated at a
considerable distance from the rest.
The chief of the Macneills of Gigha, in the first half of the 16th century, was Neill
Macneill, who was killed, with many gentlemen of his tribe in 1530, in a feud with Allan
Maclean of Torlusk, called Ailen nan Sop, brother of Maclean of Dowart. His only daughter,
Annabella, made over the lands of Gigha to her natural brother, Neill. He sold Gigha to
James Macdonald of Isla in 1554, and died without legitimate issue in the latter part of
the reign of Queen Mary.
On the extinction of the direct male line, Neill Macneill vic Eachan, who had obtained the
lands of Taynich, became heir male of the family. His descendant, Hector Macneill of
Taynish, purchased in 1590 the island of Gigha from John Campbell of Calder, who had
aquired it from Macdonald of Isla, so that it again becmae the property of a Macneill. The
estates of Gigha and Taynish were posessed by his descendants till 1780, when the former
was sold to Macneill of Colonsay, a cadet of the family.
The representative of the male line of the Macneills of Taynish and Gigha, Roger Hamilton
Macneill of Taynish, married Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of Hamilton Price Esq, of
Raploch, Lanarkshire, with whom he got that estate, and assumed, in consequence, the name
of Hamilton. His descendants are now designated of Raploch.
The principal cadets of the Gigha Macneills, besides the Taynish family, were those of
Gallochallie, Carskeay, and Tirfergus. Torquil, a younger son of Laclan Macneill Buy of
Tirfergus, acquired the estate of Ugadale in Argyleshire, by marriage with the heiress of
the Mackays in the end of the 17th century. The present proprietor spells his name
Macneal. From Malcolm Beg Macneil, celebrated in Highland tradition for his extraordinary
prowess and great strength, son of John Oig Macneil of Gallochallie, in the reign of James
VI, sprung the Macneils of Arichonon. Malcolm's only son, Neill Oig, had two sons, Hohn,
who succeeded him, and Donald Macneil of Crerar, ancestor of the Macneills of Colonsay,
now the possessors of Gigha. Many cadets of the Macneils of Gigha settled in the north of
Ireland.
Both branched of the clan Neill laid claim to the chiefship. According to tradition, it
has belonged, since the middle of the 16th century, to the house of Barra. Under the date
of 1550, a letter appears in the register of the privy council, addressed to "Torkill
Macneil, chief and principal of the clan and surname of Macnelis". Mr Skene
conjectures this Torkill to have been the hereditary keeper of Castle Sweyn, and connected
with neither branch of the Macneils. He is said, however, to have been the brother of Neil
Macneil of Gigha, killed in 1530, as above mentioned, and to have, on his brother's death,
obtained a grant of the non-entries of Gigha as representative of the family. If this be
correct, according to the above designation, the chiefship was in the Gigha line. Torqui
appears to have died without leaving any direct succession.
The first of the family of Colonsay, Donald Macneill of Crerar, in South Knapdale,
exchanged that estate in 1700, with the Duke of Argyll, for the islands of Colonsay and
Oronsay. The old possessors of these two islands, which are only seperated by a narrow
sound, dry at low water, were the Macduffes or Macphies. Donald's great-grandson,
Archibald Macneill of Colonsay, sold that island to his cousin, John Macneill of Dunmore,
and had six sons. His eldest son, Alexander, younger of Colonsay, became the purchaser of
Gigha. Two of his other sons, Duncan, Lord Colonsay, and Sir John Macneil, have
distinguished themselves, the one as a lawyer and judge, and the other as a diplomatist.
MacNeill House On History
Visit To Island Of Colonsay Inner Hebrides Scotland
Tour Scotland travel video clip, with Scottish music, of
the MacNeill House on ancestry, genealogy, history visit to Island Of
Colonsay, Inner Hebrides. The central part of the house, was first built
by the McNeill family in 1722. This is the earliest classical Georgian
country house in Argyll. It has been extended twice in between 1722 and
the early 20th century.
The MacNeils of Colonsay obtained Colonsay in 1700 and
owned it until 1904 when it was sold by John Carstairs McNeil. Major
General Sir John Carstairs McNeill, born 28 March 1831, died 25 May
1904, was a senior British Army officer and Scottish recipient of the
Victoria Cross, the highest award for gallantry in the face of the enemy
that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. He was the son
of Anne Elizabeth McNeill née Carstairs, and Alexander McNeill, born
1791, died 1850, brother of Duncan McNeill, Lord Colonsay, born 1793,
died 1874, and of Sir John McNeill, born 1795, died 1883. His own
brother was Alexander McNeill. He was educated at St Andrews University
in Fife and at Addiscombe Military Seminary in what is now the London
Borough of Croydon in England. McNeill was 33 years old, and a
lieutenant colonel in the 107th Regiment of Foot Bengal Light Infantry,
later The Royal Sussex Regiment, while serving as an Aide-de-Camp to
Lieutenant General Sir Duncan Cameron during the Invasion of Waikato,
one of the campaigns in the New Zealand Wars, when he was awarded the
Victoria Cross. McNeill later achieved the rank of major general, and in
retirement became an equerry to Queen Victoria.