The Mackenzies of Gairloch were a minor noble Scottish family and one of the senior cadet branches of the Clan Mackenzie, a Scottish clan of the Scottish Highlands.
Hector Roy Mackenzie, 1st of Gairloch was the third son of Alexander Mackenzie, 6th of Kintail, possibly from his second marriage to a daughter of Macdonald of Morar who was a cadet of the Clan Macdonald of Clanranald. [1]
Although the Mackenzies of Hilton are the senior cadets of the clan because they descend from the second eldest son of the first proven chief Alexander Mackenzie, 6th of Kintail, the Mackenzies of Gairloch who descend from the third eldest son became guardians of Kenneth Mackenzie, 8th of Kintail because the first Mackenzie of Hilton had pre-deceased his elder brother, Kenneth Mackenzie, 7th of Kintail. [1]
Hector Roy Mackenzie led the Clan Mackenzie on the Royalist side at the Battle of Sauchieburn in 1488. [2] The Crown granted to Hector a commission of fire and sword to take the lands of Gairloch from the Clan MacLeod of Raasay who had murdered Hector's nephews. Hector's legal ownership of Gairloch is confirmed by a deed made by John De Vaux, Sheriff of Inverness, dated 10 December 1494, and his ownership of Brahan and Moy by a precept issued by the King on 5 March 1508. [1]
Hector feuded with the Clan Munro which resulted in the alleged Battle of Drumchatt (1501) in which the Mackenzie chronicles have claimed victory. [3] Hector also feuded with his nephew John Mackenzie of Killin over the chiefship of the clan in which John was ultimately successful. In 1513, Hector and John together led the clan against the English at the Battle of Flodden where both escaped but many of their followers were killed. [1]
Hector Roy married a daughter of the Laird of Grant - probably Sir Duncan, who flourished from 1434 to 1485 - but she died before the marriage was solemnised. He had one son by her:
Hector married secondly his cousin Anne, daughter of Ranald MacRanald, generally known as Ranald Ban Macdonald of Moidart and Clanranald. Anne had previously been married to MacLeod chief William Dubh MacLeod of the Clan MacLeod of Harris and Dunvegan Castle. Hector Roy and Anne had four sons and three daughters: [1]
John "Glassich" Mackenzie, 2nd of Gairloch had his lands forfeited in 1547 for refusing to join the Royal Standard where the Scots had been defeated by the English at the Battle of Pinkie. His estates were officially put in the hands of the Earl of Sutherland but it was difficult for the earl to wield any real power on the Mackenzie of Gairloch estates. [4] In 1551, Mary, Queen of Scots granted a remission to John Mackenzie, 9th of Kintail for violently taking John "Glassich" Mackenzie and his brothers. None of them are described as deceased in the remission but the Mackenzie MS history states that John "Glassich" Mackenzie had been poisoned or starved to death at Eilean Donan Castle in 1550 and so the remission may have served as a means to cover this up. The MacLeods continued to dispute ownership of Gairloch and it is possible that John "Glassich" Mackenzie had been killed in a skirmish with them. He had married Agnes, daughter of James Fraser of Phoineas who was the brother of Hugh Fraser, Lord Lovat. Their children were: [1]
John "Glassich" Mackenzie also had two natural sons before he married, Alexander Roy Mackenzie and Hector Caol Mackenzie.
After this period of feuding over the chiefship between the Mackenzies of Gairloch and the Mackenzies of Kintail, by the end of the 16th century the Clan Mackenzie was a powerful and unified clan under the leadership of Mackenzie of Kintail. [5]
Hector Mackenzie, 3rd of Gairloch received a sasine dated May 6, 1563. Hector was probably killed on September 3, 1566, [4] and was buried at Beauly Priory. His brother Alexander was apparently assassinated a few weeks after succeeding and so is not considered one of the Barons of Gairloch. The next in line was therefore their brother John Roy Mackenzie, 4th of Gairloch. [1]
John Roy Mackenzie, 4th of Gairloch was born in 1548. [4] He received his estate from Mary, Queen of Scots in 1567. In 1606, he received a charter that made Gairloch a free barony and in 1619 he received another charter that added Kinkell to his estate. He built the first three stories of the Tower of Kinkell where his arms and those of his first wife are in the great hall. Much feuding and skirmishing took place between the Mackenzies of Gairloch and the MacLeods in this period. [1]
John Roy Mackenzie married first Elizabeth, daughter of Angus MacDonald, 7th chief of the Clan MacDonell of Glengarry and had the following children:
John Roy Mackenzie married secondly, Isabel, daughter of Murdoch Mackenzie of Fairburn and had the following children:
John Roy Mackenzie died in 1628 aged 80. [1]
Alexander Mackenzie, 5th of Gairloch succeeded his father in 1628. [4] He was at an advanced age at the time of his father's death. He had led the Mackenzies in their feud against the MacLeods. The charter that his father had received in 1619 had infeft Alexander Mackenzie as the fiar of the Barony of Gairloch. In 1627, he had obtained from his son-in-law, John Mackenzie of Applecross (later of Loch Slin Castle) part of Dìobaig which had been in dispute. In 1637, Alexander Mackenzie tried to acquire part of Loggie Wester from Duncan Bayne but this was not completed until the time of his successor in 1640. [1]
Alexander Mackenzie married firstly, Margaret, third daughter of Roderick Mor Mackenzie, I of Redcastle, by his wife, Fingula or Florence, daughter of Robert Mor Munro, 15th Baron of Foulis and had the following children: [1]
Alexander Mackenzie married secondly, Isabel, eldest daughter of Alexander Mackenzie of Coul and Applecross and had the following children: [1]
Alexander Mackenzie died on January 4, 1638, aged 61. [1]
Kenneth Mackenzie, 6th of Gairloch was a strong loyalist during the wars of James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose and the Covenanters. He was fined by the Committee of Estates for supporting the king in 1646. He commanded a body of Highlanders under Thomas Mackenzie of Pluscarden at Balveny but when the Royalist army was surprised and disarmed there he was on a visit to Castle Grant and so escaped capture. In 1640 he had completed the purchase of Loggie Wester which had been started by his predecessor. In 1658, Oliver Cromwell appointed him tutor to Hector Mackenzie, lawful son of Alexander Mackenzie, lawful son of Duncan Mackenzie of Sand, Gairloch. [1]
Kenneth Mackenzie married firstly, in 1635, Katherine, daughter of Sir Donald MacDonald, IX of Sleat but without issue. He married secondly, Ann, daughter of Sir John Grant of Grant and had the following children: [1]
Kenneth Mackenzie married thirdly, Janet, daughter of John Cuthbert of Castlehill and had the following children: [1]
Kenneth Mackenzie died in 1669 and was buried in Beauly Priory. [1]
Alexander Mackenzie, 7th of Gairloch received a charter confirming that the lands of Loggie Wester were part of the Barony of Gairloch. In 1681 he had his rights to his titles ratified by an act of Parliament. He married firstly, Barbara, daughter of Sir John Mackenzie of Tarbat and had the following children: [1]
Alexander Mackenzie married secondly, Janet, daughter of William Mackenzie, I of Belmaduthy and had the following children:
Alexander Mackenzie died in December 1694 at the age of 42 and was buried in Gairloch. [1]
Sir Kenneth Mackenzie, 8th of Gairloch was created a Baronet of Nova Scotia by Anne, Queen of Great Britain on 2 February 1703. [4] He was educated at Oxford and later represented the County of Ross in the Scottish Parliament. He strongly opposed the Acts of Union 1707. [1] [2]
Sir Kenneth Mackenzie married in 1696 to Margaret, daughter of Sir Roderick Mackenzie of Findon and had the following children:
Sir Kenneth Mackenzie died in December 1703 at the age of 32. About a year later his widow married Bayne of Tulloch. [1]
Sir Alexander Mackenzie, 9th of Gairloch and 2nd Baronet was only a child of three and a half years old when his father died. During his minority very large debts were paid off which consequently left him with little education. In 1708, he and his brothers and sisters were taken to Colin Mackenzie of Findon's house who was the factor of their estate and given a basic education by Simon Urquhart. In 1712, they were all at school in Chanonry under Urquhart and where Sir Alexander Mackenzie remained for six years before going to Edinburgh at the age of 18 to complete his education. He returned home in 1730. He kept out of the Jacobite rising of 1745 and afterwards John Mackenzie of Meddat applied to him for aid for the forfeited Jacobite, John Mackenzie, Lord MacLeod. However, Sir Alexander Mackenzie gave him no assistance. [1]
Sir Alexander Mackenzie married in 1730 to Janet, daughter of Sir Roderick Mackenzie, second Baronet and V of Scatwell. They had the following children: [1]
Sir Alexander Mackenzie died in 1766 in his 66th year. [1]
Sir Alexander Mackenzie, 10th of Gairloch and third Baronet built Conon House between 1758 and 1760. He married firstly in 1755, Margaret, eldest daughter of Roderick Mackenzie, VII of Redcastle and had one son: [1] [2]
Sir Alexander Mackenzie married secondly, Jean, daughter of John Gorry of Balblair, Commissary of Ross and had the following children:
Sir Alexander Mackenzie died on April 15, 1770, and was buried at Gairloch. [1]
Sir Hector Mackenzie, 11th of Gairloch and 4th Baronet was known in Scottish Gaelic as An Tighearna Storach which means the Buck-toothed Laird. He was only 12 years old when he succeeded and his affairs were managed by trustees appointed by his father. [1]
In 1789, he obtained authority from the Court to sell lands which his father had originally intended for him to use pay off the debts on the estate. [1]
In 1815, he was appointed Lord-Lieutenant of his native county. He generally lived at home among devoted tenantry and only visited London once in his life-time. He patronised the Gaelic poets including Alexander Campbell. [1] He married in 1778 to Cochrane, daughter of James Chalmers of Fingland but without issue and the marriage was dissolved in 1796. He married a month later to Christian, daughter of William Henderson, Inverness. She was popularly known among the Gairloch people as A Bhantighearna Ruadh. They had the following children: [1]
Sir Hector Mackenzie died on April 26, 1826, and was buried in Beauly Priory. [1] [2]
Francis Alexander Mackenzie, 12th of Gairloch and fifth Baronet, was like his father interested in the county affairs. During the Highland Potato Famine he sent cargoes of meal and seed potatoes to the Gairloch tenantry in 1836–37. This left him in debt with Grant of Redcastle and he arranged for his brother, Dr John Mackenzie of Eileanach, to manage his affairs. He and his second wife went for a few years to Brittany where their son Osgood Hanbury Mackenzie was born. The Dr ultimately had to pay Grant £7000 to clear Francis Mackenzie's debt. [1]
In 1836, Francis Mackenzie published Hints for the Use of Highland Tenants and Cottagers, which consisted of 273 pages with English and Gaelic versions written on opposite pages. [1]
He married firstly, in the 31st year of his age, in 1829, Cythe Caroline, eldest daughter of Smith-Wright of Rempstone Hall, Nottinghamshire. They had the following children:
Francis Alexander Mackenzie married secondly, Mary, daughter of Osgood Hanbury of Holifield Grange, Essex and had one son: [1]
Kenneth Smith Mackenzie, 13th of Gairloch and 6th Baronet was born in 1832 took an active part in supply matters in his home county. He was Convenor of the Commissioners of Supply and of the County Council. He was also Lord Lieutenant of Ross and Cromarty. In 1854, he was appointed Attaché to Her Majesty's Legation in Washington but never joined. In 1855, he received a commission as a captain in the Highland Rifles (Ross-shire Militia). He later attained the rank of Major and then retired. In 1880 he contested against Donald Cameron of Lochiel as the Tory candidate for the county of Inverness but was defeated. He was a member of the Napier Commission from 1883 to 1884. [1]
He married in 1860 to Elia Frederica, daughter of Walter Frederic Campbell of Islay, [2] and had the following children: [1]
Clan Mackenzie is a Scottish clan, traditionally associated with Kintail and lands in Ross-shire in the Scottish Highlands. Traditional genealogies trace the ancestors of the Mackenzie chiefs to the 12th century. However, the earliest Mackenzie chief recorded by contemporary evidence is Alexander Mackenzie of Kintail who died some time after 1471. Traditionally, during the Wars of Scottish Independence, the Mackenzies supported Robert the Bruce, but feuded with the Earls of Ross in the latter part of the 14th century. During the 15th and 16th-centuries the Mackenzies feuded with the neighboring clans of Munro and MacDonald. In the 17th century the Mackenzie chief was made Earl of Seaforth in the peerage of Scotland. During the Scottish Civil War of the 17th century the Mackenzies largely supported the Royalists. During the Jacobite rising of 1715 the chief and clan of Mackenzie supported the Jacobite cause. However, during the Jacobite rising of 1745 the clan was divided with the chief, Kenneth Mackenzie, Lord Fortrose, supporting the British-Hanoverian Government and his relative, George Mackenzie, 3rd Earl of Cromartie, supporting the Jacobites.
Dingwall or Dingwell is a Scottish surname. One of the most prominent families by the name of Dingwall in Scotland were the Dingwalls of Kildun who were vassals of the Earl of Ross and also septs of the Clan Munro, a Scottish clan of the Scottish Highlands.
Colin Mackenzie, 1st Earl of Seaforth (1596/97–1633), was a Highland clan chief and Scottish nobleman, possessed of vast estates and wealth.
George Mackenzie, 2nd Earl of Seaforth was a Highland clan chief and Scottish nobleman, who played an equivocating role in Scotland in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms.
Alexander Mackenzie, known as "Ionraic", traditionally counted as 6th of Kintail, was the first chief of the Clan Mackenzie of whom indisputable contemporary documentary evidence survives. During his long life, he greatly expanded his clan's territories and influence.
Hector Roy Mackenzie of Gairloch was a Scottish clan chieftain of the Clan Mackenzie, who acquired vast estates in and around Gairloch, Wester Ross as a result of his services to the Scottish crown and challenged his nephew for the chiefship of the clan.
Colin Mackenzie of Kintail, nicknamed "Cam", was a Highland chief of the Scottish clan Mackenzie who greatly increased his ancestral estates through royal favour and a career of vigorous self-aggrandisement.
Hector Mor Maclean of Dowart, or Eachann Mór Maclean in Scottish Gaelic, known as Hector the Great, was the 16th Clan Chief of Clan MacLean from 1623 until his death in 1626. The term Mór or Mor translates to great when added to a name in Scottish Gaelic. He resided at Duart Castle on the Isle of Mull. Notably, he was the first Chief of MacLean in four hundred years to not produce an heir, breaking the direct male line from Gillean of the Battle Axe, the clan's founder. He was succeeded by his younger brother, Lachlan Maclean, 1st Baronet.
Sir Roderick MacLeod of MacLeod, also known as Rory MacLeod, was the 15th Chief of Clan MacLeod and one of the most famed and notorious chiefs of that clan.
Kenneth Mackenzie, was the 10th laird of Kintail and he was nicknamed Coinneach na Cuirc in Scottish Gaelic, was a Highland chief, head of the Clan Mackenzie, who flourished in the turbulent Scottish politics of the mid-16th century.
The chiefs of the Scottish highland Clan Mackenzie were historically known as the Mackenzies of Kintail. By tradition the Mackenzie chiefs descend from Kenneth Mackenzie, 1st of Kintail however their earliest ancestor proven by contemporary evidence is Alexander Mackenzie, 6th of Kintail. The chiefly line became the Earls of Seaforth during the 17th century but this title was later forfeited in the 18th century due to support of the Jacobite rising of 1715. The current official chief of the Clan Mackenzie is John Ruaridh Grant Mackenzie, 5th Earl of Cromartie.
Kenneth Mackenzie, traditionally reckoned 7th of Kintail and nicknamed Coinneach a'bhlair, was a Highland chief, being head of the Clan Mackenzie.
John Mackenzie, or "John of Killin", traditionally reckoned 9th of Kintail, was a Highland chief and head of the Clan Mackenzie.
Leod Macgilleandrais is purported to have been a 14th-century Scotsman who lived in the north-west of Scotland. He is known from clan traditions which date to the late 17th century. According to these traditions, Leod was a follower of the Earl of Ross, and that he was an enemy of the Mackenzies of Kintail. He is said to have captured one of the early Mackenzie chiefs, and was then later killed by the slain chief's son sometime in the 14th century. His memory is preserved in the place where he is said to have been slain. According to at least one version of the tradition, Leod was survived by a son named Paul. Several historians in 19th and early 20th centuries equated this son to Paul Mactire.
The Bain, Bane or Bayne family of Tulloch were a minor Scottish noble family.
The Battle of Drumchatt, or Druim-a-Chait, was a Scottish clan battle claimed by non-contemporary historians to have taken place in the year 1501 near Strathpeffer, in the Scottish Highlands. It was allegedly fought between the Clan Mackenzie and the Clan Munro. Mackenzie chronicles have claimed a signal victory.
The MacLeods of Raasay are a minor Scottish noble family and branch of Clan MacLeod of Lewis. At their height they held extensive lands on the Isle of Raasay. In Gaelic the MacLeods of Lewis were known as Sìol Thorcaill. The Chiefship of Clan MacLeod of Lewis passed to the Raasay branch in the 20th century.
Sir Hector Mackenzie, 4th Baronet of Gairloch was a Scottish landowner and baronet. He succeeded his father Sir Alexander on 13 April 1770. He held the office of Lord-Lieutenant of Ross-shire.
Lachlan Mor Mackintosh, 16th of Mackintosh was the chief of the Clan Mackintosh, a Scottish clan of the Scottish Highlands. He was also chief of the confederation of clans that was known as the Clan Chattan.
Murdo or Murdoch Mackenzie, also known as Murdo McRorie was a Scottish courtier and the builder of Fairburn Tower near Inverness.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location (link){{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location (link)