The story of Patrick Duguid of Auchenhove, a Captain in Lord Lewis Gordon’s Regiment in the ‘45. Also mentioned is the occupation and destruction of his house by government troops after Culloden.
https://t.co/7fHibScp1v
Just south of Forfar in this field is the site of the settlement of Muir of Meathie which disappeared in the first half of the 19thC. Two men from here, William Stark, a weaver, and William Ogilvy, a servant, were with the Angus Regt at the Battle of Culloden. Both survived.
George Milne, farmer at Balcathie listed in Ogilvy’s 2nd Battalion (Arbroath Company) in 1745. Also listed from here is ploughman David Scott. Milne went into hiding after the Rising, Scott was taken prisoner in 1746 & released in 1747. Balcathie Farm stil stands.
Henry Hunter (28), was attached to the Arbroath Company as part of Lord Ogilvy’s Regiment in 1745. He lived at Newton of Arbirlot Farm just west of Arbroath in eastern Angus. The farm still exists today. He is described after the Rising as being in hiding.
The view past the 1500 yr old Keillor Pictish Stone W of Newtyle village on the north slopes of the Sidlaws in Angus to the site of the house at Chapel of Keillor of Jacobite recruit Joseph Ferguson (red arrow). He without doubt sat by the ancient stone before & after the Rising.
The farm of Wester Coul in Lintrathen, Angus. William Farquharson & John Lawson worked here before joining Ogilvy’s Regt in 1745. Lawson was captured at Carlisle & Transported with 149 others on the Veteran to the Leeward Isles but was freed by French Ships the day before arrival
In the foreground is the site of Loanend of Lour, 3ml SW of Forfar. In 1745 three weavers, John & David Lunan & John Hutchen lived here. The men were listed in the muster roll of the Ogilvy’s Angus Regt. They survived the Jacobite Rising but their homes have long disappeared.
William Horn was a private soldier in Lord Ogilvy’s Angus Reg in 1745. He was a worker at Holemill in Denoon Glen in the Sidlaw Hills. Horn survived the Rising but was taken prisoner & transported. The remains of the 18thC mill still stands today. Reconnecting the man & the place
What a thrill it was recently to reestablish for the first time in living memory the still standing house of Rochelhill near Glamis in Angus with its resident in 1745, the Jacobite Captain John Ogilvie. He survived the battles of the ‘45 dying a free man around 1774.
This is the site of West Dod which was the home of crofter David Scott on the N side of Lownie Hill near Forfar. Scott was a Jacobite soldier in Ogilvy’s Reg in 1745.
After my recent trip to the Skye looking into the story of the Prince at Kingsburgh House on the 29/6/1746, here’s to Flora, Neil, Lady Margaret, old Kingsburgh and his wife, & the men and women of Clanranald who got the Prince here to this point in his unforgettable journey. 🍷
Below Portree harbour in the Isle of Skye (May 2022). The partly submerged rock to the right is Sgeir Mhòr. From this spot Prince Charles Edward Stuart left Skye for the Isle of Raasay on the 1/7/1746 after parting with Flora MacDonald at McNabb’s Inn.