|
|
Clan
MacNaughton

With
the failure of the Rebellions of 1715 and in particular that
of the 1745, the Clan system in Scotland rapidly broke down,
with the inevitable loss of lands of the supporters of Prince
Charles Edward and the influx of English officials and landowners.
The only mention of any import concerning the Clan around this
time was in 1746 when one John MacNaughton of the family of
Moar in Glen Lyon, a quartermaster in Kilmarnock's Regiment,
was taken prisoner after Culloden while delivering a white charger
from Menzies of Culdares to Bonnie Prince Charlie. Known to
have been in rebellion and being accused of cutting down Colonel
Gardiner with a Lochaber Axe at the Battle of Prestonpans in
the '45 he was offered a pension of thirty pounds if he would
turn King's Evidence and divulge the name of his Jacobite master.
He refused and was hanged at Carlisle Castle and was remembered
thereafter as 'Honest John MacNaughton' or 'Macneachdain of
the White horse'. And so the Clan remained leaderless and landless
until in the early 19th century, there became a desire by the
Macnachtan in Perthshire to appoint or re - establish the position
of Chief of the Clan and to this end, they appealed to Edmund
Macnaghten of Beardieville in Ireland to accept the appointment.
While there does not now appear to be any record of correspondence
on the matter or just how they arrived at the conclusion that
he was the rightful heir to the title, we do know of his descent
from the line of Dunderawes through a Shane (Iain or John) Dhu.
There were more than one of the Clan bearing this name at the
relevant period, for example an Angus and Johne Dow held land
in Keremenach and Cardavay in Kintyre around I6OO but it seems
probable that the progenitor of this line, was the Iain Dhu,
son of Iain MacAlexander, son of Alexander who fought at Flodden,
or the son of Alexander, brother of Sir Iain who married the
sister of the 1st Earl of Antrum. This Shane went to Ireland
about 158O with his 'relative' Sorley Boy MacDonnell and settled
in the County of Antrum where he and/or his son acted as secretary
to Sorley's son, Randal, and obtained land in Ballymagarry.
His Heir was Daniel who married the daughter of the Bishop of
Armagh and on his death in the 168O's, his son John inherited
the Estate of Benvarden. He had married Helen Stafford of Portglenore,
a descendant of Thomas rootstock, Duke of Gloucester and third
son of Edward III. During the uprising in 1819, his wife took
their three children to seek refuge in Londonderry where they
remained with her brother the Rt. Hon. Edmund Francis Stafford
who was in charge of the city's defences against the siege by
the Catholic army of James II. After the deaths of his father
and elder brother, the estate passed to Edmund MacNaghten. He
married Leonara Vesey of the De Vesci Family, descendants of
Eustace de Vesci who in 1209 married Margaret, illegitimate
daughter of William the Lion, of Scotland. There were no children
of this marriage and in 1761 at the age of eighty two, be took
as his second wife, Hannah Johnstone by whom he had two sons.
This was the Edmund to whom the offer to be Chieftain was made
but refused. The invitation was repeated again 1818 to his eldest
son Edmund Alexander and was accepted. On January 13 of that
year, Thomas, Earl of Kinnoul, Lord Lyon, King of Arms for Scotland,
issued a Patent on the attestation of the Clan in Scotland acknowledging
him as their Chief but he never took the necessary formalities
to have the honour bestowed. On his death, his brother Sir Francis
successfully claimed the title.
Septs
of Clan MacNaughton:
MacHenry MacHendry MacKendrick MacBrayne MacEol MacNaught MacKnight
MacNitt MacNair MacNuir of Argyllshire Weir MacVicar of Kenmore
Macays and MacKays of Strathtay
CREST:
A castle embattled. gules
MOTTO:
I hope in God
TRANSLATION:
I hope in God
PLANT:
Trailing azalea
GAELIC NAME:
Mac Neachdainn
ORIGIN OF NAME:
Gaelic:
Mac Neachdainn (
son of Nechtan, pur one )
WAR CRY:
Fraoch Eilean
(Heathery Island)
Return
To Scottish Clans
|
|