Alister MacGregor:
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Trial of Alister MacGregor - Crime of Murder:

 

Alister MacGREGOR,  of Glenstra, Laird of MacGregor, for Slaughtering the Laird of Luss's friends, and plundering his lands *.
Year 1604.

This trial, and the subsequent proceedings, relating to the clan Gregor, afford the most characteristic evidence of the barbarous state of the Highlands in those times, of the lawless manners of the people, and despicable imbecillity of the executive arm.

The crimes with which the prisoner was charged, resemble more the outrage and desolation of war, than the guilt of a felon.  He was accused of having conspired the destruction of the name Colquhoun, its friends and allies, and the plunder of the lands of Luss;  Of having, on the 7th February preceeding, invaded the lands of Sir Alexander Colquhoun of Luss, with a body of 400 men, composed partly of his own clan, and of the clan Cameron, and of lawless thieves and robbers, equipped in arms, and drawn up on the field of Lennox, in battle array;  Of having fought with Sir Alexander, who, being authorised by a Warrant from the Privy Council, had convocated his friends and followers to resist this lawless host;   Of having killed about 140 of Sir Alexander's men **, most of them in cold blood after they were made prisoners;   Of having carried off 80 horses, 600 cows, and 800 sheep;   And of burning houses, corn yards ***, &c..

A Jury of Landed gentlemen of most respectable family sat upon the prisoner.

They were:

Sir Thomas Stewart of Gairntullie,

Colin Campbell of Glenurchie,

Alexander Menzies of Weyme,

Robert Robertson of Strowan,

John Napier Siar of Merchiston,

Thomas Fallusdaill, Burgess of Dumbarton,

John Hering of Lethendie,

William Stewart, Captain of Dumbarton,

Harie Drummond of Blair,

Charles Blair of that Ilk elder, Chancellor of the Jury.

John Blair younger of that Ilk,

John Graham of Knockdonaine,

Moyses Wallace, Burgess of Edinburgh,

Sir Robert Crichton of Cluny,

Robert Robertson of Faskallie.

One of these persons, indeed, Thomas Fallusdaill, Burgess of Dumbarton, ought to have been kept far aloof from this jury.  He was the special confident and adviser of the Laird of Luss; and it was in consequence of his suggestion that the Laird made the parade before His Majesty, at Stirling, with the bloody shirts, stained with the gore of his followers.

The Jury unanimously convicted the prisoner, who, in consequence of the verdict, was condemned to be hanged and quartered at the Cross of Edinburgh, his limbs to be stuck up in the chief towns, and his whole estate, heritable and moveable, to be forfeited.

Four of the Laird of MacGregor's followers, who stood trial along with him, were convicted and condemned to the same punishment, eleven on the 17th of February, and six on the 1st of March; and many pages of the criminal record are engrossed with the trials of the MacGregors.

It became the object of national attention to break this lawless confederacy, of which the object was pointed revenge and indiscriminate plunder, supported by uniform contempt of the Laws, and resistance to the Magistrates.   A statute was passed in the year 1633****, ordaining , that the whole of the Clan MacGregor which should be within the realm on the 15th of March thereafter, should appear before the Privy Council, and give surety for their good behaviour;   That each of the clan on arriving at the sixteenth year of his age, should appear before the Privy Council on the 24th of July, and find surety as above required;    That the surname of MacGregor should be abolished, and the individuals adopt some other;   That no minister should baptise a child, or clerk or notary subscribe a bond, or other security, under the name of MacGregor, under pain of deprivation.

This Act was rescinded at the restoration;    But it seems probable that the MacGregors had aggrivated the outrages of a disorderly life by the unpardonable crime of Jacobitism - The Act rescissory was annulled, and that against the MacGregors revived, in the first parliament of William and Mary. -  Within these few years, however, the state of manners and of government rendered it proper that this act of proscription should be abolished forever.  The Highlanders, about the same period, were gratified in certain other trifles for entering with zeal into the service of the State when others conspired its ruin.

Finally, the forfeited estates were restored to the heirs of the persons who were attainted for being concerned in the rebellion 1745; a measure which would have been still more generally grateful, could government have bestowed a like degree of favour on the representatives of those noble families, the descendants of those illustrious ancestors, who undoubtedly were much more innocent, much more excusable, in being concerned in the rebellion 1715.

* Record of Justiciary 20th January 1604.

** Mentioned among the slain is one Tobias Smollet, Bailie of Dumbarton, who must have been of the family of his namesake, the celebrated author.

*** This was not the first time that the Laird of Luss had suffered from the barbarous depredations of the MacGregors.  It appears, that, when the King was at Stirling, on the 21st of December 1602, the Laird of Luss presented himself before His Majesty, and implored his assistance.  The Laird was attended by a number of women, corresponding to that of his followers who had been killed or wounded, each desplaying as a banner, one of the bloody shirts which his men had on, when killed or wounded by the MacGregors.   This was about six weeks before the engagement on the Field of Lennox.   Letter by Thomas Fallusdaill, Burgess of Dumbarton, dated 19th December 1602, and addressed to the Right Honourable Alexander Colquhoun of Luss, in the archives of that family.
**** Charles I  Parl. 1.;  

          Act 30. Charles II Parl. 1. Sess. 1.;

          Unprinted Acts, William and Mary, Parl. 1. Sess. 4.;

          Act 39. George III. An.

 

 

 

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