The
politics behind the Jacobite rebellions of the 18th century were
as simple and as complex as the blood relationships which governed
the lives of royal families all over Europe at that time. In 1688
an overwhelmingly Protestant English people grew heartily sick
of their Catholic Stuart king and his pretentions to absolutism.
James II, whose father had been beheaded on the orders of Oliver
Cromwell and whose brother had only been restored to the throne
in 1661, was deposed in favour of his sister Mary and her Dutch
Protestant husband William of Orange. Unfortunately, they died
childless and the throne passed to James' second sister Anne.
This poor woman spent most of her life in childbirth and her tragedy
was to bear seventeen children in all and see not one of them
live past infancy. The next in line were the children of Sophia
the Electress of Hanover and when Queen Anne died in 1714, George
Elector of Hanover became George I of Great Britain. In Scotland
he was known as the "wee German lairdie". All the time
the exiled James and his son brooded in their palace of St. Germain
in France.
Those who supported James were known as Jacobites, from Jacobus
the Latin rendering of James. Though Jacobite sympathies in England
grew hot and cold in parallel with the general level of political
contentment, there was little chance that England would ever seriously
contemplate a Stuart restoration with it's accompanying Catholic
baggage. In one place, however, the Stuarts could depend on a
great deal of support and that was in the Highlands of Scotland.
There had been an invasion scare in 1708 and a French fleet had
actually got as far as the Firth of Forth before Admiral Byng
and the Royal Navy drove it off. The most serious of all the Jacobite
attempts to overthrow the government, however, came in 1715. It
was led by a Scots lord, the Earl of Mar who had the unfortunate
nickname of 'Bobbing John'. Mar had originally been an enthusiatic
supporter of the Hanoverians, but when he was snubbed by the new
king he took himself north and somewhere on the journey became
a committed Jacobite. He raised the standard of the Stuarts on
the Braes o' Mar and the Mackintoshes and the Mcdonalds came to
join him. Stirling was held for the government by the Duke of
Argyll and in an attempt to take the rebellion into England, Mar
sent Mackintosh of Borlum and 2,000 men across the River Forth,
down through the Borders and into the northern counties of England.
Borlum picked up some support along the way, notably Viscount
Kenmure and his borderers, but the ordinary folk gave him no help
and in England were downright hostile. Linking up with the Earl
of Derwentwater and his English Catholics, the Jacobites attempted
to invade Lancashire but were stopped at the town of Preston.
For two days of bitter street fighting they battled a superior
government army but were finally forced to surrender.
Back in the north Mar was indecisive and unable to provide the
passionate leadership that a call to rebellion requires. Early
on his men had occupied Perth and Inverness but no French warships
bearing either the 'rightful king', gold or weapons had come to
his aid. In October after sending Borlum on his melancholy mission
to defeat at Preston, Mar came came down from the Highlands and
in the shadow of the Ochil Hills, not far from the town of Dunblane,
his men met the Duke of Argyll in open battle on the field of
Sheriffmuir. Mar's army was twice as large as his opponent's and
on the right of the Jacobite line the MacDonalds broke the government
infantry and the horse behind them. On the left, however, Argyll's
men did much the same and like some great bloody rotating wheel
the battle was fought out indecisively. It was not a fight that
either could claim a victory (though both did) and at the end
of the day Mar retreated to Perth and Argyll still held Stirling
and the roads to the south. The battle had been fought on that
same Sunday that saw Borlum surrender at Preston.
Just before Christmas James II's son, who had styled himself James
III since his father's death in 1701 and whose reputation has
laboured under history's title of 'the Old Pretender', finally
landed at Stonehaven in the north-east of Scotland. He was a cold
man and did little to inspire those few who had stayed loyal to
Mar after Sheriffmuir. With winter raging, no French troops or
supplies and Argyll marching north against him, on February 4th
he and Mar took ship for France. Neither would ever see Scotland
again.
The government were not as vicious in their pacification as they
would be after the next great rising and only two of the leaders,
Derwentwater and Kenmure, were beheaded. A series of roads were
built into the Highlands by General Wade and a string of forts
constructed down the line of the Great Glen. The clans were ordered
to disarm but they handed in only old and rusty weapons, hiding
the best for later use. That would come almost thirty years later
and would be led by the Old Pretender's dashing young son - Bonnie
Prince Charlie.
The Government Army
He
gave us this charge, that if we had time to load so to do, and
if not, to make no delay but to drive our bayonets into their
bodies and make sure work.
A
government soldier on his commander's order before the battle
At
5.00am on the morning of 16th April, 1746 the beat of the drums
summoned the army of King George to the march. There were almost
9,000 of them arrayed in sixteen battalions of foot, three regiments
of horse, an artillery company and the Argyll Militia. It was
not an English army but a government one and of the foot battalions
three were lowland Scots, one Irish and the Argyll Militia was
raised from the Cambell lands in the west of Scotland.
The common soldier that made up the army's ranks came usually
from the lowest levels of society and most of them had enlisted
for economic reasons. Some had even been pressed into service.
The soldier enlisted for a period of three years and for this
received a bounty of four pounds sterling. For the privilege of
risking his life in the king's service a soldier was paid sixpence
a day and from this twopence was stopped to pay for his uniform
and equipment. The basic rations he was allotted were inadequate
and often inedible so more of his meagre wages went on food. He
wore a wide-skirted heavy coat of scarlet similarly coloured breeches
and white or grey gaiters above his black, buckled shoes. On his
head there was a black three-cornered hat that gave little relief
from sun or rain and round his neck was a constricting leather
stock designed to ensure he kept his head up and facing forward.
On his white belt were slung a cartridge pouch, a short curved
sword and a 16 inch bayonet of fluted steel. Though the average
soldier was literate enough to write his own name he had had little
schooling in anything other than the arts of war and for the footsoldier
these were not particularly complicated.
He carried a Brown Bess musket that weighed just over five kilos,
had a barrel just over a metre long and fired a 37 gram ball of
lead from a bore of 0.735 inch. It was completely ineffective
at anything over 300 paces and at distances less than that only
an expert could expect to hit a reasonable target. Its effectiveness
lay in the contolled fire of large groups of men 100 or even 200
discharging their weapons on command at the same time. The infantryman
was expected to stand his ground as an enemy advanced, withstand
his opponents artillery fire and musketry, then after volleys
of his own fire go forward in tightly packed ranks with the bayonet.
The key to this was the ability to maintain a disciplined tight
formation, in either offence or defence, in the face of sometimes
withering enemy fire. It was a lottery with survival as the only
prize.
In
the Duke of Cumberland's army that day were men who had stood
solidly against the French roundshot at Fontenoy two years previously
and joked that the approaching cannonballs looked like so many
black puddings. Fontenoy had been a bloody defeat for the British
but the men had aquitted themselves well. There were others in
the army who had run like rabbits before the Highland charge at
Falkirk just a few months before. As they moved off from their
camp at Nairn, the three regiments of horse in column on the left,
the sixteen battalions of foot in three columns between the cavalry
on the left and the sea on the right, the Argyll Militiamen slipping
through the heather in skirmishing line ahead, perhaps both Fontenoy
and Falkirk veterans prayed that this day would be different.
Of all Cumberland's men it was the artillery that would do the
most execution that day. At 34 years of age Brevet Colonel William
Bedford, commander of the ordnance was a dedicated, skillful gunner
who had seen service at Carthagena, Dettingen and Fontenoy. His
artillerymen were better trained and more professional than anything
the Highlanders had ever faced in their half century of sporadic
rebellion against the crown. Bedford had ten 3 pounder cannon
which he was to place in the front line by pairs. To the rear
he kept some other three pounders and his cohorn mortars. The
barrels of the 3 pounders were just over a metre long and into
each was placed a pound and a half (675g) of powder. A 3 pound
(1350g) ball of iron was then rammed home. Some powder was placed
in the touchhole and the beast was ready to fire. After each shot,
the barrel was swabbed out with a wet sponge to cool it down and
the process began again. A roundshot could tear a man apart and
do the same to the men in the ranks behind him. Sometimes the
cannonballs bounced and did even greater execution. The muzzle
velocity was not great and usually the roundshot could be seen
coming. Against dispersed or dug-in troops the effect would have
been negligible, against tightly packed ranks only a few hundred
yards away they would prove devastating.
The
Jacobites
Ill-starred
are the brave did no vision foreboding,
Tell
you that fate had forsaken your cause,
Yet
were you destined to die at Culloden,
No
victory crown nor your fall with applause.
The Jacobite army, though it contained a Regiment of Irishmen
and Scots serving with the French and a few lowlanders romantic
or foolish enough to follow Prince Charlie, was essentially an
army of Highland clansmen. As such it was the last feudal gathering
to take the field in the history of Britain. To the English officers
of Cumberland's staff they must have seemed like the Zulus or
Apaches in later wars; admired for their courage, feared for their
skill in battle and despised for the primitive nature of their
society.
The clan was a group of men with a common surname and, in theory
at least, connected by ties of blood. The chief was their master
and bore both the name and the purest blood of this extended family's
common progenitor.They grew up in a harsh enviroment that geology
had formed untold millenia before their birth, when the great
icesheets had carved out the Highland glens and bequeathed them
a land of great defensive potential and little economic possibility.
As the ice retreated most of the topsoil went with it, that remaining
thin and poor. Simple animal husbandry was the only possible way
to scratch a living from the land and the people became herders
of hardy black cattle and goats. The thieving of these beasts
was regarded as a noble profession for the clansmen to follow
and the stories of martial glory and honour satisfied or discharged
that were the stuff of the bards and storytellers' tales often
had their genesis in the theft of livestock or other movables
from neighbouring clans.
The chief had absolute power over his men, the power of 'pit and
gallows', and there was no appeal against his judgement. Though
by the 18th century the chief may have been educated at a university
in Scotland or France, have spoken French, Latin and English as
well as his native Gaelic, drunk claret at his table, it was his
ability to protect his 'children' and lead them in battle that
were the measure of the man. A chief's rent roll was calculated
not in coin but in the number of broadswords that would follow
him into battle. Already this system was an anachronism and only
the difficulty of penetrating their Highland fastnesses had allowed
it to go on for so long. Some of the chiefs had been lucky or
prescient enough to sniff the direction of the prevailing wind
and had hitched their banners to the government's flagstaff, most
notably the Cambell Dukes of Argyll. Even today the Duke of Argyll
is the foremost of Scotland's peers.
Duncan Forbes, the Lord President of the Council, who looked on
his Highland neighbours with a condescension greatly softened
by sympathy, once concluded that all the clans raised in a single
body could have fielded over 32,000 broadswords; a daunting prospect
for any government to face. Prince Charles never had more than
10,000 at any time during the '45 rising and usually he only had
4,000 or 5,000. The prospect of a united armies of the clans was,
however, something that could never be. Like all tribal societies,
ancient feuds, current jealousies and a tradition of perpetual
strife made a mockery of any pretensions to unity.
On
the morning of the 16th April 1746, as Cumberland's army advanced,
the Jacobites had j