Clan
Robertson
Site
Location
Car park at the Allt Druidhe Picnic Site.
Site
Location 2
Struan Church in old Struan
The
Robertsons were the chief clan in Rannoch in the old days, owning
much land, including all the south side of the loch, in Gaelic,
Slios Garbh, meaning the Rough Side.
One of their most warlike chiefs was Alexander Struan Robertson.
He took part in all three Stewart Rebellions. He led his clan
in 1689 at Killiecrankie, then in 1715 at Sherrifmuir, where he
was captured, and in 1745 at Preston Pans, from where he returned
triumphant in the captured coach of Sir John Cope, the enemy general.
However,
in 1746, after the defeat of the Jacobites, the government troops
burnt his house, the Hermitage, and he lived his last years near
here (at Carie) where he could disappear into the woods when in
danger.
Clan History
Robert
Bruce and the Robertsons
Before
William Wallaces remains had been taken down from the gibbet
at Perth, Rannoch was sheltering another hero. It was in June
1306 that Robert Bruce took refuge here. He had not long had himself
crowned king at Scone when he was overwhelmed by the English at
Methven (near Perth). He had few supporters with him which was
not surprising. For as Earl of Carrick he had been a respected
noble but he had changed sides more than once and he had just
stabbed to death his likely ally, Red Comyn, the powerful Lord
of Badenoch. So here he was, hated by the English and half of
Scotland as well, with very few friends. But in Rannoch he had
a friend.
By
far the most powerful man here was Donnachadh Reamhar, second
son of Angus Mor, Lord of the Isles (some would claim his descent
from the Celtic earls of Atholl). He had inherited from his father
a portion of the lands at the east end of Loch Rannoch, and further
extensive lands in the rest of Rannoch from his two marriages.
History or legend gives him heroic qualities as befits the man
who was the first chief of Clan Donnachaidh and the progenitor
of the famous Robertson Clan. For instance he was called Gaisgeach
Mor Fea Chorie which means the great hero of Fea Corrie. This
Corrie was used as a rallying point for his troops before battle.
It was to be on active service on at least three occasions in
support of Bruce and was used in after years by the Robertson
clan as their meeting place after the fiery cross had gone round.
Donnachadh took the side of Bruce, and the two of them became
fast friends. They were the same age, with the same war-like instincts
and both were tall, hardy men. When Bruce cast off his panoply
of armour and joined Donnachadh the two of them took to the ways
of the half-naked mountaineers, making long journeys on foot,
scrambling over rugged ground and enduring cold and hunger. Whether
this is fact or fiction does not matter; they were both vigorous
and tough men and both were to prove it; Bruce as a hunted man
suffering extremes of hunger and exhaustion and as a warrior proving
his skill and bravery; and Donnachadh showing enterprise and endurance
in battle and loyalty to Bruce.
Although
local history does not record Bruce as taking part in the local
battles, the Rannoch men built a home in Crossmount Wood for him
and his wife. Seomar an righ (Kings Hall) as it was called
was built in a gully opposite the Queens Pool
in the Tummel. The latter takes its name from having been used
as a ferry by the Queen of Robert the Bruce. Also a circular fortification
was put up hereby for their safety. The first occasion on which
Donnachadhs men were gathered at Fea Come was when they
were called to take action against approaching forces from the
South. The MacDougalls of Loin were mortal enemies of Bruce after
he had murdered Red Comyn because a MacDougall was married to
Red Comyns daughter. A force of MacDougalls, English and
what are called renegade Scots were reported to be coming through
the glen which later got the name Glen Sassum (The Glen of the
English). Donnachadh deployed his forces to meet them at the point
where the glen emerges into the flat lands at the east end of
Loch Rannoch. No more details are known about the battle except
that it was a victory for the Bruce supporters. It was nevertheless
an important battle in Rannochs history because the names
connected with it are used to this day. Innerhadden was the name
given to the part where the battle started, Dalchosnie means Field
of Victory and that name that commemorates the battlefield is
still the name of a house and estate, and victory was celebrated
from the beacon (Lassintullich) signalling to all around the success
of the local heroes. All these names are in current use today.
The
next call to arms occurred shortly after this but this time danger
threatened from the north-west. Again the MacDougalls were leading
a war party against the Rannoch supporters of Bruce. Their approach
was reported and they camped within sight of Rannoch. Before committing
his forces to action Donnachadh decided to see for himself ~-he
strength of the foe. So he dressed up as a travelling packman,
a fairly good disguise for those days for such men were frequent
visitors to lonely glens. He was able to wander round the MacDougall
camp with impunity. However, something made them suspicious for
as he was leaving some started to follow him. He had to take to
his heels with more and more of the enemy chasing him. According
to old accounts they had him trapped at the River Ericht but by
making a prodigious leap over the river he was able to escape
them. The rocky place where this feat was performed is called
after him, Leum Donnachadh Reamhar (Fat Duncans Leap). The
distance was estimated at a standing leap of 16 feet. Unfortunately
there is an Hydro-Electric dam at this spot now.
Duncan
now had enough information on which to base his attack, and early
next day he put his plan into action. It is not difficult to imagine
the surprise caused as he made use of his knowledge of the area
to swoop down from the high ground and trap the enemy in the Cone,
in the boggy ground near the burn. Now called The Red Come
Cone
Earra Dheargan after the action there. Not only were the MacDougalls
defeated but their general, Alexander was captured.
It
is a familiar story in the district that Duncan placed his prisoner
in the Island Fortress (now called Isle of the Gulls) from where
he escaped by tricking his captives. When his jailors brought
him food, which included a sack of apples he caused them to fall
and spill
all over the floor. As the jailors were greedily scrambling for
them MacDougall is said to have made his escape in their boat
and landed safely on the south side at the rock,
now called MacDougalls Rock.
When
Donnachadhs men next answered the summons to Fea Come it
was for a much sterner battle. This was in June, 1314 and we read
of the route the local forces took on their way to Bannockburn.
It was a long journey! East of Schiehallion, by Ben Lawers to
Killin, then by the Pass of Leny to Callander and thence to Bannockburn.
It was on the final muster that they acquired the famous crystal
that has been the Robertson
charm stone to this day. When they were pulling the chiefs standard
out of the ground a round rock crystal was adhering to it. They
carried the Clach na Brataich into battle and have regarded it
with reverence ever since. The story tellers of the district
will tell you that they did so well in the ensuing battle that
Bruce approached his old friend Donnachadh and said, You
have fought courageously for me. No more call
yourself Clann Donnachadh, Children of Duncan but Sons of Robert,
my children. This, say the story tellers, was
how Clan Robertson got its name.
It
is more than likely that the Chief received Bruces congratulations
before he marched back to Rannoch but not his name, because history
tells us that the Robertsons got their
name some years later from the 4th Chief of the Clan Donnachaidh,
Robert Riabhach.
Donnachadh certainly did not return empty handed because he had
the Clach na Brataich, the charm stone, and he also had the feeling
of pride at having helped his king
to success. Both these have been treasured possessions of the
Robertsons through the years and both have played a significant
part in their fortunes. They have been loyal to the Bruces and
their descendants, the Stewarts throughout their long history
and they
have consulted the charm stone at moments of crisis before making
decisions.
The
stone did not bring Donnachaidhs son Robert much good fortune
for, although he was a loyal supporter of his king, David II,
at the Battle of Nevilles Cross he was captured and spent
many years in a Durham jail. He suffered another misfortune in
1392 when he lost a large portion of his land as the result of
a clan fight. This fight occurred because his wife owned land
in Angus which he was expecting to acquire, but it went to her
nephew Sir David Lindsay instead. Arguments passed back and forth
until a meeting was arranged to discuss the matter. It seems that
only the Angus men turned up. Thereupon they sent a man to Rannoch
to find out the reason for their absence and he disappeared.
Accusations followed, the result of which was that the fiery cross
was sent round and a war party was gathered together. A fearsome
band it was because not only did it contain the men of Rannoch
but also, Duncan Stewart, the dreaded son of the dreaded Wolf
of Badenoch was with them.
He
and the young Donnachaidh chiefs (Robert was too old to go himself)
swept into Angus and laid the country waste. This was said to
be their first major battle as a clan, when their motto Gargn
uair dhuisgear which means Fierce when roused was
to be heard. And fierce they must have looked as they swept in
with their enormous two-handed claymores nearly as big as themselves.
Sir David Lindsay himself was wounded by one. He had a dying Rannoch
man pinned to the ground with his lance but this man had enough
strength to cut through Lindsays steel boot to the bone.
On
their way home they were pursued by the Angus men who were said
to be on horseback and to be wearing chain mail. But in spite
of that they were cut to pieces in Strathardle and the Rannoch
men returned victorious. However, the Crown decided to punish
them and the Chief lost his Aulich lands in the north of Rannoch.
They
were soon in favour with the king again for Duncan, the 3rd chief,
offered himself in 1406 as ransom with other noble hostages for
James I who had been captured by the English. When he returned
he became a man of some importance, living at Bunrannoch with
the fine title of Lord of Rannoch. However, it was his successor
who regained the lost land and acquired much more.
James
I was assassinated in Perth in 1437 and his murderer Sir Robert
Graham sought sanctuary in Atholl where he was captured by Robert
Riabhach, the 4th Chief of Clan Donnachaidh. Some accounts give
the place of his capture as Glenmore the wild country south of
Schiehallion. Much more likely is the shelter bed where he was
supposed to be surprised at the burn that now has his name Alit
Ghramaich (Grahams Burn) which flows into Loch Bhac. He
was said to have fought ferociously but he had determined opponents
for not only did he have Robert to contend with but also Stewart
of Garth joined in the chase. John Graham would without
a doubt have fought even harder if he had known what his fate
was to be. If he expected mercy from James Queen; after
all James used to call her his milk-white dove, he
certainly did not get it. He was nailed to a tree and dragged
through the streets; his body was torn with pincers his son was
tortured- and beheaded before him, and at length he was put to
death.
Robert
got the lands back that his father had lost. As well as the lands
of Struan, there was Glen Erochty, the two Bohespics Tummel Cane,
Innerhadden, and much more. He was made Baron Of Struan
and to his armorial bearings he had added a savage man in
chains which commemorate his capture of the dastardly
traitor Sir Robert Graham, and a hand supporting a
crown. It is from Robert that the Robertsons take their
name.
Other
incidents occurred during his time for he frequently led small
raiding parties against the rich church lands, frequently to Dunkeld
but even to the lands of the Bishop of St. Andrews. It was said
that when the royal charter was granted to him in 1451 for his
part in the Graham affair he was dying of wounds received in one
of these raids. His successors enjoyed a similar existence. Appropriate
epithets for them are wild and warlike.
Alexander, Roberts son is noted for an attack on Dunkeld
Cathedral when he and his clansmen chased Bishop Lauder and the
worshippers at High Mass. The bishop had been unwise enough to
imprison a Robertson for stealing cattle. Although Alexander had
a bad reputation it was nothing compared to William, the 6th Chief
who was a real tyrant. He was said to terrorise the whole country.
On more than one occasion he was reputed to have 800 men out with
him. In spite of the spoils and plunder he brought back from his
spreagh he was a rash man for he got into heavy debt and in consequence
lost much of his land trying to clear it. But it was his love
of fighting that was his undoing. He foolishly took on the Earl
of Atholl who was much too strong for him. He was captured and
was heidit without ceremony at Tulliemet in 1516.
It
was in 1545 that the next chief was captured by the MacGregors,
as wild a bunch as the Robertsons. It is not known what he promised
them but he was released to die a quiet death in his bed. Which
is more than his successor did. William, the 8th Chief got heavily
into debt, lost more of the Robertson lands and was murdered in
1587. Donald the 9th Chief is not recorded as doing anything of
note apart from being the father of Robert, the 10th Chief. Robert
unfortunately lived at a time when the ruling monarchs were getting
fed up with their unruly subjects in the highlands and steps were
taken to restore order in Rannoch. . . not an easy thing to do
in such a place so well fortified by nature. Soldiers were sent
in from the garrison at Dunkeld, said to be the Kings Guardsmen,
but they did not have great success. They only ventured as far
as Foss where they attempted to arrest a Neil Stewart. Here Robert
came upon them at night. He set them off as a warning to their
fellows on the 18 mile walk home without their horses or their
boots. When they said they came on the kings business he
said he caird not for his Majestie. James VI then
did a wise thing; he charged the Earl of Atholl to answer for
the present misrule of the area. Roberts house
at this time was Invervack, just on the doorstep of Blair Castle,
and when the Earl rounded up a dozen Robertson clansmen there
was nothing Robert could do about it, and for a while the Robertsons
were quiet.
There
was plenty of action during the time of the next two Chiefs. This
was when the religious controversy raged. The great General Montrose
was attempting to win Scotland for Charles I against the Covenanters.
It is unlikely that the people of Rannoch understood the main
issues concerning Episcopacy and Presbyterianism but when the
fiery cross went round they understood that all right. The Robertson
chiefs, always Royalists is spite of Robert the previous chief
temporarily falling from grace as we have just seen, they would
be only too keen to lend their support, and of course there would
also be plunder. There was probably plenty of this to bring back
to Rannoch because they took part in all the Royalist victories
in 1644 and 1645. It was Alexander Robertson of Struan as the
11th Chief was called, who led the clan on these occasions.
In
1650 they were out again but this was a different story. At the
Battle of Dunbar they came under the leadership of a good general
David Leslie, but they were beaten by a better one, Oliver Cromwell.
The
Earl of Glencaim was in Rannoch in 1653 looking for support for
Charles II. He raised the MacGregors from the Isle of Rannoch,
MacGregors Hall as the historian calls it. He would
have no difficulty recruiting them because one of their opponents
was the Earl of Argyll, a Campbell, one of their hereditary enemies.
At the same time young Alexander, the 12th Robertson Chief led
his men from Fea Corrie. Both forces met above Annat and marched
up the old path to Loch Garry. History informs us that the leaders
quarrelled so much amongst themselves that the Cromwell General,
General Monk had little difficulty in winning the ensuing Battle
of Dalnaspidal.
Of
all the Robertson chiefs the most individual and the most unlucky
was Alexander, the thirteenth baron of his line. Called Struan
Robertson the poet-chief, he was at St. Andrews University when
his father died, leaving him as chief. On top of that came news
of the revolution. His mother afraid for him wrote to his uncles
to check this headstrong boy of hers with great possessions to
lose from supporting King James. To no avail. He rallied his clansmen;
there were said to be 600 of them in the Fea Corrie and this young
chieftain led them off to join Bonny Dundee.
The
clan was too late to take part in the Battle of Killiecrankie
(1689). The highlanders famous charge had defeated General
Mackay but Dundee was dead and the highlanders lost heart without
their leader. Mackay soon regained his confidence and scattered
the Robertsons as they made towards Perth, and for his share in
this the young chief was exiled to France.
He
was pardoned in 1703 after Queen Anne had ascended the throne
and for a dozen years he was a good landowner to his clansmen
although he was beginning to accrue debts. But when the fight
began again in 1715 he was quick to join the Earl of Mar with
five hundred of his men behind him. At the Battle of Sheriffmuir
the Robertsons saw their leader captured. They rescued him but
he was recaptured and he was again exiled to France.
His
sister looked after the estates for him until he came back, but
he treated her badly, even locking her up on the Island of Rannoch.
He never did get on with women or trust them. They say that this
was because he found his own mother a terrifying person. She was
said to have starved her brother to death so that she could ensure
the succession and it is a tradition in Rannoch that as
often as she went abroad to ride or walk, the crows followed
her in great numbers, making a hideous croaking as if upbraiding
her guilt.
And yet it was women who came to his aid when a persistent creditor
accosted him at Carie and demanded payment. The women of the neighbourhood
seized the man, stripped him naked and kept him under the spout
of the mill-wheel till the poor creature was almost killed with
cold. For this the chieftain was tried at Perth, but acquitted
for want of evidence.
By
the time that Prince Charles landed in Scotland in 1745 Struan
was seventy-five. Still he set off on his third rebellion. A hundred
or so Robertsons went with him. He got as far as Prestonpans where
his men joined the Athollmen. He saw the victory and was driven
back to Rannoch in Sir John Copes captured carriage. After
the defeat of Prince Charlie at Culloden the government seems
to have felt that this last escapade of Old Robertsons was
too harmless to punish him although the Struan estates were taken
over by them. He died at Carie in 1749 from where his body was
escorted by two thousand men 18 miles through Robertson country
to be buried at Struan.
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