Kenneth Mor, Third Earl of Seaforth
Kenneth
was born at Brahan Castle in 1635, and when he was five or six
years old his father placed him under the care of the Rev. Farquhar
Macrae, minister of Kintail, and constable of Ellandonnan Castle,
who had a seminary in his house which was attended by the sons
of the neighbouring gentry, who kept young Kintail company.
One of the manuscript historians of the family, referring to
this practical early training of his Lordship, says--"This might
be thought a preposterous and wrong way to educate a nobleman,
but they who would consider where the most of his interest lay,
and how he was among his people, followers, and dependants,
on which the family was still valued, perhaps will not think
so, for by this the young lord had several advantages; first,
by the wholesome, though not delicate or too palatable diet
he prescribed to him and used him with, he began to have a wholesome
complexion, so nimble and strong, that he was able to endure
Stress and fatigue, labour and travel, which proved very useful
to him in his after life; secondly, he did not only learn the
language but became thoroughly acquainted with and learned the
genius of his several tribes or clans of his Highlanders, so
that afterwards he was reputed to be the fittest chief or chieftain
of all superiors in the Highlands and Isles of Scotland; and
thirdly, the early impressions of being among them, and acquaint
with the bounds, made him delight and take pleasure to be often
among them and to know their circumstances, which indeed was
his interest and part of their happiness, so that it was better
to give him that first step of education than that which would
make him a stranger at home, both as to his people, estate,
and condition but when he was taken from Mr Farquhar to a public
school, he gave great evidence of his abilities and inclination
for learning, and being sent in the year 1651 to the King's
College at Aberdeen, under the discipline of Mr Patrick Sandylands,
before he was well settled or made any progress in his studies
King Charles II., after his army had been defeated at Dunbar
the year before, being then at Stirling recruiting and making
up his army, with which he was resolved to march into England,
the young laird was called home in his father's absence, who
was left in Holland (as already described), to raise his men
for the King's service, and so went straight to Kintail with
the particular persons of his name, viz., the Lairds of Pluscardine
and Lochslinn, his uncles; young Tarbat, Rory of Davochmaluag,
Kenneth of Coul, Hector of Fairburn, and several others, but
the Kintail men, when called upon, made a demur and declined
to rise with him, because he was but a child, and that his father,
their master, was in life, without whom they would not move,
since the King, if he had use for him and for his followers,
might easily bring him home." [Ardintoul MS.]
Kenneth,
like his father in later years, became identified with the fate
of Charles II., and devoted himself unremittingly to the services
of that monarch during his exile. From his great stature he
was known among the Highlanders as "Coinneach Mor." On the arrival
of the King at Garmouth, in June, 1650, his reception throughout
all Scotland was of a most cheering character, but the Highlanders,
who always favoured the Stuarts, were specially joyous on the
return of their exiled king. After the defeat by Oliver Cromwell
of the Scottish army at Dunbar--a defeat brought about by the
interference of the Committee of Estates and the Kirk with the
duties of those in charge of the forces, and whose plans, were
they allowed to carry them out, would have saved Scotland from
the first great defeat it had ever received at the hands of
an enemy--the King resolved to come north and throw himself
upon the patriotism and loyalty or his Highland subjects. He
was, however, captured and taken back to Perth, and afterwards
to Edinburgh, by the Committee of Estates, on whom, it is said,
his attempted escape to the Highlands "produced a salutary effect;"
and they began to treat him with some respect, going the length
even of admitting him to their deliberations. A large number
of the Highlanders were already in arms to support him; but
the Committee, having the King in their power, induced him to
write to the Highland chiefs requesting them to lay down their
arms. This they refused, and to enforce the King's orders a
regiment, under Sir John Drown, was despatched to the North,
but it was surprised and defeated on the night of the 21st of
October by Sir David Ogilvy of Airley. On receiving this intelligence,
General Leslie hastened north with a force of 3000 cavalry.
General Middleton, who supported the King's friends in the Highlands,
and who was then at Forfar, hearing of Leslie's advance, forwarded
him a letter containing a copy of a bond and oath of engagement
which had been entered into by Huntly, Athole, the Earl of Seaforth,
and other leading Highland chiefs, by which they had pledged
themselves on oath to join firmly and faithfully together, and
"neither for fear, threatening, allurement, nor advantage, to
relinquish the cause of religion, of the king, and of the kingdom,
nor to lay down their arms without a general consent; and as
the best undertakings did not escape censure and malice, they
promised and swore, for the satisfaction of all reasonable persons,
that they would maintain the true religion, as then established
in Scotland, the National Covenant and the Solemn League and
Covenant, and defend the person of the King, his prerogative,
greatness, and authority, and the privileges of parliament,
and the freedom of the subject." Middleton pointed out that
the only object of himself and friends was to unite the Scots
in the defence of their common rights, and that, as would be
seen from this bond, the grounds on which they entered into
association were exactly the same as those professed by Leslie
himself. Considering this, and seeing that the independence
of Scotland was at stake, he urged that all Scotsmen should
join for the preservation of their common liberties.
Middleton
proposed to join Leslie, to place himself under his command,
and expressed a hope that he would not shed the blood of his
countrymen nor force them to shed the blood of their bethren
in self-defence. These communications ended in a treaty between
Leslie and the leading Royalists at Strathbogie, dated 4th November,
by which Middleton and his followers received an indemnity,
and laid down their arms. [Balfour, vol, iv., p. 129. Highland
Clans, p. 285]
Immediately
after the battle of Worcester, at which Charles was defeated
by Cromwell in 1651--where we find among those present Thomas
Mackenzie of Pluscardine as one of the Colonels of foot for
Inverness and Ross, and Alexander Cam Mackenzie, fourth son
of Alexander, fifth of Gairloch--Charles fled to the Continent,
and, after many severe hardships and narrow escapes, he found
refuge in Flanders, where he continued to reside, often in great
want and distress, until the Restoration, when in May, 1660,
he returned to England "indolent, selfish, unfeeling, faithless,
ungrateful, and insensible to shame or reproach."
The
Earl of Cromarty says that subsequent to the treaty agreed upon
between Middleton and Leslie at Strathbogie, "Seaforth joined
the King at Stirling.
After
the fatal battle of Worcester he continued a close prisoner
until the Restoration of Charles." He was excepted from Oliver
Cromwell's Act of Grace and Pardon in 1654, and his estates
were forfeited, without any provision being allowed out of it
for his wife and family. He supported the King's cause as long
as there was an opportunity of fighting for it in the field,
and when forced to submit to the opposing forces of Cromwell
and the Commonwealth, he was committed to prison, where, with
"much firmness of mind and nobility of soul," he endured a tedious
captivity for many. years, until Charles II. was recalled, when
he ordered his old and faithful friend Seaforth to be released,
after which he became a great favourite at his licentious and
profligate Court.
During
the remainder of his life little or nothing of any importance
is known of him, except that he lived in the favour and merited
smiles of his sovereign, in the undisputed possession and enjoyment
of the extensive estates and honours of his noble ancestors,
which, through his faithful adherence to the House of Stuart,
had been nearly lost during the exile of the second Charles
and his own captivity. Referring to the position of affairs
at this period, the Laird of Applecross says that the "rebels,
possessing the authority, oppressed all the loyal subjects,
and him with the first; his estate was over-burthened to its
destruction, but nothing could deter him so as to bring him
to forsake his King or his duty. Whenever any was in the field
for him, he was one, seconding that falling cause with all his
power, and when he was not in the field against the enemy, he
was in the prison by him until the restoration of the King."
Restored to liberty, he, on the 23d of April, 1662, received
a Commission of the Sheriffship of Ross, which was afterwards
renewed to him and to his eldest son Kenneth, jointly, on 31st
of July, 1675; and when he had set his affairs in order at Brahan,
he re-visited Paris, leaving his Countess Isobel, daughter of
Sir John Mackenzie of Tarbat, and sister to the first Earl of
Cromarty, in charge of his interests in the North.
Kenneth
married early in life Isobel, daughter of Sir John Mackenzie
of Tarbat, father of George, first Earl of Cromarty, with issue--
I. Kenneth Og, his heir and successor. II. John Mackenzie of
Assynt, who married Sibella, daughter of Alexander Mackenzie,
III. of Applecross (marriage contract 1697). He has a sasine
in 1695 and 1696. They had issue, an only son, Kenneth, who
married his cousin Frances, daughter of Alexander Mackenzie
of Assynt and Conansbay, and died in 1723, without issue. III.
Hugh, who died young and unmarried. There is a sasine to him
as third son in 1667. IV. Colonel Alexander, also designated
of Assynt and Conansbay. He has a sasine as "third lawful son
now in life" of the lands of Kildin, dated October, 1694. He
married Elizabeth, daughter of John Paterson, Bishop of Ross
(marriage contract 1700), with issue--Major William Mackenzie,
who married Mary, daughter and co-heiress of Mathew Humberston,
county Lincoln, whose two sons--Colonel Thomas Francis Mackenzie,
and Francis Humberston Mackenzie, created Lord Seaforth in 1797,
and who died without surviving male issue, the last of his line
in 1815--succeeded to the family estates. V. Margaret, who married
James, second Lord Duffus, with issue. VI. Anne, who died unmarried.
VII. Isabel, who married, first, in February, 1694, Roderick
Macleod, XVI I. of Macleod, without issue; and, secondly, Sir
Duncan Campbell of Lochnell, with issue. VIII. Mary, who, as
his second wife, married Alexander Macdonald, XI. of Glengarry,
with issue--John, who carried on the succession, and others.
She has a life-rent sasine in 1696. Kenneth Mor died in December,
1678, when he was succeeded by his eldest son, XVI. Kenneth
Og, Fourth Earl of Seaforth.
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