Francis Humberston Mackenzie
Raised
to the peerage of the United Kingdom as Lord Seaforth and Baron
Mackenzie of Kintail, in 1797. This nobleman was in many respects
an able and remarkable man, was born in 1754, in full possession
of all his faculties but a severe attack of scarlet fever, from
which he suffered when about twelve years of age, deprived him
of hearing and almost of speech.
As
he advanced in years he again nearly recovered the use of his
tongue, but during the last two years of his life, grieving
over the loss of his four promising sons, all of whom predeceased
him, he became unable, or rather never made the attempt to articulate.
In his youth he was intended to follow the naval profession,
but his physical misfortunes made such a career impossible.
Little or nothing is known of the history of his early life.
In 1784, and again in 1790, he was elected M.P. for the County
of Ross. In 1787, in the thirty-third year of his age, he offered
to raise a regiment on his own estates for the King's service,
to be commanded by himself. In the same year the 74th, 75th,
76th, and 77th Regiments were raised, and the Government declined
his patriotic offer, but agreed to accept his services in procuring
recruits for the 74th and 75th. This did not satisify him, and
he did not then come prominently to the front. On the 19th of
May 1790, he renewed his offer, but the Government informed
him that the strength of the army had been finally fixed at
77 Regiments, and his services were again declined. He was still
anxious to be of service to his country, and when the war broke
out in 1793, he for the third time renewed his offer, and placed
his great influence at the service of the Crown. On this occasion
a letter of service is granted in his favour, dated the 7th
of March, 1793, empowering him, as Lieutenant-Colonel-Commandant,
to raise a Highland battalion, which, being the first embodied
during the war, was to be numbered the 78th, the original Mackenzie
regiment having had its number previously reduced to the 72d.
The battalion was to consist of one company of grenadiers, one
of light infantry, and eight battalion companies. The Mackenzie
chief at once appointed as his Major his own brother-in-law,
Alexander Mackenzie, at that time of Belmaduthy but afterwards
of Inverallochy and Castle Fraser, fourth and younger son of
Colin Mackenzie, VI. of Kilcoy, then a captain in the 73d Regiment,
and a man who proved himself on all future occasions well fitted
for the post. The following notice, headed by the Royal arms,
was immediately posted throughout the counties of Ross and Cromarty,
on the mainland, and in the Island of Lewis:--
"SEAFORTH'S
HIGHLANDERS to be forthwith raised for the defence of his Glorious
Majesty, King George the Third, and the preservation of our
happy constitution in Church and State. "All lads of true Highland
blood willing to show their loyalty and spirit, may repair to
Seaforth, or the Major, Alexander Mackenzie of Belmaduthy or
the other commanding officers at headquarters at ???, where
they will receive high bounties and soldier-like entertainment.
"The
lads of this regiment will live and die together, as they cannot
be draughted into other regiments, and must be reduced in a
body, in their own country.
"Now
for a stroke at the Monsieurs, my boys! King George for ever!
Huzza!"
The
machinery once set agoing, applications poured in upon Seaforth
for commissions in the corps from among his more immediate relatives,
and from others who were but slightly acquainted with him.
[Besides
Seaforth himself, and his Major mentioned in the text, the following,
of the name of Mackenzie, appear among the first list of officers:--Major.--Alexander
Mackenzie of Fairburn, General in 1809. Captains.--John Mackenzie
of Gairloch, "Fighting Jack," Major in 1794. Lieutenant-Colonel
the same year and Lieutenant-General in 1814; died the father
of the British Army in 1860; and John Randoll Mackenzie of Suddie,
Major-General in 1804, killed at Talavera in 1809. Lieutenant.--Colin
Mackenzie, Lieutenant-Colonel 91st Regiment. Ensigns.--Charles
Mackenzie, Kilcoy; and J. Mackenzie Scott, Captain 57th Regiment;
killed at Albuera.]
The
martial spirit of the people soon became thoroughly roused,
and recruits came in so rapidly that on the 10th of July, 1793,
only four months after the letter of service to Seaforth, the
Regiment was marched to Fort-George, inspected and passed by
Lieutenant-General Sir Hector Munro, when five companies were
immediately embarked for Guernsey and the other five companies
were landed in Jersey in September, 1793, and afterwards sent
to Holland.
On
the 13th of October, the same year, Mackenzie offered to raise
a second battalion for the 78th, and on the 30th of the same
month the King gave him permission to raise five hundred additional
men on the original letters of service. But this was not what
he wanted, and on the 28th of December following he submitted
to the Government three alternative proposals for raising a
second battalion, On the 7th of February, 1794, one of these
was agreed to. The battalion was to be formed of eight battalion
and two flank companies, each to consist of 100 men, with the
usual number of officers and noncommissioned officers.
He
was, however, disappointed by the Government; for while he intended
to have raised a second battalion for his own regiment, an order
was issued signed by Lord Amherst, that it was to be considered
a separate corps, whereupon the Lieutenant-Colonel-Commandant
addressed the following protest to Mr Dundas, one of the Secretaries
of State:--
St
Alban Street, 8th February, 1794.
Sir,--I
had sincerely hoped I should not be obliged to trouble you again;
but on my going to-day to the War Office about my letter of
service (having yesterday, as I thought, finally agreed with
Lord Amherst), I was, to my amazement, told that Lord Amherst
had ordered that the 1000 men I am to raise were not to be a
second battalion of the 78th, but a separate corps. It will,
I am sure, occur to you that should I undertake such a thing,
it would destroy my influence among the people of my country
entirely and instead of appearing as a loyal honest chieftain
calling out his friends to support their King and country, I
should be gibbeted as a jobber of the attachment my neighbours
bear to me. Recollecting what passed between you and me, I barely
state the circumstance; and I am, with great respect and attachment,
sir, your most obliged and obedient servant, F. H. MACKENZIE.
This
had the desired effect the order for a separate corps was rescinded,
and a letter of service was issued in his favour on the 10th
of February, 1794, authorising him, as Lieutenant-Colonel-Commandant,
to add the new battalion, the strength of which was to be one
company of grenadiers, one of light infantry, and eight battalion
companies, to his own regiment. The regiment was soon raised,
inspected and passed at Fort-George in June of the same year
by Lieutenant-General Sir Hector Munro; and in July following
the King gave permission to have it named, as a distinctive
title, "The Ross-shire Buffs." The two battalions were amalgamated
in June, 1796. Another battalion was raised in 1804--letter
of service, dated 17th April. These were again amalgamated in
July, 1817.
Although
the regiment was not accompanied abroad by its Lieutenant-Colonel-Commandant,
he continued most solicitous for its reputation and welfare,
as we find from the various communications addressed to him
regarding it and the conduct of the men by Lieutenant-Colonel
Alexander Mackenzie of Fairburn, appointed its Lieutenant-Colonel
from the first battalion, [John Randoll Mackenzie, also from
the first battalion, was appointed senior Major.] and then in
actual command; but as the history of the 78th Highlanders is
not our present object, we must here part company with it and
follow the future career of Francis Humberston Mackenzie.
As
a reward for his eminent services to the Government he was appointed
Lord-Lieutenant of the County of Ross, and, on the 26th of October,
1797, raised to the dignity of a peer of the United Kingdom,
by the titles of Lord Seaforth and Baron Mackenzie of Kintail,
the ancient dignities of his house, with limitation to the heirs
male of his body.
His
Lordship, having resigned the command of the 78th, was, in 1798,
appointed Colonel of the Ross-shire Regiment of Militia. In
1800 he was appointed Governor of Barbadoes, an office which
he retained for six years, after which he held high office in
Demerara and Berbice. While Governor of Barbadoes he was for
a time extremely popular, and was distinguished for his firmness
and even-handed justice. He succeeded in putting an end to slavery,
and to the practice of slave-killing in the island, which at
that time was of very common occurrence, and deemed by the planters
a venal offence punishable only by a small fine of o15. In consequence
of his humane proceedings in this matter he became obnoxious
to many of the colonists, and, in 1806, he finally left the
island.
In
1808 he was made a Lieutenant-General.
These
were singular incidents in the life of a man who may be said
to have been deaf and dumb from his youth but who, in spite
of these physical defects--sufficient to crush any ordinary
man--had been able, by the force of his natural abilities and
the favour of fortune, to overcome them sufficiently to raise
himself to such a high and important position in the world.
He took a lively interest in all questions of art and science,
especially in natural history, and displayed at once his liberality
and his love of art by his munificence to Sir Thomas Lawrence,
in the youth and struggles of that great artist and famous painter,
and by his patronage of others. On this point a recent writer
says-- "The last baron of Kintail, Francis. Lord Seaforth, was,
as Sir Walter Scott has said, `a nobleman of extraordinary talents,
who must have made for himself a lasting reputation had not
his political exertions been checked by painful natural infirmities.'
Though
deaf from his sixteenth year and though labouring under a partial
impediment of speech, he held high and important appointments,
and was distinguished for his intellectual activities and attainments.
His case seems to contradict the opinion held by Kitto and others,
that in all that relates to the culture of the mind, and the
cheerful exercise of the mental faculties, the blind have the
advantage of the deaf. The loss of the ear, that `vestibule
of the soul,' was to him compensated by gifts and endowments
rarely united in the same individual. One instance of the chief's
liberality and love of art may be mentioned. In 1796 he advanced
a sum of o1000 to Sir Thomas Lawrence to relieve him from pecuniary
difficulties. Lawrence was then a young man of twenty-seven.
His career from a boy upwards was one of brilliant success,
but he was careless and generous as to money matters, and some
speculations by his father embarassed and distressed the young
artist. In his trouble he applied to the Chief of Kintail. `Will
you,' he said in that theatrical style common to Lawrence, `will
you be the Antonio to a Bassanio?' He promised to pay the o1000
in four years, but the money was given on terms the most agreeable
to the feelings and complimentary to the talents of the artist.
He
was to repay it with his pencil, and the chief sat to him for
his portrait.
Lord
Seaforth also commissioned from West one of those immense sheets
of canvas on which the old Academician delighted to work in
his latter years. The subject of the picture was the traditionary
story of the Royal hunt, in which Alexander the Third was saved
from the assault of a fierce stag by Colin Fitzgerald, a wandering
knight unknown to authentic history.
West
considered it one of his best productions, charged o800 for
it, and was willing some years afterwards, with a view to the
exhibition of his works, to purchase back the picture at its
original cost. In one instance Lord Seaforth did not evince
artistic taste. He dismantled Brahan Castle removing its castellated
features and completely modernising its general appearance.
The house, with its large modern additions, is a tall, massive
pile of building, the older portion covered to the roof with
ivy. It occupies a commanding site on a bank midway between
the river Conon and a range of picturesque rocks. This bank
extends for miles, sloping in successive terraces, all richly
wooded or cultivated, and commanding a magnificent view that
terminates with the Moray Firth." [The Seaforth Papers, in the
North British Review, 1863, by Robert Carruthers, LL.D.]
The
remarkable prediction of the extinction of this highly distinguished
and ancient family is so well known that it need not be recapitulated
here, and its literal fulfilment is one of the most curious
instances of the kind on record. There is no doubt that the
"prophecy" was widely known throughout the Highlands generations
before it was fulfilled. Lockhart, in his Life of Sir Walter
Scott, says that "it connected the fall of the house of Seaforth
not only with the appearance of a deaf `Cabarfeidh,' but with
the contemporaneous appearance of various different physical
misfortunes in several of the other Highland chiefs, all of
which are said to have actually occurred within the memory of
the generation that has not yet passed away. Mr Morrit can testify
thus far, that he heard the prophecy quoted in the Highlands
at a time when Lord Seaforth had two sons alive, and in good
health, and that it certainly was not made after the event,"
and then he proceeds to say that Scott and Sir Humphrey Davy
were most certainly convinced of its truth, as also many others
who had watched the latter days of Seaforth in the light of
those wonderful predictions. [Every Highland family has its
store of traditionary and romantic beliefs. Centuries ago a
seer of the Clan Mackenzie, known as Kenneth Oag (Odhar), predicted
that when there should be a deaf Caberfae the gift land of the
estate would be sold. and the male line become extinct. The
prophecy was well known in the North, and it was not, like many
similar vaticinations, made after the event. At least three
unimpeachable Sassenach writers, Sir Humphrey Davy, Sir Walter
Scott, and Mr Morritt of Rokeby, had all heard the prediction
when Lord Seaforth had two sons alive, both in good health.
The tenantry were, of course, strongly impressed with the truth
of the prophecy, and when their Chief proposed to sell part
of Kintail, they offered to buy in the land fur him, that it
might not pass from the family. One son was then living,, and
there was no immediate prospect of the succession expiring;
but, in deference to their clannish prejudice or affection,
the sale of any portion of the estate was deferred for about
two years. The blow came at last. Lord Seaforth was involved
in West India plantations, which were mismanaged, and he was
forced to dispose of part of the "gift land."
About
the same time the last of his four sons, a young man of talent
and eloquence, and then representing his native county in Parliament,
died suddenly, and thus the prophecy of Kenneth Oag was fulfilled.--
"Of
the name of Fitzgerald remained not a male
To bear the proud name of the Chief of Kintail."
--Robert Carruthers, LL.D., in the North British Review.]
His
Lordship outlived all his four sons, as predicted by the Brahan
Seer. His name became extinct, and his vast possessions were
inherited by a stranger, James Alexander Stewart, who married
his eldest daughter, Lady Hood. The sign by which it would be
known that the prediction was about to be fulfilled was also
foretold in the same remarkable manner, namely, that in the
day's of the last Seaforth there should be four great contemporary
lairds, distinguished by certain physical defects described
by the Seer. Sir Hector Mackenzie, Bart. of Gairloch, was buck-toothed,
and is to this day spoken of among the Gairloch tenantry as
"An Tighearna storach," or the buck-toothed laird. Chisholm
of Chisholm was hair-lipped, Grant of Grant half-witted, and
Macleod of Raasay a stammerer. [For full details of this remarkable
instance of family fate, see The Prophecies of the Brahan Seer.--A.
& W, Mackenzie, Inverness.]
To
the testimony of those whose names have been already given we
shall add the evidence of a living witness when the first edition
of this work was in preparation. Duncan Davidson of Tulloch,
Lord-Lieutenant of the county of Ross, in a letter addressed
to the author, dated May 21, 1878, says--"Many of these prophecies
I heard of upwards of 70 years ago, and when many of them were
not fulfilled, such as the late Lord Seaforth surviving his
sons, and Mrs Stewart Mackenzie's accident, near Brahan, by
which Miss Caroline Mackenzie was killed."
It
is impossible not to sympathise with the magnificent old Chief
as he mourned over the premature death of his four promising
sons, and saw the honours of his house for ever extinguished
in his own person.
Many
instances are related of his magnificent extravagance at home,
while sailing round the West Coast, visiting the great principality
of the Lewis, and calling on his way hither and thither on the
other great chiefs of the West and Western Islands. Sir Walter
Scott, in his "Lament for the Last of the Seaforths," adds his
tribute--
In
vain the bright course of thy talents to wrong.
Fate deadened thine ear and imprisoned thy tongue,
For brighter o'er all her obstructions arose
The glow of thy genius they could not oppose
And who, in the land of the Saxon or Gael
Could match with Mackenzie, High Chief of Kintail?
Thy
sons rose around thee in light and in love,
All a father could hope, all a friend cou'd approve;
What `vails it the tale of thy sorrows to tell?
In the spring time of youth and of promise they fell
Of the line of MacKenneth remains not a male,
To bear the proud name of the Chief of Kintail.
This
sketch of the great chief cannot better be closed than in the
words of one already repeatedly quoted:--"It was said of him
by an acute observer and a leading wit of the age, the late
Honourable Henry Erskine, the Scotch Dean of Faculty, that `Lord
Seaforth's deafness was a merciful interposition to lower him
to the ordinary rate of capacity in society,' insinuating that
otherwise his perception and intelligence would have been oppressive.
And the aptness of the remark was duly appreciated by all those
who had the good fortune to be able to form an estimate from
personal observation, while, as a man of the world, none was
more capable of generalizing. Yet, as a countryman, he never
affected to disregard those local predilections which identified
him with the County of Ross, as the genuine representative of
Kintail, possessing an influence which, being freely ceded and
supported, became paramount and permanent in the county which
he represented in the Commons House of Parliament, till he was
called to the peerage on the 26th October, 1797, by the title
of Lord Seaforth and Baron of Kintail, with limitation to heirs
male of his body, and which he presided over as his Majesty's
Lord-Lieutenant. He was commissioned, in 1793, to reorganise
the 78th or Ross-shire Regiment of Highlanders, which, for so
many years, continued to be almost exclusively composed of his
countrymen. Nor did his extraordinary qualifications and varied
exertions escape the wide ranging eye of the master genius of
the age, who has also contributed, by a tributary effusion,
to transmit the unqualified veneration of our age to many that
are to follow. He has been duly recognised by Sir Walter Scott,
nor was he passed over in the earlier buddings of Mr Colin Mackenzie;
but while the annalist is indebted to their just encomiums,
he may be allowed to respond to praise worthy of enthusiasm
by a splendid fact which at once exhibits a specimen of reckless
imprudence joined to those qualities which, by their popularity,
attest their genuineness. Lord Seaforth for a time became emulous
of the society of the most accomplished Prince of his age. The
recreation of the Court was play; the springs of this indulgence
then were not of the most delicate texture; his faculties, penetrating
as they were, had not the facility of detection which qualified
him for cautious circumspection; he heedlessly ventured and
lost. It was then to cover his delinquencies elsewhere, he exposed
to sale the estate of Lochalsh; and it was then he was bitterly
taught to feel, when his people, without an exception, addressed
his Lordship this pithy remonstrance--`Reside amongst us and
we shall pay your debts.' A variety of feelings and facts, unconnected
with a difference, might have interposed to counteract this
display of devotedness besides ingratitude, but these habits,
or his Lordship's reluctance, rendered this expedient so hopeless
that certain of the descendants of the original proprietors
of that valuable locality were combining their respective finances
to buy it in, when a sudden announcement that it was sold under
value, smothered their amiable endeavours. Kintail followed,
with the fairest portion of Glenshiel, and the Barony of Callan
Fitzgerald ceased to exist, to the mortification, though not
to the unpopularity of this still patriarchal nobleman among
his faithful tenantry and the old friends of his family." [Bennetsfield
MS.]
He
married on the 22d of April, 1782, Mary, daughter of the Rev.
Baptist Proby, D.D., Dean of Lichfield. and brother of John,
first Lord Carysfort, by whom he had issue--
I. William Frederick, who died young, at Killearnan.
II. George Leveson Boucherat, who died young at Urquhart.
III. William Frederick, who represented the County of Ross in
Parliament, in 1812, and died unmarried at Warriston, near Edinburgh,
in 1814.
IV. Francis John, a midshipman in the Royal Navy, who died unmarried
at Brahan, in 1813.
V. Mary Frederica Elizabeth, who succeeded her father and of
whom presently.
VI. Frances Catherine, who died without issue.
VII. Caroline, who was accidentally killed at Brahan, unmarried.
VIII. Charlotte Elizabeth, who died unmarried.
IX. Augusta Anne, who died unmarried.
X. Helen Ann, who married the Right Hon. Joshua Henry Mackenzie
of the Inverlael family, anciently descended from the Barons
of Kintail, a Lord of Session and Justiciary by the title of
Lord Mackenzie, with issue--two daughters, Frances Mary and
Penuel Augusta. Lord Seaforth, having survived all his male
issue, died on the 11th of January, 1815, at Warriston, near
Edinburgh, the last male representative of his race. His lady
outlived him, and died at Edinburgh on the 27th of February,
1829. The estates, in virtue of an entail executed by Lord Seaforth,
with all their honours, duties, and embarrassments, devolved
upon his eldest daughter, then a young widowed lady, XXII. Mary
Elizabeth Frederica Mackenzie, Lady Hood, whom Scott commemorated
in the well-known lines--
And thou, gentle dame, who must bear to thy grief,
For thy clan and thy country the cares of a Chief,
Whom brief rolling moons in six changes have left
Of thy husband, and father, and brethren bereft;
To thine ear of affection how sad is the hail
That salutes thee the heir of the line of Kintail.
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