
Because we can trace our heritage to the High Kings of
Ireland, the MacLachlans are acknowledged to be one of the oldest and most
respected of the Highland clans.
The MacLachlans originated in Cowal of Argyllshire which
comprises the parishes of Strathlachlan, Strachur, Kilfinan, Kilmoden,
Inverchaolin, Dunoon and Kilmun. The area is bounded on the east by Loch
Long and the Firth of Clyde, on the south by the Kyles of Bute and to the
north and west by Loch Fyne. MacLachlans also lived on the other side of
Loch Fyne in the parishes of Kilmichael-Glassary, the Knapdales and
Kilmartin, all at the mainland end of the Mull of Kintyre.
MacLachlans were to be found 200 years ago in other parts of
Scotland, since eastward migration had settled MacLachlans across the
Highlands. Many dwelt on Mull and along the shores of Loch Linnie. Merchants
and sailors settled in the Clyde towns of Glasgow and Greenock. There was
always a two-way movement between southwest Scotland and northeast Ireland.
In the middle of the last century, many Irish immigrants settled on
Clydeside and in southwest Scotland. District registrars spelled surnames
the Scottish way, and so some Irish McLaughlans became McLachlan or
McLauchlan.
Spellings of the name are significant only to a limited
extent. "Mac" and "Mc" were used indiscriminately until
the commencement of compulsory registration in 1855; most Argyll registrars
used "Mac" while the Clydeside and inland parishes used
"Mc." Those families higher on the social scale frequently
insisted on being recorded as MacLachlans. The inclusion of the
"u" indicates an east coast family or one of a possible Irish
descent. With the addition of a "g" the name almost certainly is
from Ireland. Of course, many McLaughlans are more Scottish than other
spellings because of a series of marriages with old Scots families.
Highland chiefs, lairds and tacksmen were considered
"wealthy" only because ordinary Highlanders were quite poor. The
feudal clan system broke up when the commerce and systems of government of
the rest of the United Kingdom spread into the more remote parts of
Scotland. After 1745, retributive measures by the government hastened this
process. The property of the Chief's family was confiscated for its part in
the Rebellion in which Lachlan, 17th Chief of MacLachlan, was killed. The
lands were later restored to his son. Up to that time, a territorial chief
had sub-let land through tacksmen who were "platoon" and
"company" commanders in the Chief's "battalion" in times
of strife. The holders of tacks were members of the Highland middle class;
while their children were brought up with the children of their neighbors,
there were no class barriers. The power of the chiefs and tacksmen was in
the allegiance of the families living on their land.
With the decline in the Clan system, the tacksmen, who
leased but owned little or no land, were among the first to leave Scotland.
Some settled in North America; others traveled to the West Indies.
Alexander and Dougald, sons of Lachlan MacLachlan of Fassafern in Lochaber,
went to Jamaica in the middle of the 18th century and retired to live in the
south of England later in the century. Their wills showed that they had
owned plantations in the West Indies and mention, in one case, a son by a
freed slave for whom provision was made.
Other tacksmen returned home to England. The sons of these
families entered the army or became lawyers or merchants in English or
Scottish cities. Some, less venturesome and less astute, tried to eke out a
gentlemanly existence without money in the area in which they were born.
Examples were Colin and Ewan, sons of Ewan MacLachlan of Laudale in Morvern
parish, who succeeded to the property. In her memoirs a neighbor wrote of
them, "In an evil moment they went security for some relative, with the
result that their property had to be sold to meet the demand, and little
indeed was left for them to live upon. They used to arrive as if to make a
call, but it was well understood that a visit of a week or two was
intended." Neither brother married, and they spent their later lives as
house servants near Oban.
When Colin MacLachlan of Craiginterve died in 1804 his
long-established landed family was declining socially and economically. They
had been indebted to the Dukes of Argyll for several generations, and had
intermarried with families of Campbells. Colin's heir was his daughter,
Lucy, wife of Archibald Bell of Inverary, then the administrative center of
the county of Argyll. Archibald and his two sons changed their surname to
MacLachlan. He had owned 2,900 acres in Argyllshire in 1872 when he was 14
years old but when he died at Eastbourne in the south of England in 1949,
his effects were worth only £727.
Besides having the effect of dispossessing most of the
tacksmen and many of the minor lairds, the social change had another effect
on the ordinary people. The greater ease of communication allowed
individuals to change their abodes and expanding commerce allowed men, who
would have died as shepherds or cottars at home, to become men of reputation
and substance elsewhere.
After fighting British government forces in the 1745
Rebellion, many former Highlanders and their sons joined British Highland
regiments. Their fighting tradition, ability to live in rugged surroundings
and on short rations and family pride made them excellent soldiers. A
commission in the British Army at that time was obtained either by purchase,
by quota of men or by nomination by a senior officer who had rendered a
distinguished service. Lachlan MacLachlan, whose family resided in
Strathlachlan, was appointed an ensign in the 48th Foot Regiment in 1796 at
the behest of his mother's brother, Lt. General James Campbell. The unusual
feature of this appointment was that Lachlan was only six years old at the
time. He never actually saw active service and remained on half-pay for most
of his life, but his brothers James, Archibald, Alexander and Robert served
to become a colonel, major-general, lieutenant-general, and captain
respectively.
Although six years was too tender an age to actually serve
in the army of the time, ten or twelve years was not. James Augustus
MacLachlan went to Canada in 1811 to join his father, a Royal Engineer
captain. On arrival he found that the captain had been ordered to the West
Indies. The 104th Regiment adopted him and made him an ensign. He remained
in Nova Scotia, married, and his descendants are still in Fredricton, New
Brunswick, continuing a tradition of military service.
The migration of Scotsmen of the time is illustrated by nine
master mariners and mates named MacLachlan born in Scotland in the first
half of the last century. Five died or had their homes in Liverpool at the
time of their deaths, one in London and three in Scotland. Of 13 MacLachlan
army officers of the last century born in Scotland who died outside active
service, only three ended their days there and one of those had probably
never been out of the country. Of the remainder, one died in Ireland, one in
New Zealand, another in Australia, and the rest of England. MacLachlan
doctors of medicine were more inclined to stay at home. Of 33 born in
Scotland, 16 died there. Of the remainder, 12 died in England, two in India,
and one each in Australia, South Africa and South America.
Like other bearers of Scots Highland surnames, we
MacLachlans are to be excused our pride in our forebears past, and the wish
to know more about them is understandable. One of the finest attributes in
the HIghland Scot was his respect for his kin and his overwhelming desire to
earn and retain their respect for him. Most families in any area of the
Highlands were related in one way or another; every member knew his
relationship with everyone else, and would stand by his mother's
second-cousin or his father's aunt if the need arose.
People like Hugh MacLachlan of Burlington, Ontario, Canada
have created extensive records of their co-descendants. His ancestor, Hugh,
with his wife, Janet McLean, left Kilmallie parish on Scotland's west coast
early in the last century and settled in Canada. The present day Hugh has
traced the many hundreds of descendants of that couple. Much of this work
can be done now while there are people alive who remember family stories of
past migrations. When these clan "elders" are gone, no amount of
research among records will adduce the information they could have given. As
it is, countless generations to come will never know the name of their last
ancestor to leave the shores of Scotland. Whether that ancestor was a
near-impecunious tacksman or a totally impecunious crofter is of no
importance. He was no doubt a man of sterling character and his name and
origin are worthy of preservation by his family, present and future.
There is so much to be recorded in this history of the
MacLachlans and so little on record. Not only are the events prior to 1745,
when most of our ancestors lived in the Highlands, of considerable
interest, but many later occurrences make good reading. If you are not one
of the families that made the long journey across the Atlantic or to the
Southern Hemisphere under sail, you have cousins whose families did. Ours is
not among the larger clans, but it is one of the oldest and most respected
and we should be properly represented in gatherings of the clans all over
the world. There are established local groups in various parts of the world,
but nothing of a cohesive organization.
Prompted by a suggestion by the 24th Chief of the clan,
Madam Marjorie MacLachlan, a small group met in Glasgow on March 24, 1979,
and resolved to form the Clan MacLachlan Society to fulfill the functions in
the foregoing paragraph. Every MacLachlan family has a story to tell.
Although one may be excused for not holding all one's relations in universal
esteem, it is an experience to read of, hear from, or meet someone who
shares forebears.
The name is the same whether it begins with "Mac,"
"Mc" or "O'," and continues "Lachlaine,"
"Lachlan" or "Lauchlin." We have all known our name to
be subject to considerable abuse as to spelling, but it would be a bold man
who claimed his to be the only correct way. Founding members have agreed to
use the spelling of the Chief's family when referring to the Clan generally,
but every effort is made to use the spelling preferred by an individual or
family.
The 25th and present Chief of Clan MacLachlan, Euan J.R.
Maclachlan of Maclachlan, makes his home in the ancestral castle on the
banks of Loch Fyne. Castle Lachlan is in the parish of Strathlachlan, a few
hundred yards from the stump of the old castle bombarded by the British Navy
from Loch Fyne in 1746 soon after his great-great-great-great
grandfather had been killed at Culloden. Euan succeeded his mother,
Marjorie, in 1996, and she followed her father. He is married and has five
children; his eldest son is Charles George Rome Maclachlan, Younger of
Maclachlan. For more Genealogy of the Chief of Clan MacLachlan, click
here.
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