Ewen Cameron of Lochiel

Sir Ewen Cameron of Lochiel.

Sir Ewen Cameron of Lochiel (February 1629 February 1719 [1]) was a Scottish highland chieftain, the 17th Chief of Clan Cameron.

Macaulay called Ewen the "Ulysses of the Highlands". He was a man of enormous strength and size. An incident showing his strength and ferocity in single combat is used by Sir Walter Scott in Lady of the Lake (canto v.).[2]

Early years

He was the eldest son of John Cameron and the grandson of Allan Cameron of Lochiel, 16th Chief of Clan Cameron (c. 1567/68 - c. 1647; son of John Cameron and unknown daughter Mackintosh).[3] Having lost his father in infancy, he passed part of his youth with the Marquess of Argyll at Inveraray. In the year 1647 he became Chief of Clan Cameron, succeeding his grandfather as one of the most important Chiefs in the Scottish Highlands.[2]

The Camerons were always strong supporters of the Royal Stuarts and Sir Ewen joined William Cunningham, 9th Earl of Glencairn in the Royalist rising of 1651 to 1654, and was defeated at the Battle of Tullich in 1652. However Ewen also won several minor skirmishes; after the defeat of this attempt he served the royalist cause by harassing the Parliamentarian general and military governor of Scotland George Monck. He then built a new base at Achnacarry Castle in 1655, to keep his men further away from the government troops. It was only upon the death of Oliver Cromwell in 1658 did he submit to general Monck and was received warmly for his chivalrous conduct during the civil war. Soon after he accompanied Monck to London where the general called a meeting of parliament to discuss the new situation. After lengthy discussion and debate it was decided that the King would be invited back from exile and that the Royal House of Stuart would be restored to the throne after a republican interregnum of 12 years. For his loyal service during the war, Sir Ewen was received warmly by the King and was allowed soon after to return to his estates.

On 20 September 1665, Sir Ewen ended the 360-year feud with Clan Mackintosh after the Stand-off at the Fords of Arkaig at Achnacarry.[4] From that point, Ewen was responsible for keeping the peace between his men and their former enemies. However when he was away in London in 1668, a feud broke out between Clan Donald and their enemies Clan Mackintosh, who headed the confederation of clans known as Clan Chattan. As Sir Ewen was away he was not able to hold back his clan, and they made a small contribution to the MacDonald victory over the Mackintoshes at the Battle of Maol Ruadh (Mulroy).[5]

In 1681, he was knighted by Charles II, whom he had fought alongside during the war. After the Glorious Revolution in 1688 in which the Royal House of Stuart was deposed and replaced by a foreign dynasty, he became one of the principal commanders in the Jacobite rising where he fought under the famous Viscount Dundee at the Battle of Killiecrankie. This battle was won by the genius of Dundee and became legendary in Jacobite history because of the death of their greatest commander at the moment of his biggest triumph. The rebellion then collapsed soon after because of arguments among the remaining leaders. By this time Sir Ewen was approaching sixty years of age and was starting to give his son more and more responsibilities. He felt he was now too old to participate directly in military affairs and his son John now led the clan in battle, most notably in the second Jacobite Rising of 1715 at the battle of Sheriffmuir.

Marriage and children

Ewen had three wives and many children: His first wife was Mary Macdonald, daughter of Sir Donald Gorme Macdonald, 8th Laird of Sleat.
His second wife was Isabel Maclean, daughter of Sir Lachlan Maclean, 1st Baronet. Their children included:[6]

His third wife was Jean Barclay, daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel David Barclay. Their children included:

Death

Sir Ewen died in 1719. His son and successor, John, died in Flanders in 1748. John's son Donald, sometimes called Gentle Lochiel, joined Charles Edward, the Young Pretender in 1745, was wounded at the Battle of Culloden, and escaped to France, dying in the same year as his father.

Notes

  1. Sir Ewen Cameron, of Lochiel, 17th Chief of Clan Cameron. Clan Cameron Australia (Robert Cameron). 1996–2004. Retrieved 8 April 2009.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Anonymous 1911.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Person Page - 19954". thepeerage.com. Retrieved 1 February 2008.
  4. MacKenzie (1883/2008) p156
  5. The Battle of Mulroy
  6. de la Caillemotte de Massue de Ruvigny, Melville Amadeus Henry Douglas Heddle (1904). The Jacobite Peerage, Baronetage, Knightage and Grants of Honour. Cameron of Lochiel, by his second wife, Isabel, daughter of Sir Lauchlan MacLean. He had issue : # S/x William MacGregor, otherwise Drummond, his heir. # Ewen MacGregor, otherwise Drummond, died s.p. # John MacGregor, otherwise Drummond, author of the memoir of his grandfather, Sir Ewen Cameron of Lochiel. # Duncan MacGregor, otherwise Drummond, died s.p. # Alexander MacGregor, otherwise Drummond, died s.p. # Donald MacGregor, otherwise Drummond, a sailor, went to Nova Scotia; married Ann, daughter of [ ] Grosbeck of New York, and had one son who died unmarried, and five daughters, of whom the third, Mary, married in 1781, as below, her cousin-german, Sir Alexander MacGregor, third Baronet.

References

Attribution

Further reading