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Vol. 7
Letter
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A Nota Bene containing an extraordinary Particular about President Forbes, in 1746.
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Copy of a Return to Glenalledell December 4. 1749.

Copy of a Letter from Major McDonald of Glenalledell the names of Glenmoriston-men, etc. November 10. 49.

Metadata
Titles
Table of Contents
Copy of a Lr fm Major McDonald of Glenalledell qrein ye names of Glenmoriston-men, &c. Nov: 10. 49.
Forbes
Copy of a Letter from Major MacDonald of Glenalladale wherein the names of Glenmoriston=men et cetera November 10. 1749
Paton
Letter from Major MacDonald of Glenaladale
Pages
Forbes
Vol. 7, 1447—1454
Paton
Vol. 2, 362—366
Credits
Encoder
Alyssa Bridgman
Transcriber
Cairen Velasquez
Proofreader
Leith Davis
Encoder
Kaitlyn MacInnis
Status
Document
transcription in progress
Metadata
metadata done
Correspondence
sent
Person Alexr.Alexander M'Donald
Date10 Nov 1749
PlaceGlenaladale
transmitted
Person Ranald MacDonald, fifth of Boradale
received
Person Robert Forbes
Date04 Dec 1749
acknowledgements
quote
I receaved your favour by Balfinlay, which was most acceptable and agreeable to me (Paton V.2, 362).
compliments to
quote
I conclude with you, lady and family, all manner of health and happiness both here and hereafter (Paton V.2, 365).
enclosed in
enclosures
requests
remediation
in Forbes
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Transcription
1447 (1447)

DecrDecember 4th (Monday) 1749 I ^R:Robert F:Forbes was
favoured with a Visit of Ranald
MacDonald
(See Vol: 5. Pag: 1108)
Boradale’s Son, when he delivered
to me a Letter from Major Mac-
Donald
of GlenalledellGlenaladale
(See in ysthis
Vol: Pag: 1388, &c.et cetera) an exact Copy
of which is as follows.


My Dear Sir
I ReceavedReceived Your Fa-
vour
by BalfinlayBelfinlay, which was most ac-
ceptable
and agreeable to me, where-
by
I was Singularly oblidgedobliged to you for
your good wishes tendered therein, and
I Intreatentreat you will be pleased to Ac-
cept
of mine in the most unfeigned
manner in return. with regard to the
particulars relative to the young Gen-
tlemans
Distresses, about the truth of
which you want to be satisfyedsatisfied you
judged very right in Doubting them
on the Score of not being mentioned
in my journalljournal, as I would be very
unjust and negligent in either adding
to, or pareingparing any thing from the
truth of matters of fact particularly
in any thing I was Eye witness to,
and I hope that when your perform-
ance
will make its appearance, it
will in some things make any thing of 1448 (1448)
of the kind that was Said yettyet Blush;
which I Impute more to the partiallpartial
MisrepresentionsMisrepresentations of those who EnclinedInclined
to value themselves, on having a great
DeallDeal to Say that way, than to any
fault in the publishers, for my part
it was merely to avoid DisoblidgingDisobliging
a young Lady who Desired the favour
of me that I thought on Setting pen
to paper to relate any thing of
the matter; &and as I was not well attat
the time was oblidgedobliged to make our
freindfriend honest Alister Dalliles bro-
ther
my Clerk and he keeptkept a Dou-
ble
of what he wrottwrote: Dr Burton
himself Seems to be in Some mea-
sure
sensible of this, as he did me
the favour latlylately to send me one of
his pamphlets by a friend of mine
IntreatingEntreating I would Correct any
thing I saw amiss in it; as he has
a mind to make up a second Editi-
on
, and send it to him;
The first particular, you want the truth
of, is his Escape of falling over the
precipice which I remember very
well, and it was the very night we
passed the guards, and it was in Climb-
ing
up that hill you’lyou’ll find in your
journalljournal Called ✝ Drymchossey immedi-atly

✝
Vol: 3. Pag: 615. Vol. 7. Pag. 1494 &and 1495, ^1497.
1449(1449)
atlyately after passing by a Small Camp
pitched in the Bottom of the VallyValley
or Glen of that name, vizvidelicet, GlenChosey
attat the foot of the hill we were
then Ascending, and the night
being very Dark we pass’dpassed so near
that little Camp as to See the Sol-
diers
passing betwixt us and the
fires and to hear the Sound of
their Talk but not to Distinguish
what they Spoke, as I Said, we were
Climbing up the hill ImmediatlyImmediately
above the Camp the night being
very Dark and the Hill very Steep,
Donald Cameron being Guide was
foremost the Pr:[ince] was after him and
I followed in his Rear and my
brother
and CousineCousin after me,
and Cr[ossin]g a Small rivulet that
gushed out of a Spring as I think
and slydedslid over a precipisprecipice attat
very place we Crossed it, Donald
Cameron
Crossed first the Pr:[ince] next
and in Crossing missed a Step, and
‘tis altogether probable he would
fall down the precipisprecipice which we
took to be very high, if he had
not been very full of life and that I 1450 (1450)
I Caught hold of one Arm and Donald
Cameron
of the other and recovered
him in a TryceTrice but the hightheight of
the precipisprecipice we Could not Discern
being very Dark. but that there
was a tree or any thing ElssElse in it is
very groundless for it is so near the
topetop of the hill that the winter
SnowesSnows and frostesfrosts would Starve
any wood growing there. there
was but one line of the Troops in
our front, but were planted in little
Camps pitched in a line from the
head of ✝LochUirn, to the head of
Locheil being 27 in all so that
once we Crossed the one line of these
little Camps we had none more near
us to Cross but as the next morning
we were oblidgedobliged to travelltravel along that
line after Crossing it we unadvertant-
ly
inadvertently
next day lodged all [] day very
near X the wing of that line but we
were under no necessity to Creep
but when Donald CamCameron: and I Exposed
our selves to the ennemysenemies view
when they Drove the Sheep to the
fold to Choose ⓧ out Some for Slaugh-
ter
, that we were oblidgedobliged to Creep
back again till we gottgot out of their
view. The

✝ X ⓧ
Vol: 3. pag: 616.
1451 (1451)
The other particular is the Story
of Ha Dougald maccullonny which
is altogether fableousfabulous as there
was no Such thing, for the place
where the Glenmorison people join-
ed
us was attat the Cave where
the ✝ fine Spring glydedglided by our
bed SydesSides whereto (upon my send-
ing
my brother and our then Guide
to them to Bring them to anean In-
terview
with me. in order to guide
me to XPollieu in SeaforthsSeaforth's Country)
they Directed us to Come to; for Do-
nald
Cameron
ⓧparted with us three
days before to take Care of his wife
Vol: 8. pag: 1661

and means. and when the first three
of them Came up to us, we resolved
not to ComittCommit the Secret of the Pr:[ince]
person to them unless we found that
they would know him yettyet upon See-
ing
him they all knew him; for my
part, if Τ Mr Cameron, was the author
of that paragraph, I think, if there
should be something of it, whereas I
have not the least grounds to Suspect
their honesty, I think, he should, for the
sake of their honesty and fidelity to a
Cause, he seems so much to SettSet a value
upon, refrain from Stigmatizing the poor
people
, with the appellation☂ of noted theevesthieves when

✝X
Vol: 3. p.: 623, 624.
ⓧ
Vol: 3 p: 618.
☂
Vol: 3 p: 547.

Τ
i: e: Mr John Cameron I suppose.
R:Robert F:Forbes A: M:
1452 (1452)
when of the Glenmorison peoples
neighbours even Camerons there might
be found those that Deserved it as
well. The Names of the Glenmori-
son
people
are as follows: vizvidelicet John
✝mcDonald, Alexander XmcDonald,
Alexander Chissolm, Donald Chissolm
his brother, Hugh Chissolm another
brother, Gregor mcGregor, Patrick
Grant
, and Hugh mc Millan who
Came one day Accidentally upon
us a little before we left the Chiss-
olms
Country
and knowing us all
we kept him with us and proved
very faithfullfaithful;
In this Vol: p: 1477. Vol: 8. pag:
1660
, 1777. Vol. 9. p. 1871.

As for the manner of Mr McKenzie’s
Death It is what I Can never gettget
the Certainty of, as I gettget so many
Accounts of it which I perfectly
know to be palpable untruths which
makes me give the less Credit to
any I hear of it, Except that he dy-
ed
died
, but I will be on the Search
and if I gettget any thing worth Trans-
mitting to you Depend upon it I shall
Send it; as for Plundering, Pillaging,
Burnings, and murders I know Certain-
ly
a great Dealldeal well vouch’dvouched but I
ammam just now hurryedhurried with other busi-
ness
and I must beggbeg to be Excused till
✝
MackDonell, alias Campbell.
X
MackDonell.
1453 (1453)
till the [next] occasion but my friend
the bearer
knows a good DeallDeal
and he’ll tell you a good many
things Especially what happened
in his own Country where every
thing that was portable, or Drivable
was CarryedCarried ofoff, ‘tis true I Saved
every thing I had till the young
GentlemansGentleman’s
return to the ConntinentContinent
when as good luck would have it,
my wounds were not three days
Closed when I had a Call to at-
tend
and leaving every thing
never Saw another Sight of any
thing but my poor wife and ba-
bies
.
I have SealledSealed up Alister’s ✝ letter
and forwarded it to him;
I am heartily Sorry to have the Ac-
count
of [] your ReallReal wellwisher
Balfinlay’s Death to give you, hav-
ing
Departed on the X 27th Septem-
ber
last
much regretted by his friends
among whom he Depended on you
as a firm one; I Conclude with
wishing you Lady and family all
manner of health and happiness, both
here and hereafter, and am in all
Sincerely with Esteem and Affection
my DrDear Sir your most affectantaffectionate and most
oblidgedobliged humble ServtServant
Sic subrsubscribitur AlexrAlexander McDonald
Glenalledell Nov:10th
1749

✝
In ysthis Vol: P: 139

X
pag: 1442.
P: S: 1454 (1454)
P: S: you judged very [well] right as to
the Story of Dougald maccullonoy
for there is nothing I remember
better than that Some of the party
Called the Pr:[ince]X Dougald but with-
out
a XSirnameSurname, merely to avoid
Calling him by his own tittletitle which
was the ground of that Story for Cer-
tain
, that ✝ Mr Cameron who is Dr
BurtonsBurton's
author of that part of the
pamphlet after the Pr[ince]'s return to
the Continent, Came only along
with Dr Cameron LocheilsLochiel's brother to
visit us, only after our return from Glen-
morison
when the Guards were remov-
ed
and the heattheat of the Danger was
over, so that his part of that history
is prodigious unconnect, knowing only
what we told our friends by way of
Discourse when we mettmet again

XX
Vol: 8. Pag: 1661.
adieueadieu


N: B: The Original of the preceedingpreceding
Letter is to be found among my
Papers. ___
✝
i: e: Mr John Came-
ron
, who (in his own Journal) gives
the Same Account of his going a-
long
wtwith Dr Cameron, &c.et cetera Vol: 1. pag: 173.
Robert Forbes, A: M:

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Citation
Forbes, Robert. “Copy of a Letter from Major MacDonald of Glenalladale wherein the names of Glenmoriston=men et cetera November 10. 1749.” The Lyon in Mourning, vol. 7, Adv.MS.32.6.22, fol. 48r–51v. The Lyon in Mourning Project, edited by Leith Davis, https://lyoninmourning.dhil.lib.sfu.ca/v07.1447.01.html.
Appendix

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