The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Killiecran­kie recalled with Pitlochry skirmish

History: Weekend of events marks anniversar­y of bloody battle

- Jamie BUCHAN jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

A weekend of events to mark the anniversar­y of one of Scotland’s bloodiest battles kicked off with a dramatic procession through Pitlochry.

The skirmish which sparked the 1689 Battle of Killiecran­kie was re-created on the streets of the Highland Perthshire town last night.

Main Street was closed to traffic to make way for an authentic retelling of a key clash which led to the famous 1689 fight.

The procession, which climaxed with the firing of a musket, was put together by the community-led Soldiers of Killiecran­kie re-enactment group.

The team has this year scored a £10,000 boost from the Big Lottery Awards for All scheme to help pay for 17th Century-style uniforms and equipment.

The festivitie­s get under way properly this morning at the battlefiel­d site. A packed two-day agenda includes re-enactments, tours, performanc­es and a large living history camp.

Artefacts found during a sweep of the area, as part of the preparatio­ns for the Scottish Government’s A9 dualling programme, will also be revealed.

The battle of Killiecran­kie saw Jacobite forces, led by First Viscount of Dundee John Graham, take on the might of the government army with General Hugh Mackay at the helm.

Both armies were attempting to reach Blair Atholl and use it as a base for future operations.

The Jacobites took position on higher ground, on the southern slopes of Creag Eallaich, while government troops were deployed to the base of the hill.

Throughout the afternoon and in the evening, both sides sniped and skirmished. At around 8pm, the Jacobites charged downhill and broke government lines.

It was during this charge that Dundee was killed. One government soldier, Donald McBane, made a spectacula­r escape, leaping about 18ft across the River Garry. He later wrote that “many of our men were lost in the water”.

That day, around 800 Jacobites and 2,000 government soldiers were slaughtere­d.

The battle remains important for several reasons. For one, it is the first recorded use of a grenade in UK, with fragments of a crude handheld explosive being found during shooting of the TV show Two Men in a Trench in 2003.

 ?? Pictures: Kris Miller. ?? Jacobites clash with Redcoats – much to the delight of gathered locals and tourists.
Pictures: Kris Miller. Jacobites clash with Redcoats – much to the delight of gathered locals and tourists.
 ??  ?? The procession was put together by the community-led Soldiers of Killiecran­kie re-enactment group.
The procession was put together by the community-led Soldiers of Killiecran­kie re-enactment group.
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