Anniversary of Jacobite declaration
The 275th anniversary of the Jacobite declaration that vowedtofightonafterculloden hasbeenmarkedwithatribute to a charismatic solider and poet of the 1745 rising.
The Declaration of Muirlaggan was signed on May 8, 1746 by several key Jacobites including John Roy Stuart, who was made Colonel of the Edinburgh Regiment and became one of Bonnie Prince Charlie’s most trusted men.
It was signed after news of a delivery of gold to Loch Arkaig, which gave key Jacobite figures hope that the campaign could continue after the British victory at Culloden.
To mark the anniversary of the signing of the declaration, a new version of John Roy’s Psalm, which was written by the soldier after he suffered a breakdown following the failed rising, has been released by the 1745 Association.
Michael Nevin, association chairman, said: “The declaration was an attempt to rally the troops after Culloden, where the Jacobites had no money to pay their men. When news came through that the gold had got through to Loch Arkaig, quite a few believed they could carry on with the campaign.”
Those who attended the meeting where the declaration was formulated included Cameron of Lochiel, Macpherson of Cluny, Gordon of Glenbucket and Lord Lovat.
They and others committed themselves “to raise in arms for the interest of His Royal Highness Charles Prince of Wales, and in defence of our country, all the able bodied men that all or every one of us can command or raise within our respective interests or properties”.
The declaration set out details of a “rendezvous on Thursday next at Auchnicarry in the Braes of Lochaber" with
Colonel Stuart to inform “principal gentlemen of the North” of the meeting’s resolutions.
The meeting, however, never materialised with the clansmen failing to mobilise their support on the ground.
Mr Nevin is the author of Reminiscences of a Jacobite which assesses the mental state of the Jacobite Colonel post-culloden which is laid out in five poems and songs he composed during this period.
Mr Nevin said, at the time of the Declaration, John Roy Stuart “was in denial – the first stage of grief” given the 1745 rising had failed.