Gilesegeyyy tW - Glengarry History
Transcription
Gilesegeyyy tW - Glengarry History
frfl l-r ie- tst":rt iJ Gilesegeyyy tW Glengarryfifistorieol IgBg -Saciery a:, '.. I i 10 ., a1 ..25 ." 35 A FORGOTTEN DOCTOROF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY . A N D A N OT EON THE ASSASSINATION OF THOMASD'ARCYMcGEE by RoyceMacGillivray The nightof 7 April 1868 is memorablein Canadianpoliticalhistory.In the small hoursThomasD'ArcyMcGee,on his way homefrom the Houseof commons, was assassinatedin ottawa. just outside his Sparks Street boarding house. M cGee,the most brilliant figure among the Fathersof confederation. was a poet,h istorian,journalist,and orator.Ai a memberof the literaryand nationalistgroup, Young lreland.he was involvedin the 1g4B Rebellionin lrelandagainstthe crown. But in canada he found the British governmentwore a f riendlie.rfacethan it hadeverdonein lreland.Hetherefore concludedthatthe interestsof the Catholiclrishin Canadawerebetterserved by an acceptanceof the established order.includingthe imperialconnection. than by the type of revolutionary struggleto which the lrishAmericanswere attracted. Though McGeewas a man of great influence,there were Jnanyin the canadianlrish communityto whom theseopinionswere unacceptable. lt was believedthattheassassination was carriedout bythe powerful lrishnationalist group,the Fenians,activeat that time throughoutthe English-speaking world. An ottawa tailor called PatrickJ. whelan was convictedof the murderand hangedfor it in February1869. A few minutesafterthe ou nmanfelled McGee,an ottawadoctor,Donald McGillivray. arrivedon the sc'ene,and declaredMcGeedead.McGee'sblood. he later reported. had flowed down the sidewalk and into the gutter. McGillivrayfound the lead pistolball "impacted"in the door of the boardino houseand gaveit to the coroner.Sincefragmentsof McGees'dentures wer; found in the hallwayof the boardinghouse.twelveto eighteeninchesbeyond the door sill. McGillivrayconcludedthat the door must havebeenooenwnen the shot was f ired.Hewas one of the two physicians who did the autopsylater the sameday on McGeein the boardinghouseattic,and hetestifiedbothatthe coroner'sinquest(alsoon 7 April) and at Whelan'strial (Sept.1g6B).j This involvementin the final tragedv of McGee'stumurtouscareer represents the one point at which,so far as we know,Dr. McGillivrav'wasan actor, howevermarginal.in 'history".lt wi ll not tie contendedthat he was great,or evenan importantman.Nevertheless. his modeststory has enorgh human drama in itto beworth recording.And tellingitwill bring beforeuja few connectionswith the significantpeirpleand eventsof canJdian history. and will remindus that thereis somewherein the remotef uture.waitingto be written.a bookon Glengarrycounty h istorythatwill explorethe many personaI and family linkagesamong eminent Glengarrians, and betweenthem and some of the leadingfiguresof Canadianhistory. DonaldMcGilIivraywas borni n Lochielrownship, Glengarrycou nty.on 3 Sept. 1836, just west of the present-dayvillage of Datteith.His faiher, Duncan,McGillivray was a farmer.His motherwas MargaretMccuaig.2This part of Glengarry was the homeof a considerable numberof McGillivrjys.we are probablysafe in assumingthat the ancestorsof most, if not all. of them came to canada in the MacLeodsettlementgroup of 1793-g4.3In an area whereone farmernormallylivedat muchthe Sameeconohic levelasanother. rt seemsunlikelythat superiorprosperitywas the reasonwhy Donaldreceived he studiedmedicine a universitveducation.But whateverthe circumstances. recervinghis degreein 1861. His graduatingthesiswas at McGillUniversity. Graduatingin the same year was another on "A PeculiarH- eartDisease."4 Glengarian,born i n the same year,NapoleanLeclair(1836-1884) of North Lancaster.The Leclairswere a well-to-do family who had prosperedin storekeeping.hotelkeeping,farming and money-lending.Napolean was probablythe first FrenchCanadianphysicianof Glengarryorigin and must have been one of the earliestFrench Canadianphysiciansin Ontario.His the building of the CanadianCollegeat brother Louis William supervised, Romeand laterservedas its Rector.s contributedarticlesto a In the 1B6O'sand early1870's Dr. McGillivray Montreal medicaljournal called the CanadaMedicalJournal and Monthly He was identified by the journal as Recordof Medicaland SurgicalScience.6 physician to the GeneralProtestantHospitalat attending at this time being DonaldMcGillivray hadan Ottawa.Accordingto the CityofOttawadirectories, office on SparksStreetin 1863, but had movedto 128 Wellingtonby 1866 and to 172 Wellingtonby 1876.7lt alsoappearsthatinthe latteryearhewas livingatthe boardinghouseof ThomasMatthewsat 'lB0WellingtonStreet.Dr. McGillivray'savailabilityat these central locationsts presumablythe sole ltwould be reasonwhy he was calledto the sceneof the Mccee assassination. him as a interestingto knowhow far his practiceattheselocationsestablished physicianfor Membersof Parliament. All the evidencewe have seen so far suggest a man rising in his orofessionand determinedto stand well in it. But disasterwas to follow. Sometimein the autumnof 1877 Dr. McGillivrayhad a mentalcollapse.The severalyearsearlier veryf irst symotomswere saidto haveshownthemselves but to have attractedno public altention.In June of 1B7B he was rn the Cornwall,Ontariojail irr accordancewith the contemporarypracticebf f irst beforethe confiningmentalpatientsin a jail.FromCornwallhewastransferred end of the monthto the mentalhospitalat Kingston.Froman examinationof we get a few glimpses his casepreparedin Cornwallduring his imprisonment, he was not a victimof mig ht f irst plight. what one at suspect. to Contrary of hi s that standardfailingof 19th-centuryCanadianmedicalmen,alcoholism.His insanitvshoweditself,accordingto the report.throughfoolishtransactionsin businessby which he lost all his property.He had the delusionof tmagining himself rich when he had in fact lost everything.He was believedto be dangerousin his presentstateto himselfand to others.Noneof'his relatives in the asylum.s All were believedto be in a positionto payfor his maintenance of this must,indeed,haveplacedemotional.if notf inancialstrainon hisfamily. The significanceof the nearcoincidenceof the datesis probablyimpossible now to recover,but it is noteworthythat his motherdied just three daysafter Donald's arrival at the Kingston asylum.Donald's own life in the bleak atmosphereof a 19th-centuryCanadianmentalhospitalwas to be merctfully brief.He died on 24 Oct. 1879, at the age of 43, and was buriedat Kirk Hill, GlengarryCounty,a few milesfrom the family home.An Ottawanewspaper. reporting his death, noted, presu,mablyincorrectly.that McGillivrayleft "considerablepropbrtyin Ottawa".Stncehe was unmarried,it was believed that the propertywould be dividedamong his kinfolk.s One of Donald'sbrothers.ArchrbaldDuncan,was educatedat Ottawa Universityand was employedin canal and railwaybuilding.About the mid1B7O'she settledin Alexandria,Ontario.as a liverystableproprietor.In the 1B8O'she acquireda furniturestoreand undertakingbusiness.Hisobituaryin the GlengarryNewsof 24 Dec.192o honourshis long careeras a successful Alexandriabusinessman. Among the peoplewho paid tribute by flowersor attendanceat the funeralwere Dr.W.L.and DuncanJ. McDougald,uncleand father respectively of a celebratedCanadianof a latergeneration.the multimillionaireBud McDougald(died 1978) of the Argus Corpoiation.One of Archibald'ssons,also calledArchibald.who died in 1962,wasa secretarvto LordBeaverbrook.l0 Anotherson, Eddie,( 1893- 1949) was MLAforGlengarry from 1937 to 1948. NOTES 1 McGillivray's medicaltes'timonyis printedin T.P.Slattery.'TheyGot to Find Mee Guilty Yet" (Toronto, 1972]r.pp. 7-9, B1-82. T.P. Stattery.The Assassination of D'ArcyMcGee(Toronto,1968), p.465. Reportonautopsy in canada MedicalJournal and Monthly Recordof Medicaland surgical Scoence,V(1869), pp. 433-437 (pictureof bullet inctuded). 2 Recordsof Lochielchurch of scotland(nowSt. columba)of KirkHill,ont. Thetornbstoneof Donaldand his parentsis in the cemeteryof the otherKirk Hill church.the WestChurchor UnitedChurch.I am gratefulto Mrs.Mary C. Beaton,of Ottawa,for kindlysupplyingme with informationrelativeto Donald McGillivrayfrom the st. columba records. the west church cemetery.and the manuscriptcensus(1861 , 1O.7Lochiel). 3 For this group, see The lVlacLeods of Glengarry:The Genealoglrof a Clan (lroquis,n.d.)andRoyceMacGillivray and EwanRoss.A Historyof Glengarry Glengarry(Belleville,1979). p. 12. " The BritishAmericanJournal,ll (1861 ), pp 231-233. 5 For the Leclairs,see Dr. Norbert Fer16."The Leclairsof Glengarry". GfengarryLife {yearbookof the GlengarryHistoricalSociety),jg71, and MacGillivray and Ross.Glengarry,pp. 158-160. 6 CanadaMedicalJournal(as in note 2), ll(1866).pp.51 -56 to Vil(1B7 1)pp. 537-538. 7 "Tne Ottawa Citizen" Directoryof Ottawa ... 1863 (Ottawa,The Ottawa Citizen,n.d.). p. 40; Ottawa City and Countiesof Carletonand Russell Director1866-7 ( Ottawa:Hunter,Rose & Co., 1866), p. i94: The Cityof Ottawaand CentralCanadaDirectory(Ottawa:A.S. Woodburn,1876), pp. I 84,143. e Recordof examinationand LieutenantGovernor'swarrant for Donald's commitalto the asylum,OntarioArchives,R.G.10, 2O-F-1. H 1 153. Ontario. Office of tl-ie RegistrarGeneral,record of death of Donald McGillivray. OttawaDailyCitizen,25 Oct. 1879. 10GlengarryNews,29 March 1962 (obituary)and privateinformation. DOCTORS WE R EN OTON L YH E A L ERSBUTCONSOLERS by EdgarAndrew Collard In the Montreal General Hospital in the '1B9O's, Charles Robert Shewas dying.As a doctor Kirkpatrickhad the caseof a girl from Glengarr:y. there was nothing more he could do for her. But she told him she wantedto havea ministercome to see her beforethe end. not as a memberbut as She had attendedservicesrn a Montrealchurch, asktheministerof a visitorwhosat in the gallery.ShewantedDr. Kirkpatrickto the church to come. went himselfto askthis clergymanto come as quicklyas Dr. Kirkpatrick possibie.Not muchtime was left.The clergymanlookedthroughhis members' roll. Her namewas not there.He declinedto go; she was not one of hisflock. "astoundedand shocked".went backto the hospital.He Dr. Kirkpatrick, intendedto go to his own room.get a Brble,and then readand praywithher as best he could. In the hospitalcorridor he met FatherJosephToupin,a priest at St. the doctor looked.He Patrick'sChurch.FatherTouoinnoticedhow distressed askedhim what was wrong. Dr. Kirkpatrickexplained.FatherToupin said at ^^^^ ^^ ^{ ^^,, course. once, "t'il| il go, or At her deathbed from Glengarry. The But therewas a difficulty.The girlwas a Protestant of a strangeand alien arrivalat her deathbedof a priest,the representative farth,would onlv bewilderand distressher. lt was no time forthe intrusionof the unfamiliar.But somethinghad to be done.Time was running out. FatherToupin had a solution.He would go with Dr. Kirkpatrickto his room.Therehe would divesthimselfof his robe- his soutane- as well as all other indicationsof his Catholicstatus.Shewanteda minister.FatherToupin would make himselfinto the ministershe needed. The change was made.Togetherthey went to the dying grrl. Father Bible - the Toupin read to her comfortingpassagesfrom Dr. Kirkpatrick's ProtestantBible.Then he offeredup an extemporeprayer,in the mannerof a Protestantminister.She died at peacein the way she had wished. When the doctor and the priestcame away.fromthe bedside,Father impropriety. Toupinwas awar ehe had beenguiltyof a seriousecclesiastical a Protestant ministerat a deathbedwas an Fora Catholicpriestto impersonate irregularity. eventhough motivatedby nothingbut compassion. extraordinary andwarnedhim,"Saynothingaboutit".Thedoctor Heturnedto Dr. Kirkpatrick neverdid - not until after FatherToupinwas dead. died when he was only 34. Alreadythis McGill Dr. Kirkpatrrck.himself of the MontrealGeneralHospital graduatehad been medicalsuperintendent Journal.in December and then one of its surgeons.The Montreal"Medical 1897, claimedhe was "the first in Canada"and one of the f irst in Americato successf ully repairthe stomachin perforationf rom ulcer." had spentin f rndingconsolationfor The amountof trme Dr. Kirkpatrick the dyinggirl was only one rnstanceof the placehe gaveto consolationamong a doctor'sduties.l'here arr:other similarstoriesabout him. The view that medicinewas more than sciencewas very evidentin Dr. WrlliamOsler,often regardedas McGill'smost illustriousmedicalgraduate. Shortlyaftergraduationhe was appornteda professorin the medicalfacultv, so yo ung as t o be k n o w n a s " th e b a b y p ro fessor." H e w ent on to great a ch i e v em ent s in his p ro fe s s i o n i n th e U n i te d S ta tes and ended hi s career as S i r Wi l l i a m O s ler . Regi u s Pro te s s o r o f Me d i c i n e a t Oxford U ni versi ty. W hile a pr of e s s o r i n M o n tre a l i n th e 1 B7 O' sand l B B O' s.Osl er remai ned a cti ve in t he M ont r e a l G e n e ra l H o s p i ta l . T h e re hi s rol e as consol erw as often o b se r v ed. lt was s aid th a t h e " w e n t a b o u t th e h o s pi tal as a f ri end and practi sed ki n d n e s s as a br a n c h o f m e d i c i n e ." So me trrnes j ust a few w ords had a su rp ris ing ef f ec t , bu t th e y w e re th e ri g h t w o rd s at the ti me. O n going t hr o u g h a w a rd In th e h o s p i ta l he came upon an ol d S cots w o man. S he was m a k i n g " a d e v i l o f a ro w ." On e o f the doctors had tol d her she w o u l d hav e t o unde rg o a n o p e ra ti o n . T his announc e m e n t h a d th ro w n h e r i n to an agony of gri ef and protest. Sh e was lif t ing up h e r h a n d s a n d s c re a mi n g i n despai r. The w hol e w ard w as d i sturb ed. Dr . os ler wen t o v e r to s e e h e r. H e p a tte d her on the shoul der. " poor ol d Sco tch body , " he s a i d s o ftl y . " T h o l e a b i t. th o l e a bi t." (" Thol e" w as the ol d Sco ts wor d f or " end u re " . Wh a t h e w a s s a y i n g t o her w oul d i n E ngl i sh have me a n t: " Y ou m us t t ry to b e b ra v e ." ) T he old wom a n tu rn e d a ro u n d . S h e s e i z e d both hi s hands. S he smi l ed a n d wept . and s aid. " o s i r, I h a v e n ' t h e a r s i c a ta l k si nce I parted frae E di nboro. Bl e ss y ou, I m aun t ry to s to p fra e g re e ti n g a n d gri zzl i ng." os ler t alk ed t o h e r fo r a fe w m i n u te s . w h en he l eft to go on dow n the w a rd , t he old wom a n w a s re s i g n e d a n d q u i e t. T he pr ac t ic e o f m a k i n g h o u s e c a l l s (possi bl e,_nder the medl cal co n d i tr ons of t hat t i me ) ma v h a v e s tre n g th e n e d the rcl e of the doctor i n a fa mi l y ' s lif e. T he docto r k n e w h i s p a ti e n ts a l l th e betterw hen he saw them In th e i r h om es . He c a m e to u n d e rs ta n d w h a t th e home si tuati on w as - an i mp o rt ant c ons ider a ti o n i n e v e ry c a s e . O n his c alls a d o c to r d i d n o t ru s h i n a n d out. H e often staved aw hi l e. re l a xe d and c hat t ing H i s c a l l s w e re s o m e th i n g of soci al vi si ts. H e came as a fa mi l y f r iend. Dr . T hom as R o d d i c k w a s a n e x a mp l e o f a doctor w ho mai ntai ned hi s p rl va te pr ac t t c e and h i s h o u s e c a l l s (i n c l u d rn g n i ght cal l s) even after hi s Ii fe w a s cr owded wit h m a n y o th e r o b l i g a ti o n s . H e w as dean of the McGi l l Medi cal Fa cu l t y f r om 1901 to 1 9 0 8 , c h i e f s u rg e o n o f the R oyal vi ctori a H ospi tal . p re si d ent of t he B r r t rs h Me d rc a l As s o c i a tro n , a member of parl i ament for the sa ke o f int r oduc ing u n i fo rm s ta n d a rd s fo r th e regi strati on of doctors i n C a n a d a, and ac t iv e in a g re a t ma n y o th e r i n te re s ts.Y et he conti nued hi s ori vate p ra cti c e t o his las t ye a rs . I n his biogr ap h y o { Si r T h o m a s R o d d i c k i n 1938, D r. H .E . MacD ermot sa i d that S ir T hom as " g a .v eh i s p a ti e n ts a n i n d e fi n abl e sense of securi ty w hi ch ma d e t hem f eel t ha t h e h a d s h o u l d e re d a l l th e i r w orri es and forebodrngs. Pe rh aps t his was be c a u s e h e w a s n e v e r h u rri e d rn hi s manner." Dr . M ac Der m o t q u o te s a l e tte r fro m o n e o f D r. R oddi ck' s ol dest pati ents: " A par t f r om hi s s k rl l a s a s u rg e o n a n d p h y s i ci an, he had the great grft of i n sp i ring his pat ients w rth c o n fi d e n c e , a n d u p on enteri ng the si ck room he b ro u g h t c heer and h o p e . In c a s e sw h e re h o p e c o ul d not be gi ven, hi s presence b ro u g h t c alm and pe a c e . " He nev er gave u p try i n g to b ri n g c o m f o rt to the pati ent, l eavi ng noth i ng u n d o n e t hat t hought a n d s k rl l c o u l d s u g g e s t. H e w oul d srt w rth the sufferer. o n l y l e av ing when t h e e n d h a d c o m e . a n d h e h ad hel ped the fami l y i n krndl y a d vi ce. His int er es t s i n h i s p a ti e n ts b e c a me a p e rsonal one; thevfel tthey had a f ri e n d t o whom t hey c o u l d a p p e a l u n d e r a n y c ircumstances." S uc h doc t or s a l l fu l fi l l e d th e o l d m e d i c a l i deal : " S ometi mes to cure; o fte n t o r eliev e; alw a v s to c o n s o l e ." W#;:l:;' :{*::'rMalc'tm MA L C OL MMA C GREGOR C H A IR MA K ER enon e A C a s eS tu d yo f th e R e ta rd i nair Phenom by Bruce Kennedy T he abilit y to a c c u ra te l y e s ti m a te a date of constructi on for earl y fu rn i t ur e depends o n i n te g ra ti n g i n fo rma ti o n fr om several sources. P roposi ng su ch a dat e m ay be b a s e d o n a c o mb i n a ti o n o f evi dence i ncl udi ng the styl i sti c i n f l uenc e s hown byth e p i e c e . ma te ri a l s a n d methods of constructi on, ori gi n or p ro v enanc e, and d o c u m e n ta ti o n . D o c u me n tati on may take the form of i n vent or ies ,wills , b i l l s o f s a l e , o r s i g n e d p i e c e s. U nfortunatel y.veryfew pi eces o f f ur nit ur e m anuf a c tu re d o r fo u n d i n O n ta ri o had any sort of documentati on a sso c iat ed wit h it . T h i s l e a ' re s o n e w rth s ty l e . constructi on and provenance w i th whic h t o dat e m o s tf u rn i tu re . In ma n y c a s es,w here the provenance i s l ost, th e o n ly c lues lef t f o r d a ti n g a p i e c e o f f u rn i tu re a re i ts styl e a nd constructi on e sse nt ially t he pie c e i ts e l f. w i th n o p e ri p h e ra l i nformati on. When usingfurniturestyleto asstgna dateof constructionto a pieceof furniture it is possibleto consideronly a period or time window when that piecemay havebeenmade.Comparingvariouscomponentsof the piece(feet. cornice,turningor mouldingprofiles,etc.)to the popularstylemanualsof the late 18th and early 19th centurieslit is usualto determinethe earliestdateof construction by identifying the latest stylistic influence.For example.a Hepplewhite-influenced chest of drawers that has an Empire-influenced galleryboardwould be assessed as a laterpiecethana chestofdrawerswhich is entirely influenced by.Hepplewhite.The same principle applies when materials or methods of construction are examined.provided that the componentsbeingexaminedareoriginalto the piece.Again,the earliestdate of constructionwill be determinedby the latestfeatureof construction.Here the primary features to consider include the decorativehardware,the constructionhardware,Joinery,and the woods used. When settingabout the task of estimatinga date of constructionit rs importantto rememberthat differentstylesand methodsand materialsof constructionhave periodsof overlap.The forcesfor changewere generally slow to act in the earlierdays of settlement.Thiswas particularlytruein the non-urbanareasof the province wheref urniturewas producedby individual craftsmenfor a fairly small geographicmarket.Becauseof the paucity of newspapersand newspaperadvertisements for 'modern' furniture styles, these craftsmen tended to produce furniture of the same style and constructionfor relativelylong periodsof time. Often,thesestyleshad lost popularity,someyearsearlierin more urbansettings,wherethe influencefor change was stronger.and where mass production and importationwas prevalentfrom about 18502.Michael Bird has termed the occurrenceof "traditionaltechniques,modesand designs"at a laterdatethan fashionable the retardinairephenomenon.3 He has documentedan excellentexamplein the craft of John Gemeinhardtof Huron County.who prodr.rced a varietyof furniturein the last half of the 19th century.4 Another personwhose work should also be regardedas a part of the retardinaireptrenomenonis Malcolm MacGregor(1863-1953), (Fig. 1) MacGregor (originally spelled McGrigor, and later McGregors)was a descendantof a HighlandScotchfamilythatemigratedin 18U3,settlingin the St. Raphael's areaof GlengarryCounty.MalcolmMacGregorwas a farmerby trade.In 1906 or 1907 he purchasedafarm on Lot 19,2nd ConcessionSRR. CharlottenburghTownship, GlengarryCounty. lt was severalyears after buildinga new house,in about 191 2-1 5, that Malcolmslippedon a frontstep and injuredhis hip.lt is lrkelythisinjurywhichcausedhim towalkwitha cane.lt appearsthat he startedmakingchairsafterhis accident,and continueduntil sometime in the 1940's.MacGregor's workshopconsrstedof a smallcorner on the secondfloor of a garage.where he had a bench and vice set up. The style which he tended to produce most often was a comb-back arrow-backrockingchair(Fig.2). MacGregormust havebasedhis designon a comb-backarrowrockingchairwhichwasin the possession of the MacGregor famrlyfor manyyears,and which is attributedto HenrVStackhouseof Pevril. Ouebec.ThisStackhouse Chair.which is identicaltoPlate286 rnThe Heritage of Upper Canadian Furniture6.was likely purchasedby the MacGregors directly from Stackhouse,as they brought their wool to be carded at the StackhouseMills at Pevril.T ltwas in thesemillsthat HenryStackhousemade sonre of these rocking chairs.The MacGregorrocking chair illustratedin Fi g ur e 2. whic h i s o n e o f s e v e ra l kn own ex am ple s , s h o w s ma n y fe a tur es s im ilar t o th e S ta c k h o u s e fo r C o m p a re , c hair . ro c k ing e xa m ple, t he s lig h t s h a p i n g o f th e se at . t he s hape o f th e a rm . ro c k e rstyle, s iz e of c omb a n d th e n u mb e r o f a r r ows in both th e c o mb -P i e c e a n d bac k . A s liqhtl v d i ffe re n tv e rs i o n o f t he bas ic f orm w a s a l s o l i k e l y ma de by M ac G re g o r (F i g . 3 ). Fo rm er ly in t he c o l l e c ti o l o f J .E. Fl anigan of B r oc k v i l l e a n d n o w w i th C a n adian His t or i c a l Si te s . O tta w a . th i s c har r ( and a m a te to F rg u re 2 ) w e re ac quir ed i n th e v i l l a g e o f Mo ulinet t e in S t o rmo n t C o u n tV i n th e 1 950s . T his p a i r o f c h a i rs h a s b e e n illus t r at ed p re v i o u s l YB a n d mi sat t r ibut ed t o R e n fre w C o u n tv . Th e pr im ar y d if f e re n c e s b e tw e e n th e ch a ir s in F igur e 2 a n d 3 a re th e n u mber of ar r ow s , th e d o u b l e s i d e stre t c her s . and t h e ro c k e rs w h i c h a re m or t is ed ont o th e l e g s o f th rs so m ehat s m aller c h a i r. E v i d e n c e to i n dic at e t hat M ac G re g o r a l s o ma d e th i s v er s ion of a ro c k i n g c h a i r c o m e s fro m t he f ac t t h a t b o th ty P e s o f 2 FVa bock r@klng emh.hMk attu 'rotr stain Slt t8h : SW 19 Ddrk bM . S D t I %" : O H 3 5 rockers,as well as a numberof crude arrows,werefound in his workshopsa1 the time of the dispersalauctionof the MacGregorfarm in 1911. A numberof thesecrude rockingchairswere sold to an antiquedealer by the MacGregorfamily in the early 1950's.The chairsfrom the Flannigan collectionlikelycame from that group MacGregoralsomadeseveralotherchairstyles:avariationof a Boston rocker(Fig.ai, an arrow-backhrghcharr(Fig.5).a captain'shighcharr(Fig.6)s, child-sizerockingchairs,and a rather btzarrecomhinationof a comb-back arrow-backaddedonto a late Victorianwicker rockingchair (Ftg.7). The chairs that MacGregor produced are all very prrmitive in construction.Most componentsappear to have been shaped by axe and drawknife.Many havelointswhich are reinforcedwith round nails.the heads of which are left exposedand qurtevrsrble.Most havebeenmadewithoakas as secondarywoods. the predominantwood,with pine,basswood,and h ici<ory Oakwas a readilyavailablewood on the MacGregorand neighbouringMowat farm, where quite a few matureoak remaintoday. Thesechairs,which havethe appearanceof havingbeen made in the mid-19th century,are excellentexamplesof the retardinairephehomenon. The style and methods of construction (although not the materials of construction.i.e.the round rrails,whic,hare likelyoriginal)pre-datethe actual d ateof constructionby aboutone century.Withoutknowingthe provenanceor having some documentationthey would probably be assumedto be the antu-buk r@hns ctuir Cmb.buk painbd dark red, ntu' OisiMlI! stAwed. Photo cMb4 oI Philip FiNft 5 hi4h ciaar. OrbiMIr Atu-b@* phrdre&+rM, @ rtrfuFn sH t1":3W 4i';3D 11ui': On t5". BBM stlh reki\9 chnir. Rd&h' ttrM poinl. SH 15h ; SW 12'4"; sD t8\": oH 50". Etffi'"roo^*r.n*r*12"; wiil.8E a"; Sw trr"; sD oE rt". FiNn 7 Affi M r tu - b w hdJwinrd- ci a i r . Tq OH u\ product of some proneerbackwoodsman(as they were by Stewartlo)In the retdrdtnarrephenomenonit is not a requisitethat primitivefurniture be a product of frontier communities.produced out of necessity,as has been dairyf arming suggested.llMalcolmMacGregorwas worki ngin a progressive area,settledsome 125 yearsbeforehe producedhisf irstchair.Judgrngbythe quantityof chairshe produced,and the fact that he gavesomeawayto f amily members,it would seem reasonablethat they were not produced out of necessityeither. More likely Malcolm MacGregormade chairs becausehe en.loyeddoing so. Acknowledgements I would like to thank all the membersof the MacGregorfamily who helped in the documentationof this work, and who loaned items to be photographed. References 1. Pain,Howard.The Heritageof UpperCanadianFurniture.Van Nostrand ReinholdLtd.,Toronto.'1978,pg. 544. 2. Minhinnick,Jeanne.At Home in UpperCanada.Clarke,lrwin & Co. Ltd.. Toronto,1970. 3. Bird. Michael & Terry Kobayashi.A S plendid Harvest.Van Nostrand ReinholdLtd.,Toronto,1981. p. 68. 4. Bird, Michael Perpetuation and adaptation: The furniture and craftmanshipof John Gemeinhardt(1826-1912ll.CanadianAntiques& Art Review2(16): 19-34. 5. EarlVdocumentsof the McGregorf amily in the author'scollection. 6. Pain.Howard.op. cit., p. 121. 7. McKendrv, Ruth. Ouilts and Other Bed Coveringsin the Canadian Tradition.Van NostrandReinholdLtd.,Toronto,1979, pS. 54. Furnitureof English B. Stewart, Don R. A Guide to Pre-Confederation Canada.LongmansCanadaLtd.,Don Mills, 1967, p. 65. 9. Minhinnick.Jeanne.op. cit. c.Lp. 17 1. 10. Stewart,Don R. op. cit. p 65. 1 1. Mrnhinnick,Jeanne.Early Furniturein Upper CanadaVillage. 18001837. The RyersonPress,Toronto,1964, pp 3-6. appearedin the UpperCanadianand is reprinted This articleand photography with their kind permissionand that of the author. 10 DUNVEGAN Fromthe TweedsmuirHistory compiledby the DunveganWomen's lnstitute- 1942 In the first quarterof the eighteenthcenturyour ancestorscamefrom Scotland- Hebrideansfrom the lsle of S kye and men of Glenelgon the Scottislrmainland.Strong men and bravewomen they settledhere in virgin forestand hewedtheir homesteads out of the bush,makingpossiblebytheir heroic determination the fertile, smiling fields that characterizethe prosperouscountrysidetoday. Thesepeoplecame up from the St. Lawrenceto Lochiel,wendingtheir way wvstward;some came by way of the OttawaRiverthrough Hawkesbury. The Campbellfamilycamein f rom Harrington- Mrs.John A. MacRaewho was ni ne monthsold being carriedin her mother'sarms on horseback.Her aunt walkedher cow from there.Theynamedthe communityDunvegan,afterthe Dunvegan in their native land. The Stewarts settled in Stewarts'Glen, M acLeods in Skye and Caledonia.There were Camerons,MacLennans, Chisholms,Grants,Dewars,MacRaesand MacCrimmons. Having cleareda small patch of land they erecteda log cabin with earthenf loor and sleepingquartersabove.A hugef ireplacewith a cranefrom which hung a pot was their first cooking apparatus.Their furniture was perhapsonly blocksof wood, a bunkwith a strawmattressservedas sleeping quarters- itfolded up in the daytimeand servedas a settee.Thecabinswere built by the combinedeffortsof the neighboursrn bees-- as a stimulantthey partookof an occasionaldraughtof whiskey.The roof of the cabinwas of elm bark,the chimneyof stone.They had no matchesand usedflint and steelor went to the neighboursfor a live coal. Pineknotsfirst then tallow dips gave light at night.Candlescame laterand the ThreeRiversbox stove.Carpenters becamemoreefficientso theyhad betterf urnitureand irnprovedthe buildings. Theirlifewas one of harshipandtoil.Therewere no beastsof burdento help lightenthe labourof the pioneers.Men heweddown trees,burnedthe wood and sold the ashesto the potashmanufacturer- this was the first cash they received.Grainwas sown amongthe blackenedstumpsof the clearingsit was cut with a sickle,threshedwith a flail,and fannedwith a hand fan.The ploughswere madeof wood,the ox was the first beastof burden.Latersheep were sent out to this country, providingwool which the women washed, picked,cardedand spun into yarnto be knittedinto socksand mitts,or woven into cloth and blankets.Theseblanketshad to be fulled -- all the community m et and sat at a long tableand the pieceto be f ulledwas poundedaround.and beatenuntil it was the desiredthickness-- at the sametime they sang Gaelic songs suitableto the occasion. Duringthe winterwhen sleighingwas at its bestfarmersmadetrips to Montreal.severaltravellingtogether.Their sleighswere loadedwith grain, pork,butterand home-madecheese.whichtheyexchangedf or hardwaresuch as axes,saws,nails.etc. and Liverpoolsalt - it being cheap at a shilling a bushel.Theyalwaysput up at a ScotchTavern,stablingtheir horsesfpr twentyfive centsa day and feedingthem out of the supplieson the sleighs.Boardand lodgingwas fifty cents a day.Thesepioneershad certainenjoyments--they had loggingbees,stoningbees.and raisingbees.Thewomenwerenotwithout their bees- they had quiltingbees,spinningbees,fullingbeesand beesto pick wool. We would not liketo saythat Grandmother indulgedin the 'O BeJoyful" 11 likethe men folksbut thev hadtheir snuffwhich madean occasionalround.In the eveningthe workwas clearedawayand the violinsbroughtout and then followed hours of song and dance. When cominginto Dunveganfrom the southdown Mrs.Urquhart'sHill- which at one time as Big Kate'sHill.she beinga Mrs.MacLeod-- you seemto be descendinginto a vale.The first objectto catchthe eye is the spire of the church pointingupwardto the sky. indicatingthat our forefatherswere God fearinqpeople.Thereis a smallcreekf lowingthrJUghwhich crossesthe road at the corner in the village.lt flows northwardand emptiesinto the Scotch Rivernear St. lsidore.The first roadswere the horsetrailsthroughthe bush. Therewas one trail which wended its way down through Malcolm Dewar's Thef irstv ehicleon the roadwas I lumber acrossto the MacMillansettlement. cart and buckboard,shortlyfollowedby the wagon,.latercamethe one-horse Duggy. At one time liquorwassold in Dunvegan.both wholesaleand retail.In the brickbuildingwhichAlex MacRaebuilt he keptan hotel.AngusMaclntosh kepta liquorstore.The ScottAct came into force in 1BB5 and was repealedin again-- untilthe passageof the 1888. Then liquor could be had in Dunvegfan TemperanceAct. Thechiefindustriesin thevillagerncludeda gristmill ownedby Malcolm McRaewith a Mr. Crooksas miller.A tanneryoperatedowned by Alexander McCrimmon-- the tannerybuildingis now Mrs.W.J.MacLeod'sbarn.Another tanneryoperatedby MalcolmMcRaewas on the cornerwherethe cemeteryis today.Therewas an asherybelongingto C.P.Welles,and anotherownedand built by Angus MaclntoshsituatedbehindMrs. D.C.MacLeod'shouse.There were severalsaw mills-- that of John Grantand D.C.MacCuaigoppositeMrs. D.C.Macleods'house.A portablemillwas herefor two years.Hugh MacTavtsh boughta millherewhich had a mill on south-eastMain St. Dan MacKeracher was soldto D.A.Gray.Thismillwas removedfrom Dunveganin 1941.Thefirst tin shop was kept by John MacCallum-- in those days he peddledhis wares aroundthe countryside.barteringhis tinwarefor hidesand rags.A latershop was openedby DuncanMacKay.followedby Alex Maclean.who was assistant to Maccallum.ThenfollowedDanCampbell.Dunveganhad manyblacksmiths -- Norman McRae. Neil McConnell,Duncan and Murdoch MacCrimmon, Donald Campbell,Rory MacCuaig,Hughie Gillis (who built the shop later operated by J.A. Stewart);Norman MacDonald, Sandy Fraser and Dan -- AlexMacCrimmon,Malcolm Campbell.Therewerea numberof shoemakers Morrison,John Campbell,DonaldGillis,Tom MacGowanand David Blythe. The first storewas on the site of DonaldDewar'shouse-- operatedby I ittle PiperMacLeod.When he sold a pound of tea on credithe drewa tea leaf, and if it was halfa poundyou boughthe drewa halfleaf- rnthis mannerhe kept his books.Mr. Welleskepta storewhere MartrnFergusonis now, and William Urouhartin what becamgthe Stewartblacksmithshop.AngusMaclntoshkept storein the Cranehouse,then he boughf rom Donaldand ForbesMacRaewho on the north-eastcorner'- this is claimedto be the f irst were carriage-makers buildingin Dunvegan. Afire brokeout in 1892 which destrovedmost of the industrialpartof the village.lt startedon the south-eastcornerof the mainstreettakingwith tt gristmill,an ashery.a somestables.Allen'sfurniturcshop, MalcolmMacRae's CrippleDick the shoemaker in which MacCrimmon tannervowned bV Sarrdie had a shoo and severalhousesto the east. 12 The Dunveganblacksmithshop was built in Novemberof ,l894 by N.K. Macleod for Hugh Gillis.blacksmith.They startedto build it on the 5th of Novemberand it snowedthat night but saturdayof that weekit was complete. The boys around helpedput in the wi ndows and doors, put in the floor and shingles on the roof. The first horse shod at the shop belongedto J.R. MacPhee.This shop was taken down in 1954. Thevi llagecheesefactorywas builton the bankof the creekjustwestof the villageby Duncan"Captain"MacLeod,one partbeingthe old log houseon hisf ather'sf armandthe othera buildfngAlexMaccrimmonhadf rom the south end of his father'sfarm."TheCaptain"madecheeseherefor someyears,then sold to "Billy D. MacLeod"who was followedbvWilliam MacRaewhomacle butter and cheeseand finallyNormanMacRaewhoowned and operatedthe factoryfor forty years. The first school in Dunveganwas north of Dan MacLeod'scorner. gate-- this schoolhouseburnt,and manyof oppositeMalcolmMacGillivray's the pupils outgrewschool age beforeanotherschoolcould be built.school was held for a year in David Urquhart'shouse,with senator MacMillano{ Alexandriaas the teacher.Schoolwas then held east of the cornerclose by Dan Campbell'shouse,with teachersMiss Deyand Miss KateMacNaughton. The first schoolhousesitewas bought in 1B6Ofrom the "Captain"MacLeod for the sum of Eightdollars.A log schoolwas built north of the factorygate. Manyof the biggerfarm boysattendedschoolduringthewintermonths.There beingno playgroundthe pupilswanderedaboutoftengoingdownto the creek for amusement,and some no doubt arrivingbacklate.on one such ocoasion duringthe tenureof M r. Seldonwho waswaitingwith the ever-present hickory stick-- one of the pupilsretaliated.an incidentneverafterf orgottenbythe rest of the pupils. In 1BB4 the old log school house was bought by Angus Maclntoshfor $85 and movedto the 6th of Kenvon.The new schoolwasbuilt by Angus O. MacLeod,and brickedby Mr. Mcl aughlinof VankleekHill. The first cemeterywas laid out near the road on the farm of John F. campbell north of Dunvegan.The remainsof those who passedawav in the earlydayswere buriedthere-- theyplannedto builda churchnearbybutthobe planswere changedwhen Norman"Captain"MacLeoddonated a piece of propertyfor a church and cemeteryon the south-westcornerof his farm.The f irst burialin this cemeterywas the youngson of MalcolmMacRae.Theoldest inscriptionon a headstonebearsthe date 1846 althoughtherewere burials before that time. There are one or two Gaelic inscriptions.one stone, constructedby a villagerJohncampbell,shoemaker, is f ieldstonedressedand rnscribedand all the tools he usedwere a grindstone,chiseland hammer. Among the quaintold customsbroughtover by our ancestorsf rotn the Highlandswas one of visitingas manyhomesin the communityas possibleon NewYear'sEve-- knownas BannockNight.upon arrivalata homethevisitor proclaimed"NewYear'sgift'onyou" - to whichthe hostreplied"Sayyour ditty" without which there was no admittance.Translatedfrom the Gaelicis this rhyme sometimesused -- "Blessingson the house and everythingin it. Betweentimber,stone and door latch; Plentyof food and plentyof clothing; May healthypeoplelive in it on New Year'sDaV." Therewas no residentdoctorin Dunveganin the earlydays.Dr. Donald McDiarmidwho livedat Atholwould be occasionaly called.AtAlexandrialived Dr. Simpson(DoctorDhu.the Blackdoctor)whoalsoadministered tothe rllsof the vil lagers.when you went for himvou tooktwo horses- onefor him to travel 13 on. Then he was vervoften underthe influenceof liquorso he'd haveto sober up beforemakingthe journey.On his returntrip two horsesaccompaniedhim too -- someonehad to bring backthe horsethe doctor rode. The Scotchwere a rathersuperstitiousrace and were great at telling ghoststories.Oneevening a certaingentlemanwentto visith ts neighbour and saw,or thought he saw,an objectin thedistance.Hesaystohimself- "lf it be the devill'll givehim just halfthe road- but rf rt is a bearl'll haveto f ight for my lifel" Mrs. MacLeod lived north-westof Stewarts'Glenand one Sunday mornrnq she dressedin her bonnet and great shawl to go to church. She ryendedher way acrossthe Glendown to the schoolhouseandthereshewent for a drinkto the spring.Likelyit was somewhatmuddyaroundthe springand as shestoopeddownf or a d rink shegot hershawldaubedwith mud.Sh-esaton a log th.ereto rest.Shethought- "l must not go to churchlikethis.....lf the Old Fellowhimselfis tryingto preventme from goingto God'sHousetoworshipl'll play a trick on him". She turned her shawl insideout and went on her way. In the long ago people when they went visiting outside of the neighbourhoodhadto remainovernight-- travellingon foottooksometlmeto get overthe road.Somevisitorscameto this housewherethey were shortof The ladyof the houseroseveryearlyrn the morningand breadfor breakfast. get field a sheafof grarn.Thisshethreshedwith a f lail,fannedtt to went to tne then she roastedthe grainandf inallyput it througha sievemadeof sheepskin, through a hand-grinderand sifted it again.The oat-cakeswere readyfor the visitorsfor breakfast Poemby William Maclennan The Hillsof Skve "O my heart!my weary heartl There'sne'era day goes by But it turns hame to Dunvegan Bv the storm-beathrllso' SkYe" DUNVEGAN 'Dun'asa prefixmeansa fort,the'Vegan'part may referto a princeorwarload known in the days of the Celtsor Picts. Re Bullfrog Tavern.The explanationmayor maynot be authentic.A Mr. DonaldMcPheeof the Manor gavewhat soundslikea plausibleexplanation. A sc.rldier came Into the "Swamp Hotel" and was refused a drink by the innkeeper. Apparentlyhe went out to the nearbystreamandspeareda bullfrog with his bayonet.He returnedwith the frog danglingon his upheldbayonet. "You'llpour me that drinkor you'llbewherethe frog is now!".Onecan i magine a hastycompliance. FISHERMAN OF A WEARYHEBRIDEAN THE PRAYER Would that the peatswould cut themselves And the fish jump on the slrore That I upon my bed might be And sleeoforevermore. 1A T H E S C H OOL SOF McGIL L |VRAY'BRTDGE S by Jean Maclntosh Thef irstschoolat McGillivray's Bridgeis knownto havebeenlocatedon the south sideof the river,west of the bridge,betweenthe roadand the rrver. Thereis littleinformationregardingit but it is logicaltosupposethatit was the schooldescribedin the precedrngdocumentasa commonschooland built in 1820. Thiswas one of the earlyloyalistsettlements and someof the homesin the area date back to that perrod.One earlypupil was JamesGrantlaterto become Sir JamesGrant A teacherrn its laterhistorywas Mary Cameronof CameronHall of the RiverRoad. The doiument was found among the family papers tn an old chest belongrngto WillramUrquhart.U.E.L., who was grantedlandon the southside of the RiverRaisin1% mileswestof McGillivray'sBridge.lt not beingsignedby the Trusteescalledfor a closerstudVof the locationof S.S.#18Char.,dated 1820. Avisit to the archivesin Ottawaand a letterto the Dept.of Educatronrn Torontoyieldedno informatronexceptto say thatthe educationsystemwas very dis-organizedrn canada from 1812-1840. Little informationcan be found. lt is a knownfact that the common school systemwas set up in 1B 16. Howevercertainfacts known point to the beliefthat S.S.#18was a Commonschoolknownto havebeensituatedon the south bankof the River Raisinwest of McGillivray's Bridge. (1 ) Therewas detrnitelya schoolon that locatton 12l The location of the Urquhartfarm 11/zmilesfrom the Bridge wouid reasonablyestablishthe fact that this would be the school in whrchthe Urquhartfamilywas educated. (3 ) Addedto thesefacts is the followingexcerptf rom a letterreceivedf rom one of the descendants of WilliamUrquhartlivingin the SouthernStates: "E.L. (EliasLeonardUrquhart)son of James Urquhartand Margaret Leonard,commencedschool at the age of six. going to a log sChool houseat what was knownas McGillivray 's Bridge.a mile and a halffrom his home. Hrsfrrstteacherwas Henrysmith of Martintownand his last teacher was H.D. McArthur who later becamea prominentChicago o octor. Rethe ceriificateon charlesScrimgcour,it was learnedattheArchives of canadathat there had indeedbeena teacherof that nameemployedin the common Schools of ontario and that he later joined a regiment in New Brunswick.He resrgnedand settledin Ontario. Informationand documents The late Miss EmmaUrquhart,Dated Aoril7. lgll S.S.#11 Charlottenburgh Thereis no documenteddate for the erectionof the Schoolknownas S.S.#11,Char.,but if one refersto Belden'sAtlas,a map for 1B7g shows a schooI locatedon the northbank of the RiverRaisinon the easts ideof the road where such burlding remains standing in 19BB. The Public School Act replaced the Common School System in 1871. S.S.#11 was no doubt establishedsoon after. For some ninety years it was the seat of primary educationfor the childrenof a largesectionincludingthreeconcessions, the 15 RiverRd. east and west.the Kings Rd. and the 7th ConcessionRd. An earlyinstructorwas DuncanFaulknerto be followedbVa long lineof l964.Attendanceovertheyearsvaried thirtvsometeachersuntrlitsclosingrn but until its closingyearstherewas alwaysa largeclass.at one time reaching 6O pupils.About 1920 an experimentwas tried. dividingthe classroomto allow for two teachers.This was unworkable. Formanyyearsthis was a redschoolforthosewholong rememberit but in its lateryearsit was paintedwhite. ln the 1 950',stherewas much controversyin the sectionregardingthe possibilityof closingthe schoolwith its much smallerattendanceto bus the childrento a largercentre.This was delayed. l'he teacherto taughtthis writerto readandwriteand do arithmeticand other subjectswas MissBerthaMcGregorof the King'sRd.whilethe one who preparedher for the Entranceto High SchoolwasMiss ElizabethFergusonof bt. f tro. the lateMrs. ElizabethBlair,well knownGlengarryhistbrianof many years. On a warm eveningin June 1964 friendsand formerstudentsgathered in the little school, then modernizedconsiderably,to honour Mrs. Mary of the McDonaldwho had taught their for 21 yearsand to mark the cl1.1stng Mrs. McDonald; Mrs. present well as as were school.Threeform er teachers (McDermid), Jean and Mrs. McMillan (Maclntosh), Helen Mrs. Barton Jean Maclntosh(McCuaig).Followingthe closingof the schoolthe buildingwas renovatedand becamea dwelling. '/) . ;4i7rl')'/ /"''i"n'-.',,"t'o ,,7.f/r," (';:"' )'/'z/'|/'7' ','ri ,;;t 4rir, V)r'i'r') ..t"rr,/,/o/ror,( " ' ' " ; ' l/ / ,/,/ ./:.' ,l;r.r, -/o' .ror' /c /''ry' (,?),,r..2;l /r'/.,ur 2rrrv e'.,'/r)7tr.err.J/c ", ' / ( r. .;;- .' r :ft) r"''"' //*;";r, o /,12O /',/'o'4iV''t/'r',;a;o /('., ..-, ,{r/rt. {2,,r., (:e rr! lft:t,", l?'.,'i.t*', ty,t.z.. ;./tr-7|. 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"//."r0)" /r1", (').rr rt.r, or".,/il, i| ..r;l ''/' e //) ../.c.1 n -/il',2,h-"'r". 7, %.lir2, /rt,, o,7"oC4o,/'orr-{2;i <----6-' \$ ..);. - .t/'/;rv! ,rr/.',,v'./t2./."/2.y'// 4f"* zl?zt /, L .i ,J {r"ft' N N ltt'iy': ,:r/,/.y.,. ! 1r,,",,), .,/,,.,,,r,r.,zh 1;.4n.E. 17 .t;:\'t\ 1l:;it'(i.,, .'/f,.t/trrrr.-,,*; -'(),'1ur', {4-t ./, .. .,' \ .! ) d it I li"rii)* ,a()r,,,,(.r, >.o ,.r-;.1.t /,1'; ',,,') ..t // "l '::',/oi'::ii" / 4 '/t'"or));7 )),')i,,,'r)'t t i/ i gffiln ,, ,f ,) ./7, './ .1t'r'.,,,, , ,,./ ,^/y'/,)t;,ir-_, , )' ' ,2):-<./,{ufi.1tr',,,, "r,1 -, * cr.t/tzt \ dtil, 4+ /,r. .f ('",r.;/411':, (l/*,lnt celizeccl/ 4.,'/o /A (--.u. ;;"/"; ert'f-,.flyl /v u-, /.u"ti/a', fir'r*/)"/ fr , -,ryJ,rrro.rr."*1loai,r* ./,* & Zr. /2*9 6. & // t; '-,' r- llzzzn7 t J4l' 1' z/' n'f,-"o"'' r, /;rV;r-*-h; 1'' 7"" ffib I rdt (irrr,,oorz,,. -Q/o/oo'4 : ./9,..-u- /x 2a '/ 18 THE GLE NGA RRYTE LE P HO NE by Hughina McK in n o n ) I I ) associationheld its f irst meeting telephoneco-operative TlreGlengarry at the town hall in Alexandria.Tuesday,June 4. 19O7' when a number of prominentmen from LochieltownshipGlengarryCo. metto form a company. At the meetingthe constitutionwas adoptedand threetrusteeswere namedMr. PeterChisholm,Lochiel,Dr. K.A. MacLennan,Alexandriaand Mr. J.J. The MacMillan,MacCrimmonEast.with Mr. ChisholmbeingnamedPrestdent. committeeimmediatelygot to work to secureconnectionwith the town and outsidepoints. At once men were hired to start construction,digging post holes erectingpolesand stringingthe wire to connecton poles.By Octoberof that and a total of 19 phones.Thef irst yeartherewere two toll linesto Alexandria, Lochiel,operatinghours being Bros. store at centralofficewas in the Morris from 7 a.m. until 9 p.m.week days and 9 until 1O a.m. and 3 to 5 p.m. on Sundays. In 1913 a small brick buildingcloseto the storewas obtainedby the companVand the switchboardwas installedthereinwith Mr. RobertHayhired and manager. as secretarv-treasurer ln 1915 W.J. MacKinnon(my husband)was approachedby Mr. M.J. and managementof the telephone Morristo takeoverthe secretary-treasurer to whrchWillie at once refusedsayinghe knew nothingat allaboutthework. However.Mr. MichaelMorriswould not accepthis refusalandtold him to think it over.Willie came home and we talkedit over.He said"l can'ttake it, I even don't know how to changea battery".So I said"Othershavelearnedand I am sureyou can.Justthink aboutit and see it for yourself".So afterconsideringit well he decidedto accept. where he sold farm At the time we owned a houseand lot at Fassifern machinery,McLaughlrnbuggies, etc. The telephone company had their meetingand he was hired- this meanta move.lt was only 3 milesbut itwasan The upheaveland on arriVingit lookedratherdismalbut it was an adventure. make it liveable. repairs to lot and a of doing it needed burldingwas smalland We just had one littlegirl,Christenawho was 3 vearsold.Therewasnot a bit of ground connectedwith the building.Therewas a verandahat the front. the edge of which was at the edgeof the road.Insidethe house.downstairshad 2 rooms,the front one had a part of it partitionedoff with spaceenoughin one part for the switch board and operatorschair at a window at one end and a at the small safe and cupboardto take care of booksand small necessities other.on the wall was a cablewithallthecarbonsof the differentoutsidelines. sat in thewaiting Duringa bad stormat nightwe manytimescamedownstairs, room andwatchedthe lighteningf lashup and down the cableand of courseit meanta lot of work riextdayfor Willie.Allthosecarbonshadto be cleanedand put back as well as the carbonsin the phonesin manyof the lineswherethe lighteninghit the hardest.In horseand buggy days it made long drivesand long days.Well the restof that roomwe usedas a waitingroom.We alsohadto use it as a diningroom as therewasn'tany otherplacefor our furniture.A door ooened into the other room where our kitchenwas. The back kitchendoor openedrntothe hotelyard.The hotelstableandshedscameto within 1o feeto{ the kitchendoor.The hotelwas not in operationatthattimesosometimelater tv th e te l e phone c om pa n v b o u o h t a l l th e v a c a n t l a nd. tore dow n al l the sheds and sta b l e and put up a n tc e s ta b tefo r o u r h o rs e a n d l ater a garage w l th an upstal rs wh e re a lot of t eleph o n e e q u i p m e n t w a s k e p t. I s hall alwav s re me mb e r o u r fi rs t d a y a t Lochi el central . W e kept the o p e ra t or who oper a te d fo r R o b e rt H a y . L e o O u e snel . H e w as a good operator a n d 'a ver y lik eable bo y o f a b o u t 1 5 o r 1 6 y e a rs o f age. H e w ent out to hi s l unch so we had t o t ak e o v e r th e s w i tc h b o a rd . F o rt unatel y my si ster-i n-l aw w as h e l p i n g m e and s he h a d h a d s o me e x p e ri e n c e wi th the operati ng as she had wo rke d wit h t he B ell te l e p h o n e i n Mo n tre a l . Sh e knew a bi t about i t. H ow ever at th a t ti m e no one as k e d fo r th e i r p a rty b y n u mb e r. they j ust gave the names of th e p a r t y t hey want e d , s o w e h a d to l o o k u p the number i n the book. One d i ffrcult y was t hat t h e re w e re ma n y o f th e s a m e name. for i nstance w e had 4 D .J. M ac M r llans s o w h i c h o n e d i d th e y w a n t, th e one at Laggan, K i rk H i l l or L o ch i el and what wa s th e n u m b e r o f th e l i n e th a t ran that w ay. l t al l tookti me a n d so m ewould los e p a ti e n c e . S o b e l i e v e me . L eow asw el come backfrom hi s l u ch and f r om t hen o n I g a v e h i m h rs l u n c h a n d al l hi s meal s.Then w e started h a vi n g ev er y one loo k u p th e p h o n e n u mb e r o f the party they w anted. l t took ti me but ev ent uallv w e s u c c e e d e d . A tth a tti me therew eren' ttoo many phones, p ro b a bly les s t han 2 0 0 . T he ups t air s c o n s i s te d o f 3 ro o ms . On e a very smal l one and one had a d o o r opening on t o a b a l c o n y w h i c h w e u s e d a s a si ttrng room for a ti me. W e we re for t unat e f or aw h i l e to b e a b l e to g e t O p e ratorscl ose by w ho w ere abl e to Sl e e p at hom e and w e w e re s o o n a b l e to re l i e v ethem part of the ti me. l t took a l i ttl e tim e t o lear n t o ri n g th e n u mb e rs a s th e re w asn' t any el ectri ci ty and the ri n g i n g had t o be do n e b y o n e h a n d a n d th e o th e r hand had to pul l the keys. l t w a s a bit dif f r c ult us i n g b o th h a n d s to w o rk d i fferentl y. T he s er v ic e a t n i g h t w a s t^ b e o n l y D o ctors cal l s, occasi onal l y there w o u l d be c alls , s om e mi g h t h o p d o w n st air s t o ans we r s o w e p u t rr L i l ro u g n b u t i t wasn' t too often. Most peopl e w e re ver v c ons ider a te . H o w e v e r, a f{ e r a c o u o l e ef years i t w as approxi matel y 2 4 h o ur s er v ic e. I n 1917 t he G l e n g a rry c o -o p e ra trv € a s s o ci ati on w as i ncorporated tnto th e G lengar r y T elep h o n e C o . L td . T h e y h a d t hei r fi rst meeti ng at Lochi el to wn ship hall on A u g u s t 4 , 1 9 1 7 N /.J . M o rri s w as appoi nted P resi dent,J.J. Mo rri s was appointe d s e c re ta ry -tre a s u re r.U p to that ti me I l ooked after the b o o ks but an addit io n to th e fa mi l y m a d e l i fe a bi t busi er. In 1 921 a tol l l i ne to Va n kleek Hr ll was p u t i n . In 1 9 3 0 th e y j o rn e d the Independent Tel ephone Asso c iat ion. W r llie h a d ma n y l o , l e d i o u s d ri v e s i n horse and buggy days and i n w i n t er long c old d ri v e s w i th h o rs e a n d c u tter and as many as 15 or 1B su b sc r iber s on s om e l i n e s . m a n y a l o n g w a y o ff the road, but he al w ays sai d mo st o f t he s ubs c r ib e rs w e re th e " Sa l t o f th e e arth" . H e w as never al l ow ed to co me hom e wit hout a h o t d i n n e r. O n e l a d y i n p a r ti cul ar w ho w as a l ong w ay off th e ro ad s eeing him re p a i r th e l i n e w o u l d w a v e a w hi te f l ag so he w oul d come d o wn t o t he hous e. D tn n e r w o u l d b e a l m o s t ready so he must stay, w hi ch I e xp e ct he was glad t o d o . Su p p e rw a s d i ffe re n t, hew as usual l y home qui te l ate. Afte r a num bei of y e a rs th e re , h e b o u g h t a s e c o nC handtouri ng carw hi chw as a g o d s end. lt m ade d ri v i n g s o m u c h e a s i e r b u t o t course i t w as horse and cutter i n w i n t er as r oads we re n o t p l o r4 re dfo r m a n v v e a r s after. H eavysnow f al l s made b a d roads . I n 1934 or t h e re a b o u t - th e c o m p a n y a uthori zed hi m to buy a car. Te l e p hone r ent s we re i n c re a s e d fro m $ 1 2 .OOto S 1 4 OOand l ater to $ 1 6.00. 20 so h e b ought a Chev y ru n a b o u t s o w e h a d o u r ow n car for our ow n use. H is lif e was a ve ry b u s y o n e o n c e l i n e s w e r e bei ng extended. t\ew Ii nes w e re being built , m o re te l e p h o n e w i re b e i n g i n s tal l ed.There w ere some very h e a vv s now s t or m s an d s e v e ra l s l e e t s to rm s w h e n l i nes and pol es w ere broken d o wn whic h m ade a l o t o f w o rk . S o m e s u b s c ri b ers w ere w i thout servi ce for d a ys or week s but e v e ry e ffo rt w a s ma d e to re store servi ce as qurckl y as p o ssi b le. Help was ea s y to g e t b u t n o o n e h a d much know l edge of tel ephone wo rk so it t ook m uc h l o n g e r to g e t th i n g s w o rk i n g but through ti me men w ere g e tti n g t he ex per ienc e w h i c h m a d e i t e a s i e r. Th i s a rt ic le was giv en to M r. M c l e o d b u t h e w a s n ever abl e to obta i n the second i n sta l m ent . S he m ay h a v e c o m e d o w n w i th h e rf i nal i l l ness shortl yafterw ri ti ng th i s a cc ount . T he lad y w h o p u t o u t th e s i g n a l to come to di nner w as the w el l l o ve d 'K at ie' .widow o f D u n c a n W . M a c l e o d . Ka ti e w as l eftw i th a l argefami l yto ra rse a nd a f ar m t o lo o k a fte r..S h e d i e d a t th e a g e of 99. CLAN CHATTAN ON WE A R IN GH IGH L A NDDRESS by Jamie Scarlett The growth of Clan Societiesand the comparatrveease with which Clansmenf rom overseascan visitthe homelandhasresulted.in the summeral least.in many more kilts being seen in Scotlandthan has been the ss5c for many a decade.Somelook good,some not so good;someas if they areworn everyday and some as if they havebeensuppliedasthe rightthingtowear in Scotland.lt is apparentthat there is some need for gentle guidancein the matterof wearingHighlanddress.In mv viewthcre is no bettermanualon-the subjectthan J C Thompson'slittlebook'SOYOU'BEGOINGTO WEARA KILT' But a few wordsf rom one who hasfound the kilt idealHighlandwear,summer and w inter,formal and informal,over severalyears,maystill not come amiss. Firstof all,we must bear in mindthat Highlanddressis a dressand like any other,subjectto the rulesof comfort,good tasteand aesthetics.lt is not a fancy dress; although Army regulationsand Victorian rule-makerscame perilouslynearto makingit so. lt is the idealdressfor itsown environmentand similarconditionsanywhere,fullyadaptableto climateand occasion.Whatwe haveto do, then, is to wear the dresswith dignityand propriety,with sucn individualityas we can musterand, aboveall, make it look good! Letus beginwith the kilt,probablythe mostexpensiveitem in the outfit. A good mediumweight worstedis good for day or eveningwear.summeror winter.lf you livein a veryhot place,you maypreferto try a lightercloth but my feelingis that the temperatureoutsidethe kilt has very little bearingon that insideand that the heaviercloth has a better'hang'.lwould alwayseschew those tartanson a white ground,termed 'Dress'tartansby the trade.At best these are corruotions of women's tartans, and at worst Victorian The l engthof a kilt is difficultto specify,but rememberthat it is abominations. intendedto showthe kneesandthat if it is too longthe bottomedgewilichafe truewhen the kilt is wet, as it often rs in its the backsof them;this is especiallV 21 home territory.Whetheror not you wear underpantswith the kilt is entirely your businessand nobodyelseoughtto know;but the truthof the matteris that did not knowaboutthem.SomepuristswilI saythatthe kilt the old Highlanders pin is an anachronismand should not be worn. However,lfind that a little weighton the cornerof the apronhelpsto preventit fromf lapping aboutin the breeze. lf you do weara pin do not makethemistakeof pinningthetwo aprons together;to do so only enhancesthe chancesof tearingthe apron or pulling the pin out and losing it. I dislikethe abbreviated'monkeyjacket'styleof kilt jacket.which feels skimpedand hasno roomf or pockets.I g reatlyprefer the longer'hacking'style, but the BritishServicebattleblouse(or the day doubletlargelyc.rpiedfrom itJ makesa fullv satisfactorysubstitrrte.On the other hand,an ordinarvtweed sportslacketor ablazerdo not lookwell wlth the Ktttano should be avoided. Thereare few occasionswhich callfor f ully-rrggedHighlandeveningdress.A darkjacketin somesmooth materialwith plainor silverbuttonswill suit most formalaffairs,and manyinformalas well. For'full rig'thereis nothingto touch one of the High landstyledoublets.Jacketsthat are modifiedversionsof those that belong to.trousered evening dress make a very poor showing by comoanson. It rsaboutthe legsthat most Hrghlanddressrevealsits shortcomings. A man in a kilt looksa bit likeone of thoseVictorianvasesuoportswhich stands on threeof itsfourverythinlegsandwobblesalarminglywhen anybodypasses within abouttenfeetof it. He needssomeweightatthe base.Thickstockings white.with an Arran pattern.are suitablefor day or evening- and stoutshoes are the answer.The rulesusedto saythat shoeshad alwaysto be blackand I was surprisedto learnrecentlythat brownshoesare obligatorywith a red kilt. Despitethe blackshoe rule being a hang-overfrom militaryorders,lthink I would still go alongwith it; shoesshow againstthe hose,not againstthekilt. You will neverguessin advancehow much you wi ll haveto packinto a sporan(anglice-sporran), so makesureit is big enough.Ornamentedleatheris the stufff or daysporans a nd silvermountedsealskinor the likef or evening;but a leatherbag on a brasscantle is good for either.Sometimesthe sporan ts slungon short lengthsof chainloinedby an adjustablestrapatthe back;these chainswearthe apronof the kiltto a th readbarestateveryq u rcklyand are best avoided.A broad leatherbelt with a plain bucklejoins with the sporanto enhancethe appearanceof the kilt and keepthe wearer'smiddleregiontidy.lt is debatablewhetherit shouldbe brown.to matchthosesooransor blackfor a dark kilt and brown for a red. That leavesonly a clusterof minor items,mostlymattersof personal preferencebut beginningwith the sgiandhu. lt usedto be that this hadto be worn in the top of the right stocking.but light has beenseenand left-handed sgianscan be found.TheordinaryroundHrghlandbonnetis as good as anyfor the cli mate,thoughsomepreferthe Glengarrystyle.I tlrrnka deerstalker looks dreadful!My preferredchoiceof shirt is plain,white or coloured.worn wrth a tie that surtstne lacket.Tartantresdo not, generally,go wellwrthtartankilts. On lastword for men.The kilt feelsstrangeat first,so go on wearingit until rt does not. has survivedof the earlrestform of women's No intelligibl"6s5gpiption outdoor dress..theARiSAID.Arisaidis translatedas "gown" but experiment suggeststhat the orrgrnalVersionwas no more than a blanket,caught up in hasteand usedas a wrap.Worn with the narrowwidtharoundthe body.a light Highlandblanketcan be made into a gracefulovergarment by lightlypleating 22 Loose wrap-over-skirt. and beltingit roundthe waistto makean ankle-length mater ialis then pulledup underthe armsanddown overthe shouldersandthe four thicknessespinnedtogetherat the breast.This leavesenough material Later,the arisaid hangingdown behindto be usedas a hoodwhen necessary. was worn with somethinglikea sleevedwalstcoatand providedthe modelfor the'Aboyne"dressfor Highlanddancing.After the arisaidproper had fallen into disuseit becamecustomaryforHighlandwomen towear eithera taitan gown or a plain gown with a tartan'screen'dra plaid.lt can fairlybe saidthat Highlandwomen'sdressis the fashionof the day with a touch of tartanand of the simplejumper and skirtoutfit; most ladiesare awareof the adaptrbility pleated lightly and not imitationsof the men'skilt. but pleaseletthe skirtsbe materialdoes not becomethe layers of extra padding several out with The femalebottom. There is one aspectof womens Highlanddressthat is the subjectof strict rules;that is the wearingof a sashwith formal dress.Regulationslaid the sashshouldbe worn diagonallyround down by the Lord Lyonrequire'that the bodyfrom hip to shoulder,whereit rspinnedwith the ends hangingdown the wife of a Ch tefor equallyor with the longerend at the back.A Chieftainess, pins her on the leftshouldei. regiment, sash the wife of a Colonelof a Highland pins.hers has married out of her clan who right. Awoman the on clanswoman A and pinshersashby the middleto the rightshoulder reverses the arrangement and ties the ends in a bow on the left hip. Sinceanyof theseare inconvenient for dancing,or when decorationsareworn, on s uch occasionsa smallloop at the centreof the sashis attachedto a buttonat the waistof the f rockand both ends are pinnedto the right shoulderand let fall down behind. Finally,over-useof tartan, such as wearing bonnets made up of segmentsof severaldifferenttartans.marksout the weareras a tourist and thereforea targetfor the worst that tourism can do! articlewas writtenon request.As an authorityon tertan,and Footnote:Jamie's its weaving,and as someoneinvariablyseenwearingthe kilt.we could not as he havehada bettercontributoron howtowearHighlanddress.Remember. saVs.this is not fancydress.Wearitwith pride.bui alsowith goodtaste,dignity and propriety- Ed. This articleappearedin the CLANCHATTANmagazineand is reprintedby their kind permissionand that of the author. 23 T HE WEARING OF S A S HE S B Y LA DI E S I N E V E NI NGDRE S S No. 1 Style - worn by clanswomen.The sash is worn over the ri ght shoulder across the breast and secured by a pin or brooch on the ri ght shoulder. wivesof clan chiefsand wivesof No. 2 Style- worn bv Chieftainesses. colonelsof Scottishregiments. Thesash.usuallyf ullerin stze(24 incheswide with a 1 2 inchf ringe)is worn overthe leftshoulderand securedwith a brooch on the left shoulder. No. 3 Style-worn by ladieswhohavemarriedoutoltheirclan butwho still wish to use their originalclan tartan.The sash usuallylongerthan No. 1 styleis worn over the right shoulder,securedthere with a pin, and fastened with a large bow on the left hip. No. 4 Style-worn by countrydancersor whereanyladydesiresto keep the f r ont of the dressclearof the sash.Thisstyleis similartothe beltedplaid.lt is buttonedon at the backof the waist,or is hel dby a smallbelt.and is secured at the right shoulderby a pin or smallbrooch,so that the endsfall backwards from the rrght shoulderand swing at the back of the right arm. No. 5 Style- worn by ladieswho haveno clan. She is freeto wearthe tartan of her fancy.The sash is worn over the right shoulderwrth the ends knottedor broochedand Iayrngon the right hip.Thesashmay be attachedto the nght shoulderby a brooch. z+ SIR ALEXA NDE RMA CK E NZ]E ,P IONE E RE X P L O RE R by Donald N. MacMilla n the two notable Canadiansareto havean opportunityto c ommemorate '\/oyages'of Sir AlexanderMackenzie,the outstandingpioneerexplorerof NorthfuesternCanada.In 1 789. with a smallcrew,he went by canoethrouqh an tmmensearea,not previouslytravelledor known to white men,from Fort Chipewyanon LakeAthabasca.north to the Arctic Ocean,some 1 500 miles, mostlvon the watersof the great riverthat now honourshis name.Then tn 1793. with another small crew. he made an even more hazardousand significanttrip to the west,at firstascendingagainstthe currentsof the rivers, then climbingon foot over the heightsof land,and finally,in an oft-repaired canoe,movingswiftlydown to the PacificOcean.There,as the f irstto achieve althoughtn a verydrfferentway than he the long-soughiNorthwestPassage. had hoped.he inscnbedon a rock thesewords:"AlexanderMackenziefrom Canadaby land,the twentysecondof July,one thousandsevenhundredand ninetythree. Lat 52" 20' 48" N." of coursewe havethe same interestand pride as our As Glengarrians, fellow Canadiansin Mackenzie'sexplorations.However,because of his we havean evenmorepersonalinterest.Bornin 17 64, Glengarryconnections. in Stornowav,lsle of Lewis.to KennethMackenzieand his wife, lsabella 4 Maciver,who bied witnrna fewyearsof his brrth,Alexanderemigratedrn 1-7-7 A to NewYork,with hisfather,his uncle,John,and hisaunts,Maryand lsabella. year or two later, his father and uncle receivedcommissionsin Sir John Johnson'sRoyalRegiment,andAlexanderand his auntsmovedup-stateto the MohawkValley.to be with the Highlandfamiliesthere,many of whom were As the hostilitiesincreased,the Mackenzieaunts, laterto settlein Glengarry. concernedfor the safetvof the boy, sent him rn 1778to Montreblto attend school.Then in 1179, he becameemployedin "the countinghouse"of a fur trading Company.His early maturityand markedabilitycontributedto.his being sent to the Company'sDetroit Post rn 1785. Soon he was offereda positionas a "partner",on conditionthat he proceedto the Indiancountry,i.e., to WesternCanada. thatthe agent in chargeof the NorthWest It is of interestto Glengarrrans located,was Companyin the Athabascaterritory,whereMackenzieeventually PeterPond.suspeotedbut neverfound guilty of the murderof Jean Etienne of the Rev.John Bethune.Within a vearor Wadden,a Swiss,the father-in-law was apporntedto be Pondlssecondso of his arnvalin the f ar west,Mackenzie in-commandand understudy.Young Mackenziebelievedhim to be guiltyof more than one murder.Pondhad a historyof violence,whereasWaddenwas and knownsobriety"(p.xvi).Hisdeathwas regardedas a man "of strict'probity while he was entertainingPondto it occurred in that all the more shocking dinner. Mackenzieseemsto havemadethe best of what could have been a difficult situationbyworkingwith his superiorand trying to learnas much as possrblefrom him. He did so recognizingPond'sabilityas a trader with an extensiveknowledgeof the f ur bearingcountry.lt seemslikelythat the telling of Indianstoriesabout a great river.which flowedto the north buteventually the youngermanand motivatedhim emptiedrntothe Pacific Ocean.fascinated Pond'slessthan to dream dreamsof becomingan explorer.Unfortunately, in his first discomfiture Mackenzie's to information contributed accurate 25 voyage, when he realtzedthaf to him the Mackenziewas "the river of disappointment",in that it was not the passageto the Pacificand a second voyagewould be necessary to achievehis dream.Nevertheless, his timewith Pond playedan importantpart in stimulatingthe future explorer.In 1788, Pond'sstatusin the North West Companybecameuncertainand he reftthe post never to return. Mackenziewas appointedto be in charge at Fort Chipewyan,thus giving him a basefor his two voyages. Meanwhile,the Glengarryconnectionof the Mackenziefamily was becomingmoretangible.As Loyalistofficers,KennethandJohn wereentitled if they settled in Canada. to 2,000 and 3,000 acres of [and respectively, it took a numberof petitionsto gainapprovalof theirgrants:500 Surprisingly, acresin Kenneth'snameand 1250 to John in the earlyperiod;then 1500 to Alexander., as Kenneth'sheir, in 1796; and finally,in 1806, the remaining 1750, a total of 5,000 acres.Possibly,becausethe claimswere made some years after the 1784 initial settlementof the southern concessionsin Glengarryand Stormont,a considerableportionof the grantswere in Dundas, andothersin Concession of WinchesterTownship somein the 7th Concession grantsare moredifficultto 1 of Williamsburg.lhelocationsof the Glengarry's place, possibly because of the early custom of naming the southern or the RaisinRiver, with referenceto eitherthe lake(St.Francis), concessions "Charlottenbutgh, E. 1/zLot 17, 1st Conc.from RiverRaisin,being 5th e.9., Conc.or rangefrom Lake,- 10O acres".Otherlotsseemto havebeenin the 6th lt would appearthat the presenthighwayfrom AppleHill and 9th concessions. to Martintownrunsrhiougha partoTone lot (west3/lLot 30 9th Charl),Theone grantwithinthe presentKenyonrownshipis easiertoidentify;"Kenyon, Lot 25, 4th Conc. 200 acres,18O7".Alexander(Mclsaac)McDonaldpurchasedthis land in 1858 for f 1 75-0-0.John and hissisterswerein Cataraouiin 1 789 and are said to have movedto Glengarrya little later.likelyto the Williamstown area.Johndied in 1795, Mary in 18OBand lsabellain 1835. ThatAlexander went to Britainin the autumnof 1BO5,and onlymadea fewvisitsto Mackenzre to explainthe lack of any confirmedcontacts. Canadathereafterhelps , Mackenzie.however.was concernedabout the welfare of his fellow Highlandersin Glengarry,especiallyafter his uncle and aunts locatedthere. Aware,no doubt,that the peoplewere not ablein the earlyyearsof settlement to afford the luxuryof a church bell, he donatedthe first one to come to the county,the one that still servesin Williamstown.The date on the inscription probablyindicatesthe year in which it was cast: 1806 ThomasMears & Sons of London,Fecit. The gift of Sir AlexanderMackenzie, Church of Glengarry, To the Presbyterian Provinceof Upper Canada,North America The Rev.John Bethune,Minister. Whetheror not Sir Alexanoereverworshrppedin the church.the peoplewere gratefulfor his generosity.When the first divisionof pews was made in the presentchurch in 1818, a pew was set asidefor Mackenzie. of Mackenzie's epochIn preparingto celebratethe 200th anniversary making'Voyages'.it is appropriateto note someof the thingsthat makethem so worthy of commemoratio:'I. l. Sir AlexanderMackenziewas the pioneerexplorerof vastregionsin northwesternCanada.Although his routes were "simply lengths without breadth".they were truly "voyagesof discovery".From Athabasca,which zo seemedat the ttme to be the extremelimitsof the areaknownevento the fur traders.he travelledto and from the Arctic and PacificOceans.His splendid accounts of'the journeys inspiredothers, including David Thompsonand Simon Fraser,bothwith significantGlengarryconnections, to explorein depth some of the territorythrough which he had passed.Equallyimportant,the publicationof his'Voyages'aroused the interestof manyin Britain,including Lord Selkirk,and gave them a vision of the possibilitiesof extensiveBritish commercewith, and settlementin, WesternCanada.Some claimthat. had it not beenfor his pioneerwork.a greatdealof the West mtghtnot havebecome nor remainedCanadian. ll. Mackenziewas well fitted for his voyages.He claimedto have"a constitutionand frameof body equalto the most arduousundertakings". He was able to lead a rigorouslife on a varying,and. attimes, meagrediet.and oftenwith only a littlesleep.He believedthat he had "an inquisitivemind and an enterprisingspirit".(Preface,p. XVI).When he reaiizedduring hisfirsttrip that hewassomewhatdefrcientin astronomyand navigatron, he determinedto spend a winter in Britainto learn more about thesesciencesand to acquire betterinstruments. lll. He made his remarkable voyageson his own initiative,usinghis own meansor thoseat hisdisposal.Hedid not askhis Companyfor permission becauseit seemedlikelythat he would be refused.Althoughofficiallyrn the employmentof the Company,and missing no opportunityto promote its inter ests,he was carefulto take time off only after he had arrangedfor his cousin.RodericMacken2ie, to administerthebusinessof his postwhilehewas absent.Whereasmany other voyagesof exploration,both beforeand after, were sponsoredby wealthyand influentialpersonsor corporationsin Britain, few knew in advanceabouthistravelplans.Indeed.evenon their completion, some of the senior officersin his own Companywere of the opinionthat it would havebeen betterif he had remainedat his pr:st;attendingto practical matters.As an activepartnerin a flourishingtrade,Mackenzieacquiredsome wealth,but he receivedno remunerationfor his exolorations. lV. Hesetthepatternfor explorationin WesternCanadabytravelling light and livingoff the land as much as possible.Awareof the severityof the long winters,he plannedhis trips for the period betweenspring thaws and autumnfreeze-ups. The narrativeof his first voyagebeginswith the modest statement:"We embarkedat nine in the morning (June 3rd, 1789) .... in a canoemadeof bircn bark".Thecanoewas poweredby paddlers,but whenthe wind was favourablea sailwasusedto relievethemen.thus makingit possrble to averagesomeseventyf ive m ilesper daywh ile on the g reatriver.Therewere four Canadians(French)and a German.and Mackenzie thoughttheywere"the mostexpertcanoe-menin the world".untrlhe sawtheskillsof someIndianson the westernsideof the Rockies. Thereweretwo smallercanoesfor his Indians who acted as guidesand interpretersand rn the repairof the canoes.There were also a few wiveswho helpedby pickingfruit and in the preparationof meat and fish. The large canoe carried extra clothing, merchandisefor presents and bar ter. arms and ammunition. and some pemmican for emergencyuse.Therewere timeswhen game and f ishwerescarceand every one was put on two mealsper day.On a few occasions,Mackenziereckoned therewas only provisionfor a weekor two. In the 1793 trip. a twenty-fivefeet long canoe"so lightthattwo men could carryher on a good roadthreeorfour mileswithout restingwas used (p. 151 ). The vesselcarrieda cargo of three 27 thousand pounds and ten people. Usually,even the birch bark for the frequentlyneededrepairswas obtaineden route. V. Mackenziewas an able leader,dealingfirmly and kindlywith his peopleand being concernedfor their healthand safety.Once,he refusedto abandonone of his Indianswho was ill. On anotheroccasion.when it was necessary to wadeacrossa riverford wherethe c urrent.somethreefeetdeep, was extremelyswiftand dangerous, the membersincludeda youngIndian.not sufficientlyrecoveredfrom illness,to attempt such an ordeal. Mackenzie carriedhim "with some difficulty"on his back.(p.378). Healwaysinsistedon payingfor provisionsobtainedfrom the nativesalong the route,e.g.,forfish, dry as wellas fresh."we paidwith the usualarticlesof beads,awls,knivesand tin". (p. 88). At one lodge,from which the nativeswere absentand it was proposedto takesome articles.he agreedto do so only if some paymentwas left.His own Indiansfound "thisact of justicedifficulttocomprehend".(p.9O). Not one lifewas lost on eithervoyage,and it is not surprisingthat two of the voyageursin the first crew willinglywent with him on the secondtrip. Vl. In hisvoyages,Mackenzieenduredinnumerable toils,perils,trials, phrasessuchastheseoccuroften:"our frustrationsand cares.In his narrative, toilsomejourneyof this day" (p. 1191,"ata quarterpastthreein the morning we continuedour voyage"(p. 153); and "aftermuch toil andtrouble"(p. 179). "l could not but reflect. Therewere "whitewaters"that threatenedeverybody; with infiniteanxiety.on the hazardof my enterprise; onef alsestepof thosewho were attachedto the line,or the breakingof the line itself,would haveat once consignedthe canoe,and everythingit contained.to instantdestruction."(p. 169). Nearthe PacificOcean,he was confrontedby a group of natives.who had probablybeen mistreatedby CaptainCook'ssailors.and one of them, armedwith a knife,grabbedhim f rom behind.AlthoughMackenzie was alone at the time, with great dexterityand strength he threw off the assailant. (pp.352-3).A long sentencesometimessumsup the life-threatening dangers and sufferingsthat he sharedto the full with his crew: ".....For though our effortswereshort,theywere pushedto the utmost.as lifeanddeathdepended on them. ....I was on the outsideof the canoe,wherelremainedtilleverythrng was got on shore,in a stateof greatpainfrom the extremecold of the water;so that at length,it was with drfficultyI could stand,from the benumbedstateof my limbs."(pp.21B- 9).He had his shareof frustrations.LikeChamplainwho lost his astrolabeat an earlierperiodIn the UpperOttawa.Mackenziehadthe misfor tuneone day to drop his pocket-compass into thewater. (p. 154). On anotheroccasion,he lost his note book,it beingsweptoverboardby hanging brancheswhile he dozedin the movingcanoe.(p. 183).Althoughhe selected his Indranguides carefully,he was sometimesvexed by their unreliability. Nearingthe Arctic,he had to dismissa guidewhohad becomeso tror-iblesome that rt was necessary"to watch him night and day,exceptwhen he was upon the water".(p.44],.The new guide deserteda few days later! Vll. On both voyages,Mackenziekept a daily lournal in which he the recordedas much informationas possibleabou"tthe land,the inhabitants. climate,the trees, the vegetation,the insects.the birds, the fish and the animals.The followrngare typicalof everso manyentries:"Notwithstanding almosteverypartof them produceberriesof various their barrenappearance, junrper-berries, partridgeberries"(p. raspberries, kinds.such as cranberries, 19), ".... cranberriesare found in great abundance..... lt rs a singular circumstance, that the fruit of two succeedingyearsmay be gatheredatthe 10 sa me tim e, f r om t he s a me s h ru b " (p .6 9 ); " Ou r nets thi s morni ng produced fo u rte en whit ef is h. t e n p i k e , a n d a c o u p l e o f tro u ts" (p.1121: " Our hunters ..... ki l l e d two r ein- deer " 1 p 6 9 ); " T h e tre e s a re s p ru ce. red-pi ne, cypress, popl ar. wh i te b ir c h. willow, a l d e r, a rro w -w o o d , re d -w ood, l i ard, servi ce-tree, boi sp i ca n t. . . . . ( p. 179) ; " th e fi n e s t w o o d o f c e d ar trees that I have seen. I me a sur ed s ev er al of th e m th a t w e re tw e n ty -fo u r feet i n the gi rth. and of a p ro p o rt r onat e heigh t." (p . 3 6 8 ) Al th o u g h th e re are pages that seem to be o ve rl o a ded wr t h or ie n ta ti o n fi n d i n g s . th e n a rra ti ve contai ns an abundance of i te ms int er es t ing ev e n to th e re a d e r i n o u r o w n ti me. S ubl ect to hi s l i mi tati ons o f ti me and paper , M a c k e n z i e i n c l u d e d w h a t h e j udged w oul d be of hel p to th o se w ho planned to fo l l o w h i m i n to th e a re a . V lll. W it h t he a b l e a s s rs ta n c eo f h i s c o u s i n, R oderi c.the account of hi s tra ve l s was publis he d rn 1 BO1 u n d e r th e ti tl e ,' Voyages from Montreal on the Ri ve r St . Laur enc e t h ro u g h th e C o n ti n e n t o f N o rth A meri ca to the Frozen and Pa crfrc O c eans : in t he y e a rs 1 7 B 9 a n d 1 l 9 3 ." N ow a ra re book sel dom seen by th e re ading publr c , it h a s b e e n l i s te d i n a re c e n t catal ogue at $3.000. Overthe ye a rs, m any aut hor s h a v e w ri tte n a b o u t M a c k e nzi e' s expl orati ons. W . K aye L a mb has inc luded t h e ' V o y a g e s ' i n h i s ' J o u rn a l s and Letters of S i rA l exander Ma cke nz ie" , 1970. T h e n , i n 1 9 1 1 , M . T . H u rtrg , Li mi ted, has publ rshed the 'Vo ya ges ' , as a delu x e v o l u me i n th e C a n a d i a n R epri nt S eri es of rare and va l u a ble f ir s t edit ion s . B o th b o o k s a re i n th e R e ference R oom of the C ornw al l Pu b l i c Libr ar y , and t h e q u o ta ti o n s i n th i s a rti c l e are from the l atter. A lt hough M ack e n z i e s ta te d i n h i s P re fa c e that he had been much better ca l cu l a t ed t o per f or m th e v o y a g e s , a rd u o u s a s th ey mtght be. than to w ri te an a cco u nt of t hem , hi s ' V o y a g e s ' i s a n e x c e l l e nt book of i ts ktnd. A l though cri ti ci z ed " f or it s aus te re s ty l e .....l e a n a l mo s t to the poi nt of starvati on" . there i s a mp le ev idenc e t ha t h e e m b e l l i s h e dw h a t c o u l d have been a dul l theme. In at l e a st o ne ins t anc e, h e b e c a me a l mo s t l y ri c a l . a s he recal l ed the most beauti ful sce n e ry he had ev e r s e e n . l t h a d " a l l th e d e c o rati ons w hi ch the trees and a n i ma l s of t he c ountry c a n a ffo rd i t; g ro v e s o f p o pl ars i n every shape vary the sce n e ; and t heir int e rv a l s a re e n l i v e n e d w rth v a s t herds of el ks and buffal oes. . ... At t his t im e t he b u ffa l o e s w e re a tte n d e d w i th thei ryoung ones w how ere f ri ski ng a bout t hem , a n d i t a p p e a re d th a t th e e l k s w ou l d soon exh i b i t the sa me e n l i ve ning c ir c um s t a n c e . T h e w h o l e c o u n try d i s pl ayed an exuberant verdue; th e trees t hat bea r a b l o s s o m w e re a d v a n ci ng fast to that del tghtful a p p e ar anc e, an. ' dt he v e l v e t ri n d o f th e i r b ra n c h e s refl ecti ng the obl i que rays of a ri si ng or s et t r ng s u n , a d d e d a s p l e n d i d g a i ety to the scene, w hi ch no e xp re s s ions of m ine a re q u a l i fi e d to d e s c ri b e ." (p. 155). I t has als o bee n s u g g e s te d th a t M a c k e n z i e' s " bl eak S cots consci ence" p re ve nt ed him f r om d o i n g a n y th i n g fo r th e sheer toy of i t and thbrefore a cco u nt ed f or t he l a c k o f h u mo u r i n h i s n a rrati ve. S urel y the hazards and u n ce rt aint ies of t h e j o u rn e y s w o u l d h a v e been a better expl anati on! N e ve rt heles s ,one ex a m p l e o f h u m o u r - a l mo s t o f grave humour - ts to be found rn h i s des c r ipt ion o f th e e ffe c t o f s o me w i l d onrons that hrs peopl e had g a i h e r ed. W hen m ixe d w i th th e s ta l e a n d s l e n d e r suppl y of pemmi can, they so mu ch im pr ov ed it t ha t " th e y p ro d u c e d a p h y s i c a l effect on our appeti tes.w hrch wa s ra t her inc onv en i e n t to th e s ta te o f o u r p ro v i si ons." (p. 235). lX . M ac k enz i e w a s c o n v i n c e d th a t th e successful compl eti on of hi s e xp l o r at ions was his tru e re w a rd . H i s l o u rn a l e n ds w i th these w ords: " H ere my vo ya g es of dis c ov ery te rmi n a te . T h e rr to i l s a n d thei r dangers. thei r sol i ci tudes a n d suf f er ings . hav e n o t b e e n e x a g g e ra te d i n my descri pti on. On the contrary. 29 rn many Instances,languagehas failedme in the attemptto descnbethem. I received,however,the reward of mv labours.for thev were crowned with success."(p.397). Therewere, of course.other rewardsand honours.Wrthin the North West Company.,there was increasrngrecognitionof the uniquenessand importanceof his exploits.His Royalistfatherwould havebeenpleasedwith the royaI f avoursthat cameto Alexander.TheDukeof Kent.laterto becomethe fatherof Victorra.thefuture Oueen,befriendedhim and appointedhim as his travelling companion,both in Canada and in Britain. and probablv had somethingto do with the knighthoodconferredrn 1802. And yet, therewas on ly a slownationalrecogn itionof the g reatnessof h isvoyagesof d iscovery.In 1808. Sir Alexanderreturnedto Scollandto spendhis remainingtwelveyears at Avoch in the Blacklsle.reallya peninsula,not far f rom the Highlandtown of Inverness. The ancestralseatof the MackenzieClan had beenin the area,and there he marriedhisclanswoman. GeddesMackenzre, who becamethe mother of his two sons and his daughter.Theretoo he purchasedher father'sestate and on it he livedthe lifeof a countrygentlemanand assistedin promotingthe agrrculture.of the neighbourhood.In 182O, while returning home from Edinburgh.hetook illand died suddenlyin awaysideinn. Hewasburiedinthe Avochchurchyard.lt would seemthat afterthe lapseof so manyyearsthereis little local recognitionof hrsgreatness.Somewill recallthestatementof the Ottawahistorian.Dr. RobertLegget.in his 19BB lecturein the Nor'Westers and LoyalistsMuseum.Wi lliamstown.when hevisitedMackenzie's gravehe noted that the memorialtabletpaystributeonly in generaltermsto the life and work of the explorer. In Stornoway,there is recognition.Martin's Memorial Church now occupiesthe siteof the housein which Mackenzie was born,and in itthereis a bronzetabletwiththisinscription:"SirAlexanderMackenzietheexplorer,who was the f irstwhite manto followthe MackenzieRiverto the ArcticOcean;and the first to crossthe Continentof NorthAmericanorth of Mexico.was born rn the year,17 63, in a houseon this site."lt is now generallyagreedthatthe date of his birth was 1764. With this correction.it is likelvthat the tablet'stribute would be acceptableto Mackenzie. As he himselffelt at the end of hisvoyages, his true rewardhad been in their successfulcompletron.Likeso manvof his fellow countrymenin an age when the BritishEmpirewas expandingrapidly, h is ambitionhad beenrelatednot so m uch to what h is countrvcould do f or h im as to what he could do for his country.Therefore,it is indeedfitting for us to commemoratehim by celebratingthe two hundrethanniversaries of hrs 1 789 and 1793 voyages. 30 SOCIEr y Y IS TORICAL AD D R E S ST O GL E N GA R R H 6, 1988 AT AL EX A N D R IAON , T .,OC TOBER b y H i s H o n o rJu d g e Matheson Historyis the storytold by someonewho wasn'tthereof somethingthat never happened,or perhaps more accuratelyit is the retelling and the from a particularpoint of view of somethingdimlyremembered. refurbrshing Your roots do havemuch to determinewhat you are,you musttry to controllt and not iet your genealogycontrolyou. Herein the companyof severalof my blood relationsI must endeavourto restrainmyselfand not revertto the ltttle bov who heardfrom his father,DawsonMathesonborn in Apple Hill,about Bannockburnand Flodden long before learningthat lwas born a British subjectand long long beforediscoveringthat l was a Canadian.lrejoice in thinkrngthat many of our ilk, Sir John A Macdonaldis our classicexample. have been better Canadiansbecause'theblood was strong'.When Robert Mitchell left Falkirk,Scotland,wrth his wife and two children tn 1913 "Grandma"Mitchellsummonedhim to meether in'the big house'.Speakingto him for the lasttime she said,"Now Robert.you are goingto Canada."Raising Thisis when you arrive,tsEA CANADlANl." her voiceshe added,"Remember. for any of us. not bad advice This highlandcharacteristicof deep attachmentto place,to loch or mountainor g len,th is ratherold f ashionedq ualityof loyalty iswhat Str Willtam Johnsonsoughtwhen he wrote to BritainforJacobitesettlersto serveas an inner guard in the MohawkValleyat a time when manyambitiousmen were The men hewantedaroundhimweremenof f rghtingquality talkingre.volution. and courageand of tolerancefor difference,they hadto livewith peoplewho spoke English,and German.and Dutch, as well as severalof the native tongues,but most particularlyhesoughtfierceloyalty.ltwasoutof thisstock that his son SirJohn Johnsonproducedat ChamblyOuebecin 1716 the First Battalionof the King'sRoyalRegimentof New York,f rom which many of us herepresentaredescended.lt was this samequalityof loyaltythat stoodout in 1812-13. in 1831, and again at the close of the AmericanCivilWar when Feniansbelievedthat Canadashould be capturedas compensationto the UnitedStatesfor the Britishhavingsunk the Alabama. You will recall that in the three yearsfollowing Culloden Parliament revisedsome of the lawsthat had beenpassedafterthe'1 5 and enactedstill harshernew onesthat wereto destroyfor everthe Clansystemand the feudal power of the chiefs,a power of life and death over the clansmen.The chief. sublectto no law, but his own had power of capitalpunishmentover all his people,a right 'from the dawn of societybeforea writing of the laws'.John Prebbletellsthe storyof a.chiefwho attemptedto stampout larcenyamonghts tribe by tying a clanswomancaught in some triflingtheft by her hair to the seaw eedso that AlmightyGod,throughhis inexorabletide,shouldwreaka fit punishmentupon her by drowning.Many of the chiefswere well educated, indeed many tar better than the Englrshgentry. In Europeanand Brrtish universitiesand by traveltheywerewellversedin the languagesand very as connectionbetweenthe highlandsand Romers well in Latin.Thelongstanding of tolerance. remarkable.lwill speaklater of the highlandcharacteristic Culloden.on April 16th 1746. brought sudden and savageend to a ronranticdreamwhrch had been kept alive since the '15 and which was lit JI afreshto burnfiercelywhenCharlesEdwardStuartlandedat Barraon the 1gth of August 1145.lt becomesa greatwatershedof history,the tasttmportant battlein GreatBritainwith far reachinginternationalconsequences. when the Sooo ill-equippedhighlandersundershockinglyinadequatecommandwere routed by a professionalBritish army of twice their number supportedby powerfulartillerythe remainrngclansmenwere put to the sword'.We believe that Major Jameswolfe saveda numberof the defeatedFrasersunder Lord Lovatfrom the f ury of both Cumberlandand GeneralHawleywho were urging their mento'killeveryprisoneralive'.Theconsequences of Wolfe'schivalryare mrnd boggling for thirteenyears later it was Lovat'sFightingFraserswho stormedthe heightsof Ouebec.And it was Wolfe who died! By brutalitythe highlandswere subdued,the glensemptied.the clans destroyedand the Hanoveriandynastymadesecure.The warriorspiritof the clansmenwere usefullyextendedrn England'swars.My secretary's husband, Harold Cameron,is descendedof a sergeantCameronwho served under WellingtonatWaterlooand who was settledin the BathurstMilitaryDistrictby GeneralDrummond as army back-upafter 1812-13. But long beforethai North Britainhad to be destroyedas a possibleally or pawn of France.The tartan was banned.the kilt gone, their raw l egs put into breaks.'so that highl anderswould becomeas other men'. Becauseclothingwas so scarce they sewedtheir kilts betweentheir legsto make breekswhrletheir women d ippedtheirtartan plaids intovatsof vegetabledyeand m ud so thatthe pattern wouldn't show. This proscriptionwas onlv lifted in 1782 | know this well 'sent becauseI haveherea silvertankard to me by mv clan Chief,Sir Torquhil Matheson of Matheson.6th Baronet of Lochalsh six years ago to commemoratethe 200 yearsof f reedom!Of course,the pipeswere similarly proscribed.The lastto die by hangingat Yorkminster on Novemberj S, 17 46, (allthe Highland prisonerscontraryto Magnacartaweretried in England)was James Reid from Angus, a piper of Lord Ogilvy's Regiment.The jury recommendedmercybecausehe had nevercarriedarmsnor strucka blow but the ludge. Lord Chief Baron Parkeroverruledthe jury declaringthat "No regimentevermarchedwithoutmusicalinstrumentssuch as drums,trumoets and the like;and a Highlandregimentnever marchedwithout a piper, and thereforehis bagpipe,rn the eyes of the law, is an instrumentof war". This historicjudgmenthas proveda sourceof considerableprideto generations of militarypipersever since, but it stretchedone good piper'sneck. While there are widely differenttastes in music it is hard for us to imagine the fear that pipes engenderedin London, in England,and even throughout the lowlands.We hear beauty in the EriskayLove Lilt and in piobrachbut many heardthe rant of the pipessouth of the Valleyof the Tav with alarm and dread.BeverleyMacOueenwho ovvnsthe log home between Dunvegan and MacCrimmonwhich was bui lt by my great-grandparents AlexanderMathesonand Flora Nicolson.and with whom I claim a distant kinshipthrough my ancestressAnn McSwanof Skye,showed me his fiddle musicbroughtto Canadafrom the Mistylsle'.lt hadthe ancientpipetunesbut weittenfor the violin. some uncultivatedSassenachcustomsofficer might imagineit was comoosedby Bachto whosecompositionspipe music bearsa curious resemblance. At Culloden,and duringthe crueloppressivemilitaryoccupationof the glensthat followed,the Britishgovernmentf irstdefeateda tribal uprisingand then destrovedthe societvthat rnadeit possible.Lordchesterfield,the model 32 of good breedingby his famousletterson mannersto his bastardson,wroteto Newcastlerecommendinggenocide,"Starvethe countryby your ships,put a priceon the headsof the Chiefs and letthe Duke(thebutcherCu m berland)put allto the f ireandsword.And so the lowlandersinheritedour hillsandthe tartan becamea shroud.And that is why you and I arefar from Scotlandand herein Alexandriatonight. Of course there was bitternessand pain. My grandfatherRev.John Mathesonwas born in Edinbanein Skve,on the seacostwith the lslandof Lewisrn distantview. He camewith his parentsto KenyonTownshipwhen he was two. I askedmy father if my grandfatherwas very proud of havingbeen born in Scotland.My fatherrepliedthat once he had askedhim that,and that his father had taken a very long time to reply.He said "lt is a strangeland, duringthe crisis Dawson,that would prefersheepto men."In Sutherlandshire of the CrimeanWar not one soldiercould be raisedfor the army.An old man and a veteranof the wars told the Duke of Sutherland"Shouldthe Czarof of DunrobinCastleand of StaffordHousenexttermwe Russiatakepossession could not expectworsetreatmentat his handsthanwe haveexperienced at the handsofyourfamilyforthelastfiftyyears."AllovertheHighlandsthefabricof ancientloyaltieswas mouldering.Oncethe chiefs lost their powersmanyof them lost also anv parentalinterestin their clansmen.Mv Clan Chiefwas an exception.The 'TarPan'of the famousJardineMathesonempireand f ounder of Hong Kong.he is disguisedin the Clavellnovelas'Dirk Struan'.Matheson purchasedthe lsland of Lewrsand becamethe greatestbenefactorto the hrghlanders of NorthBritain.Yetwhen he diedwith a massivefortunef rom his trade in opium leaving vast moniesto be paid to all those who would claim kinship.not one Mathesoncameforwardto say he was related.I thinkthat the remembranceof this manwas one of the influencesthat leadmy grandfather. and my father, and my uncle killed at the Somme, in the directionof the Christianministry. Yetthesepeoplehad loyaltybredinto them,and when a newtestcame tn 17 7 5 rn the NewWorld to which they had beenso crudelytransported, they werethef irsttodeclarefortheHanoverian king.Thelittleflower.wecall'Sweet William'wascalledin Scotland'Stinking Willie'becauseitwas namedaftera h atedand veryi nconsiderate sovereig n.Yetou r peoplewereamong the f i rstto become Loyalistseven though it meant them abandoning new found possessions and lush MohawkValleyfarms. Mv mother'smother was born Kate Mclntosh.She married Duncan McCuaigof Bainsville who I believedto be the greatestman in allthe world.I learnedmy highlandgenealogywith tartanpatchworkquiltsrn Bainsville with each sett representing anotherrelative.At four yearsof age Grandmataught meto be a snob.Whenlsaid "lsn't itwonderfulto be a McCuaig!"shewould replywith a sniff,"Och,theycamef romthe Third.but we camef rom the Front!" And then she would prevailupon poor Dunc to drive us in the McLaughrin Buickup pastwesley'swhereshewould point out Murchison,shepronounced it Merkisonland and another propertyowned at one time by the Rosesof Kilrannoch.Much later llearned that Duncan Muchisonof Lancaster. while servingwrth the KRRNY,had been responsiblefor bringing57 familiesfrom the MohawkValleyintowhat becameUpperCanada.Hewasf luentin Mohawk and was latercommissionedwrth ColonelCampbell'sIndianDepartment.Hrs father,in North Carolina,a retiredHighlandofficer.though elderly,wrth kilt and sword declaredfor the King. He was thrown into prison, escaped, 33 recaptured,escapedagainand againrecaptured.He perishedin gaol.Laterin Montreal,beforethe Britishauthoritieshis widow Jennethad him recognized as a Loyalist,and shewasgranteda smallpension.Duncan'sdaughter.Janet, marr iedCharlesRoseof the KRRNYand they at one time ownedthe property patentedto Sgt. PeterSommersof the Lancaster-Summerstown area. Rev.John Matheson'swrfewas ChristyAnn ElizabethMacNaughtonof Charlottenburgh who warnedme at aboutfiveyearsof age of the greatperilof strongdrinkandwild women.Shewas a piousladywhopaintedand playedthe organ.With great prideshe showedme the entry in her Bibleof her ancestor Peter FergusonKRRNYwho was carried,while deliriols. into Canada by Mohawkwarriorsand later restoredto health by being fed po.tionsof dog meat. He marriedJane Cameronof Cameron'sBushwhose fatherwas also KR'RNY. Thiswas the PeterFerguson who gaveup his propertyrnWilliamstown in f avourof Rev.John Bethunewho is mentionedin Dr. MacMillan'sbook,'The Kirk i n Glengarry'. My sister, Catherine ElizabethGordon Matheson, before she was marr ied was named after her two grandmothers.Rev. Dr. Gordon (Ralph Connor)whobaptizedher insistedin addinghis name,'Gordon', tothe distinct chagrinof my motherwho thoughtthe nameto be too masculine.lt is too bad that we do not morefully understandthe significanceof names.I hadan uncle Dr. Charnock Matheson,a longtrme professorat Oueen's.who actually despisedhis name. He had to answerfrom everythingfrom Shamrockto Charcoal.lt was vearsafterh is deaththat I discoverednear Lochalshthe 'field 'Charnock'themost of the two declivities'whichin Gaelicwas orono.unced piece sacred of earth to Clan Matheson.My father had been named after PrincipalWilliarn Dawsonof McGill.andthe secondson was intendedto have an even nobler name.lvery nearlygot called'Homer'afterone of my soldier uncleswas killedbut fortuitouslymy grandfatherhada severeheartattackjust after larrivedand myfather promisedhis fatherbeforehe expiredlwould be plain'John' like himself. Macaulay said, "A people which takes no pride in the noble achievements of remoteancestorswill neverachieveanythingworthy to be rememberedwith prideby remotedescendants." I rememberoverthirtyyears ago how delightedand proud the Right HonourableSir Thomas Innes of Leaneywas,then Lord LyonKingof Arms,when a numberof our old Glengarry familiesregisteredArms in the heraldicregistryin.Edinburgh.Shakespeare said of Scotland," Alas poor country.too sickenedro know itself".We. the childrenof the diaspora.who came hereto this favouredland when eventhe name Scotlandwas anathemaand need be disguisedas'North.Britain'will neverforget'the pit f rom which we weredigged'.Becausewe continueloyalto her memoryScotlandis particularlycloseto her chrldrenbeyondthe seas,by they in Australia,Hong Kong, Cape Brrtain or Trinidad. Like our Viking ancestorswe havehelpedto f loweralltheraces.Thereare Scotsin Hungary,in Italy,branchesof my Clan in Norwayand Denmarkwith minor changesin spellingof name:Yearsago one of our covernorsGeneralvrsitrng FortWrlliam expresseda desireto actuallymeeta'full blood'lndian.TheHudsonBayfactor said what was equivalentto "no problem"and went to the backto producea young giant called Macdonald.Whether he was of Sleat,or Keppoch,or Clanranald,or GlengarryI cannotsay,but he was a prideto any race and the GovernorGeneralwas enchanted. 34 to d isappear.We aretoo importantto Canada. Letus not allowourselves We understandas few otherswhat it meansto be an underdog.a despisedand fearedminority.The Glengarrysettlementof Jacobites,settledbesideFrench Canada. consisted of ardent Catholics and tolerant Protestantswhose commoncausebecamea passionf or decencyandf air play.ThesetraditionsoI courtesy,toleranceand compromiseovercameall the sectarian hosprtalrty. all pasthurts.More importantthan allthe hatredsand grievances. differences, the massivemilitarVcontributionsor historicexplorationswere the spiritual Glengarryhavelaidovertheyearsupon andintellectualgrftsthatthepeopleof nation, what Brockingtoncalledthis world's com passionate this of altar the f irst great experimentin brotherhood. Beforeembarkingwith the First CanadranDivisionto jorn the Britrsh EightArmyrn Sicilywespentsomeweekslearningto mountainclimbwith pack lwas saddenedone day to l earnthat the young Graham mulesrn Perthshire. heir,The Grahamand last of his lrne,had beenkilledwith the 51st Highland Divisionin the AfricanDesert.I spentpreciousmomentswith htscourageous mother.LadyGraham.The thought of that time we spent togetherbringsto mind these somewhatmvsticallines. 'A GrahamTartanto a Graham'.Try to imaginethe tartan speakingto living clansmanwho will carryforth its traditionand honour! some 'Use me in honour,cherishme, as ivy from a sacredtree, mine in the winds of war too close aroundthe armourof Montrose and kissthe deathwoundof Dundee.' SIR EDWARDPEACOCK who many now haveneverheardaboutwas An illustriousGlengarrian Sir EdwardPeacock.Hewas born on August2, 1871 in the manseat St.Elmo. HismotherwasJaneMcDougallofthis community.Hisclosestlivingrelativeis Miss Emily Kennedyof Ottawa and formerly of Maxville.Miss Kennedy's parentswere CatherineMcDougalland John Kennedy.He was also a first cousin of Mrs. Anne McRae'smotherand of the late D.H. Kennedvof Three Bridges. An articleon Sir Edwardapoearedin theTorontoStaron October16. 1982. The following informationwas taken from this article which is the propertyof Mrs. McRae.here at the Manor. In 1902 an angry young housemasterstormedour of UpperCanada uollege and got a 1ob as a bond salesman.beginningan astonishingnew career.Duringthe nexthalf-centuryhe becamethe confidantof a procession of kingsand queensof Englandand bythetime of his deathhewas one of the financialgeniusesof this century.In 192 1 Peacockbecamethe firstCanadian to be made a directorat the court of the Bank of England.He had such a thorough understandingof internationalfinance that he made one of hrs clients.the RhodesTrust. so enormouslywealthythat he was called "The SecondFounder"of the Rhodesscholarshrps. 35 At the outbreakof WorldWar ll. lt was Peacockwho wasf lownsecretlyin a Britishbomberto Washingtonto solvethe delicateproblemof how Britain i n the U.S.to f i nanceitswar with Germany.TheTimes could useits i nvestments oncewrotethat "therewas probablyno oneto whom the entiref inancialworld f or turnedso readily- or so often".and in tokenof their personalappreciation his services,the royalfamily conferreda knight-hoodupon htm. It is only rarelythat the Ontariogovernmentplacesone of its historical a site plaquesoutsideOntario;when it decidedto raisea memorialtoPeacock. was selectedwhere it would be seenby most of hrsfriendsand itwas placed insidethe Bank of England.For in the last yearsof his life. Sir Edwardhad becomeknown as " The Conscienceof the Citv of London." ln the traditronof the Scots.he was raisedin the beliefthatthetwo most worthwhile professionsfor a man were to become either a ministeror a teacher,and byworkingas a f arm laborerhe was a bleto saveenough moneyto pay for his tuition at Oueen'sUniversity. He not only graduated"magnacum laude,"he won both gold andsilver medals,and soon afterwardsreceivedan offerf rom UpperCanadaCollegein Torontoto becomeits new Englishteacherwith a handsomesalaryof $BO0a year and his "tceep". In the 1920's he was alsoaskedto becomea personalf inancialadviser to the royalfamily.The Princeof Walesmade him a memberof his councilof advis ersand he remaineda valuedconfidantof the royalfamilyuntil hisdeath. At the end of the complex negotiationsarising over Edward Vlll's abdicatron, on Dec. 10, 1936, the new king,GeorgeVl wrote n his diary,"ERP was a very great help." Bv the trme he was in his 60's Peacockhad won for himself an unassailablereputationas a man of absoluteintegrity,a witty and graceful man with allthe qualitiesof a greatjudge and a seasoneddiplomat. No one was surprisedwhen it was later learnedthat he had beenthe personal choice of Winston Churchill and his government to fly to Washingron,at the herghtot the tsattleof Britain.to find waysto use British investmentsin Americato buv more food and ammunitionto help Britain during the worst yearsof the war. In his B0'swhen Peacockwas almosttotallydeaf,he was askedto help createthe banksupportedCommonwealthDevelopmentFundto f inancelong range projectsin the developingcountriesof the BritishCommonwealth. Throughouthis long life, Peacockneverlost touch with his friendsin Canadaand came back almosteveryyear. He held a life long interestin the affairsof Upper CanadaCollegewhich had developedinto the best boys' school in the countrY. Afewweeksbeforehis deathin 1962 atthe ageof 91 hewasshownthe rnscriotionthat was to be placedabovethe main door of the "Prep"school.lt "Named was now to be knownas!he PeacockBuildingandthe inscriptionread in honor of Sir EdwardRobertPeacock,Master1895-19O2,A Founderofthe PreparatorySchool." Thisarticlewas givenby Mrs.Ann MacRaeto NeilD. MacLeodand is reprinted with his kind oerm ission 36