Hugh
MacKay (c1756 – 1840)
Wife: Ann MacDonald (c1765-1802)
Children:
Catharine (1785-?)
Donald (1787-?)
William (1787- ?)
George (1790-?)
Lachlan (1793-1861) (guess which one is my ancestor)
Francissa (1795-?)
John (1798-?)
Hugh MacKay was born on the Isle of Tiree, Argyll, Scotland. The Isle
of Tiree Community website describes Tiree thus:
“One
of the Inner Hebrides, Tiree is twenty-two miles west of the nearest
point on the Scottish mainland, Ardnamurchan. ...Britain’s
twentieth largest island, it is just over ten miles at its longest,
five miles at its widest, and a little over half a mile at its
narrowest.
A walk of forty six miles would take
you around its coastline, much of it along white beaches of shell
sand. Tiree is divided into 286 crofts and five farms although there
are today probably fewer than a hundred active crofters. The land is
split into thirty one crofting townships, each controlled by a
grazing committee. It is the most fertile of the Hebrides...
The weather dominates life on Tiree
in a way it often fails to do on the mainland. Weather reports from
the island are familiar to listeners to the BBC’s Shipping Forecast
and Reports from Coastal Stations.
Like the rest of Scotland’s west
coast, the island is bathed by the warm Gulf Stream. The surrounding
seas keep the island’s climate mild in winter and cool in summer.
Sea temperatures are at their lowest in March, and at their highest
in September.
The prevailing south-westerly winds
bring a succession of weather systems from the Atlantic... There are
gales here on average thirty four days a year.”1
Tiree is without woodland, and has only three sizeable hills.
Tiree, withing Argyll and Bute, from Wikipedia |
Finding birth records for Hugh has proved problematic, although
pursuit continues. His father, if Hugh followed tradition, would have
been Donald (as this is the name of his eldest son – the tradition
was to name the eldest son for the paternal grandfather). However,
this is presently conjecture. Little has been uncovered of Hugh until
the birth of his first child, and even then the details are sketchy.
In
1785 the birth of Catharine is recorded in the Parish Records of
Cornaig, Coll to Hugh MacKay and Anne MacDonald2.
They were already married as the child was not listed as “begot
through fornication”. Luckily, the custom in Scotland was to record
the mother's maiden name. No marriage records for Hugh and Ann have
yet been uncovered.
All the subsequent Mackay children were born on Coll, although in
differing Parishes (Cornaig, Sodistal), with the possible exception
of Lachlan (this will be explained later), whose birth does not
appear in the Old Parish Records (OPR).
Coll, the island directly north-east of Tiree on the map above,
is 20.9km long by 4.8km wide and these days has a population of about
200. It has sandy beaches and one notable “mountain”, Ben Hogh in
the south west of the island which rises to a height of 104m3.
Coll's official website boasts a list of things the island does not
have, including “nowhere to go whilst it rains.”4
Coll's population has been much higher. There were 938 residents in
1776, and over one thousand by the early nineteenth century,
eventually rising to about 1500. Added to the human population was
all the accompanying lifestock. There were cows, the lucky families
having one per household for milk, and sheep, with many on the island
listing their occupation as weaver. Hugh McKay was among these.
Clabbach, Coll, from www.visitcoll.co.uk |
A
typical Coll house was a small affair, one or two rooms, with a
thatched roof held down by a complex web of ropes weighted with
stones. Where windows existed they were small. Light came into the
first room through the door and any windows.
The external walls were about six feet thick, made of two layers of
stone with a gap between filled with sand and peat. The roof came
only to the gap and grass and food plants were grown in the fill.
There was no chimney and the sooty thatch, when replaced, was
ploughed into the fields as fertiliser. This all doesn't sound too
bad. Somewhere to live, well-insulated for the winter, extra growing
space. However, only part of this house was for the human occupants.
Half to two-thirds was dedicated to the livestock, which would have
to live indoors in the colder months, and whose dung would be removed
each spring by breaking a hole in the wall and shovelling the dung
out onto waiting carts. If you were very poor, there was no dividing
wall between your family and your animals, which were tethered to
prevent incursions into the living quarters.
In
1793, the call went out for men to fight Napoleon. Hugh was among the
first on Coll signed up to the 79th
Regiment of Foot (Cameronian Volunteers). The Regiment was
established
on August 17, 1793 at Fort William from among the members of the Clan
Cameron by Sir Allan Cameron of Erracht. A new tartan was devised,
based on a combination of the MacDonald and Cameron tartans.
Initially Hugh and
his comrades were stationed on Malta. There is a record of a Lachlan
McKay being born there in 1793, implying that the whole family went
along too, although currently that Lachlan cannot be indisputibly
linked to Hugh. Families travelling with soldiers was not uncommon at the time, so it is possible. In 1794 the Regiment was sent to the Netherlands. The
campaign went badly and the men were evacuated back to Great Britain,
the 79th foot listed for disbandment. However, this did
not happen and the Regiment was instead posted in 1795 to the West
Indies. Hugh, along with a number of other men, was sent
home during this time and his last two children, Francissa and John,
were born. In 1799 the men were recalled and joined their Regiment,
bound for Holland
The 79th
Foot saw active service at Egmont-op-Zee in October and in 1800
joined an unsuccessful assault at Ferrol on the Spanish coast. From
there, they went to Egypt and were part of the force that eventually
saw the surrender of the French at Cairo. As a result a sphinx with
the word EGYPT over it was added to the Regiment's colours and
badges5
The next few years
were spent in Minorca, where Anne died. George, Donald, William and
Lachlan were already serving in the army as soldiers, Lachlan having
been signed up at the age of six as a drummer boy, but the death must
have come as a blow to the family The assumption currently is that
Catharine bore the bulk of the care for Francissa and John.
In 1804 the 79th
Foot was made part of the British Army, and it is from this point
that the Chelsea Records commence. A second battalion was formed as a
draft-finding unit and Hugh served in this Battalion from 20th
Sept 1804 to 24 December, 1807, whereafter he was transferred to the
1st Battalion. The 1st Battalion had, during 1807, served
in Denmark. Hugh joined them on their return to England.
“In 1808 the 79th
Foot moved to Portugal, moving to Spain in the following year and
participating in several major battles of the Peninsular War:
* Corunna in
1809,
* Busaco and the
defence of Cadiz in 1810,
* Fuentes d'Onor
in 1811,
* The Battle of
Salamanca, the occupation of Madrid and the siege of Burgos in 1812,
* the Battles of
the Pyrenees, Nivelle, Nive in 1813
* The Battle of
Toulouse in 1814
Following the
abdication of Napoleon in 1814, the regiment moved to Cork, Ireland.
However, with the return of Napoleon from exile, the 79th Foot
travelled to Belgium in May, 1815. The regiment took part in the
final battles of the Napoleonic Wars at Quatre Bras and Waterloo in
June.”6
All soldiers who served at Waterloo received a special medal. The
medal is silver, is 1½ inches across (37mm) and is attached to a
ribbon by an iron ring. It was the first medal to have the
recipient's name impressed around the edge by machine. Unfortunately
many were lost as the iron ring rusted. Whether Hugh's medal still
exists somewhere is at this point unknown.
front and reverse of Waterloo medal, from
http://www.kingsownmuseum.plus.com/medalsa.htm
|
Hugh MacKay,
Private, was officially discharged on 16 October, 1815, although his
service record gives the conclusion date of his service as 24 April,
1816 (the extra time a credit for serving at Waterloo and Quatre
Bras). He was discharged on the grounds of “Infirmity through age”
being at that time 59. Given that Quatre Bras and Waterloo alone
accounted for 21 800 dead on the British side, Hugh did remarkably
well to survive the entire war.
His discharge
papers, held in the National Archives, London, give a physical
description of Hugh. He is given as “fifty nine years of age, five
feet, six inches in height, dark brown hair, grey eyes, dark
complexion”, his trade listed as “weaver”. His place of
residence is “Coll, Tobermory, Argyll”. Hugh signed the papers
with a cross.
Following the war,
his family scattered, while Hugh returned to Coll to quietly live out
his days, a weaver who had travelled the world.
Nothing more is yet
uncovered about Hugh, except his death date, 1840. However, this is
not yet verified, and comes from an uncertain source. There are few
death records for Coll or Tiree as burial was not considered a
sacrament (John Knox wrote that death rites led to Popery, and Knox
had the last say in Scotland). The search continues.
1http://www.isleoftiree.com/history.html
2Christening
records OPR accessed through Scotland's People website. OPR frame no
FRCH2V1P60
3http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coll
4http://www.visitcoll.co.uk/Coll.php?p=about
5"Historical Record of the 79th Regiment of Foot, or Cameron Highlanders" by Captain Robert Jameson, William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh and London, 1863, p.15
6http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/79th_Foot