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       Few events in the history 
      of civilized nations compare in interest and pathos, with the attempt made 
      in the middle of the eighteenth century by Prince Charles Edward Stuart, 
      to recover the throne of his ancestors. 
      From his landing in 
      Scotland on July 23rd 1745, till his final escape into France, his pathway 
      lay through so many vicissitudes of success and failure, of hope and 
      despondency, that the story of those few months seem to belong to the 
      realm of romance, rather than to that of true history. 
      One trait however, stands 
      forth clearly from the background of doubt and obscurity, and shines like 
      a thread of gold throughout it all, and that is, the unswerving attachment 
      and loyalty of the Catholic Highlanders to the person of the unfortunate 
      Prince. With only, little regard for consequences, they flocked to his 
      standard, on the memorable day when its waving folds blessed by Bishop 
      McDonald were flung out on the breeze at Glenfinnan. They pledged their 
      wealth, their homes, their lives, to his cause. They were ready to go with 
      him, to fight for him, aye and die for him with a tenacity of purpose, 
      that seemed begotten not of calm reason but of thoughtless infatuation. 
      And dearly did they pay, for their devotedness. Terrible indeed, was the 
      retribution that followed their espousal of the Stuart cause and for years 
      they were forced to pay the penalty amid incalculable trials and 
      sufferings. 
      It is true that the Penal 
      Laws had been in force in Scotland, for years prior to the coming of 
      Prince Charlie; but, with the lapse of time, they had lost much of their 
      earlier severity, and it often happened, that officials well disposed 
      towards their Catholic countrymen, would allow the latter, intervals of 
      comparative peace. But after Culloden's fatal day when the Stuart cause 
      was ruined forever, the authorities laid deeper plans to harass the poor 
      Highlanders, so that henceforth their existence became a veritable 
      Egyptian bondage. Any leniency hitherto exercised in the administration of 
      the Laws was no longer tolerated. New statutes, surpassing all former ones 
      in ferocity, were enacted, and orders went forth enjoining stricter 
      vigilance in dealing with the Catholic people. Nothing was left undone to 
      make their lives miserable, and it would seem that the policy of the day 
      was nothing less than a plan well thought out, to glut the vengeance of 
      the House of Hanover. According to a modern writer: "more than a thousand 
      persons were transported from the Country, the Highland Clans were 
      decimated and dispersed, the Catholic Chapels destroyed, the Seminary at 
      Scalan plundered and burned, Missals and Vestments publicly committed to 
      the flames, and Priests and people persecuted with merciless rigor. The 
      vigilance of the authorities was directed in a special manner against the 
      Bishop of the Highland District, Right- Reverend Hugh McDonald, who was 
      forced to flee the Country and spend some time in retirement in France." (Geddes) 
      Another circumstance, that 
      added to the difficulties of the times was the conduct of the Landlords, 
      upon whose estates the Catholic people were settled. These landed gentry, 
      taking their cue from the Government of the day, treated their tenants 
      with heartless severity, and pursued in their regard a policy of petty 
      persecution, scarcely less trying than the iniquitous laws of the Country. 
      Howsoever matters stood with the poor tenant, his rent must be paid an 
      demand. Whether his crop yielded well or was a failure, whether his 
      circumstances were good or bad, the collector never failed to come to his 
      door insisting upon the "pound of flesh," and threatening seizure or 
      eviction for the luckless one, who found himself unable to meet his 
      obligations. Oft-times failure to pay the rent was hailed with undisguised 
      pleasure by the haughty proprietor, who pretended to find therein some 
      shadow of excuse for proceeding to extreme measures. Occasionally these 
      evictions were carried out on a general scale, and for no other reason 
      than that the Landlord would be able to unite a number of small holdings 
      in a park, which he could stock with game for the amusement of himself and 
      his friends during the hunting season. 
      One of the most heartless 
      and bigoted of these landed proprietors was Alexander McDonald of Boisdale, 
      in the Western Islands. Originally a Catholic, he gradually fell away from 
      the Faith, mainly through the influence of his wife, who was a Protestant, 
      and not content with his own cowardly perversion, he strove by all means 
      in his power to drag his tenantry with him, as if by abandoning their 
      religion they would furnish him a quasi-justifaction of his own miserable 
      weakness in that regard. It is said of him that on a certain Sunday, he 
      posted himself at the junction of two roads and brandishing a stout cane 
      tried to keep the people from the Catholic Church and force them to his 
      own place of worship, a circumstance which gave rise to the epithet "Credimh 
      a bhata bhui," ["Religion of the yellow staff."] which they contemptuously 
      applied to his particular style of evangelism. Meeting nothing but failure 
      in his attempts to pervert the older people, he turned his attention to 
      the children in the hope that he might here realize a larger measure of 
      success. He established schools in his neighborhood, where instruction 
      would be gratuitously furnished, and exhorted the parents to profit by the 
      advantages thus supplied by his generosity. Soon however, it was 
      discovered that the Faith of the little ones was being tampered with by 
      ultra zealous Protestant teachers, who found many occasions to inculcate 
      doctrines and opinions contrary to the spirit of the Catholic Church, and, 
      should this state of affairs continue, the plastic minds of the children 
      would be gradually turned away from the Faith of their Fathers. The 
      parents therefore, apprised of this cowardly attempt at perversion at once 
      removed their children from the schools, and would not permit them to 
      return. The Laird thus thwarted in his designs, was more than ever enraged 
      with his tenants and more than ever determined that they should of 
      necessity come over to his way of thinking. He served notice on them to 
      attend a meeting on a certain day, and exhorted all to be present as he 
      had matters of great importance to announce to them. They accordingly 
      assembled on the appointed day, and of the interested persons not one was 
      absent. They came, all the more eagerly, that it had begun to be rumored 
      about, that Boisdale having grown weary of his work of persecution, was 
      now convinced of the futility of severity in treating with a people 
      unswerving in their loyalty to religion; and that now he was gradually 
      coming around to gentler methods of dealing with his tenants. Imagine 
      their surprise and chagrin, when the Landlord, having addressed them in 
      his usual overbearing manner, produced a document written in their native 
      Gaelic, containing practically a renunciation of their faith, and a 
      promise that they would hold no further intercourse with priests of the 
      Church, and this document he asked them to sign under pain of being driven 
      from their lands and deprived of their homes. With the spirit of the early 
      christians every man refused to sign, and this unanimous decision was not 
      the result of long deliberation, but a spontaneous outburst of refusal, 
      showing a determination that could never be broken. The alternative of 
      being deprived of their homes seemed to those devoted people but a paltry 
      affair compared to the priceless boon of Faith, which they were called 
      upon to sacrifice. 
      From the date of this 
      meeting they began to talk of emigration. Matters had now reached a 
      crisis, and it was plain that the passive resistance of former years was 
      no longer sufficient to save the situation. The older people, it is true, 
      did not fear for themselves. They possessed the firm conviction that, by 
      the grace of God, they would persevere and triumph over the pretensions of 
      an inquitous master, but how would it fare with their children? Would they 
      in turn be able to cope with the stress and tyranny of a system that grew 
      more effective as it increased in cunning, until it might well be called 
      expert in its methods of perversion? 
      Would these young and 
      innocent souls persevere amid such trying circumstances, or would they 
      perhaps weaken in the struggle, and sell their birth-right for a "mess of 
      pottage?" So the cry became more and yet more insistent: Let us go out 
      from here! Let us go to a land beyond the seas, where the Upas tree of 
      Landlordism has never taken root, where the sun shines upon a people free 
      as the air they breathe, and where our children and our children's 
      children may live in peace and security and adore God according to the 
      dictates of their conscience. Thus they talked the matter over among 
      themselves. Wherever they came together it was the main subject of 
      conversation. Particularly at their Ceillidhs in the long winter evenings, 
      when neighbors met for a heart to heart talk, the question of emigration 
      was sure to come up, and not infrequently some strolling seannachie, his 
      soul fired by the consciousness of present wrongs, would rehearse the 
      trying circumstances which they patiently endured, while the free land of 
      America was calling to them, aye imploring them to come across the seas 
      and share in the peace and prosperity of the New World. In this way 
      emigration became their one dominant idea, until they seemed to have no 
      other purpose in life, but to go out from their native land and seek homes 
      in America. 
      But many and great were the 
      difficulties in the way. To bid adieu to the land of their birth, to sever 
      ties that seemed as it were a part of their very lives, to abandon homes 
      wherein they had spent so many years, and in which they had hoped to close 
      their earthly career, these were indeed formidable barriers in their way; 
      yet they seemed comparatively small compared to the difficulty of devising 
      ways and means of defraying the expenses of such a journey. Some of the 
      people possessed a little means, and for these the undertaking was 
      feasible, but a great majority were comparatively poor and to these it 
      seemed an utter impossibility. The rent roll of years had eaten up the 
      results of their labors, and they had merely eked out a bare subsistence 
      for themselves and their familities, so that nothing was put by for the 
      proverbial rainy day; and hence, when the rainy day came in the form of 
      emigration, the poor tenant had nothing to meet the extraordinary 
      expenditure thus entailed. For him it seemed that he must continue to 
      endure his wrongs in patience, and await a brighter lay, when in God's own 
      good time he would find a relief. 
      But fortunately there was a 
      man on the spot who was able to dominate the situation and procure the 
      funds required by the poorer people. Captain John MacDonald, Laird of the 
      Glens, took up their cause and by enlisting the kindly sympathy of other 
      powerful personages, he succeeded in collecting sufficient money to defray 
      the expenses of the voyage. He placed himself in communication with Bishop 
      Hay, Vicar-Apostolic of the Lowland District, and with Bishop Challoner of 
      London, through whose influence subscriptions were taken up, and a goodly 
      sum raised to meet the needs of the emigrants. Captain John himself 
      mortgaged his vast Estates in Scotland to enable him to purchase land in 
      Prince Edward Island, whereon the emigrants would settle on their arrival 
      in the new Colony. This purchase was effected in the year 1771, and 
      forthwith he despatched laborers ahead to make the necessary preparations 
      for the arrival of the emigrants, who, he hoped, would be ready to leave 
      Scotland early in the following year. In the month of March, 1772, he 
      chartered a vessel called the "Alexander" in Greenock. Thence she went 
      North to Uist Island, and early in the month of May she set sail for 
      Prince Edward Island with two hundred and ten emigrants, of whom one 
      hundred were from Uist Island, and the remainder from the mainland. Of 
      these by far the largest group was composed of MacDonalds, but there were 
      also a goodly number of MacEacherns, MacKenzies, McPhees, Campbells, 
      Beatons, Gillises, MacRaes, MacIntoshes, MacKinnons and probably others, 
      whose names escape the writer at this time.  |