~1~ Brave Highland Men – A Prologue The six Black Watch companies who started it all off in May 17253 were more than a little different from the majority of King George’s soldiers – and not only because they happened to wear bonnets and plaids rather than hats and breeches. For whilst those men who were enlisted into the army’s ordinary ‘marching regiments’ of foot could be sent anywhere that His Britannic Majesty, or rather His Majesty’s ministers, desired, the Watch were raised specifically for service in the Scottish Highlands. In practice this generally meant in Perthshire, Badenoch and around the Great Glen for the most part, where they were intended to act as a quasi-military police force in their own right and also to provide guides for any of the regular troops venturing off General Wade’s new roads. For what seemed good and sufficient reasons at the time, command of the individual companies – three of them initially to be led by captains and three by lieutenants – was therefore entrusted not to some of the unemployed veteran officers then languishing on the half-pay lists, but to supposedly well-affected Highland gentlemen resident in those parts. They, it was fondly imagined, would have a proper stake in ensuring the peace and tranquillity of their own districts – and would also have a thorough knowledge of the local troublemakers, criminals and political dissidents most likely to disturb that peace. This might have looked like a good idea in theory, and at first there was indeed a commendable display of zeal on the part of those chosen to demonstrate that the Government’s faith in its new-found servants was not misplaced. The old ways, however, had not been forgotten and in practice all too many of the officers, and in particular that notorious old rogue, Lord Lovat, very clearly regarded their companies first and foremost not as a badly
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needed police force, but rather as a bounteous source of patronage and income for themselves and as a form of outdoor relief for their equally needy friends and relations. In effect the Watch very quickly became a rather agreeable gentlemen’s club. ‘Many of the men who composed these companies were of a higher station in society than that from which soldiers in general are raised,’ gushed their earliest historian, Colonel David Stewart of Garth. ‘Cadets of gentlemen’s families, sons of gentlemen farmers and tacksmen4, either immediately or distantly descended from gentlemen’s families . . . Hence it became an object of ambition with all young men of spirit to be admitted, even as privates, into a service which procured them the privilege of wearing arms.’ Garth’s almost idyllic picture of the Watch and its finely dressed young gentlemen soldiers, casually riding on horseback to the periodic musters, each accompanied by his own gillie or manservant, to carry his uniform and his kit, needs to be treated with a proper degree of caution of course. But there is no doubt that to those fortunate enough to serve in it, am Freiceadan Dubh was, to use that wonderfully evocative eighteenthcentury expression, a ‘job’. 5 As in the regular army, the commanding officers of the companies received a bewildering variety of financial allotments and allowances from the Government for clothing and equipping their men, and the profits to be made on supplying the jackets, plaids, shirts, belts, pouches and everything else their men needed were accounted one of the legitimate perquisites of their rank. Rather less legitimately, but perhaps no less inevitably, some of those official funds were also shamelessly embezzled by many of the Black Watch officers: drawing allowances for men who did not exist, and granting lengthy furloughs to those men who did, in order that the captains might in the meantime draw their pay. Of themselves these pecuniary transgressions might not have been considered entirely damning by the authorities, for it was still a venal age when public service and private profit were not yet considered incompatible. However, the scale of it became scandalous and there were also well-founded rumours of protection money occasionally being demanded from farmers – the old ‘black-meal’ – in return for carrying out the very policing duties that the companies were supposed to be providing at the King’s expense!
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In fact, taking into account the scale of the various financial irregularities, the disturbing tendency to supplement official income streams by unorthodox means, and the rather casual attitude to service in the Watch in the first place, it eventually became such a notorious ‘job’ that the Government finally bestirred itself to assert some proper control over the six companies. Narrowly anticipating the outbreak of war with Spain over the curious matter of Captain Jenkins’s ear in 1739, it ordered their consolidation into a proper marching regiment of foot under the command of John, Earl of Crawfurd, on 25 October 1739, just two days before the war officially began on 27 October. Obviously such a dramatic conversion could not take effect overnight, for not only did four completely new companies need to be raised, but the six existing ones also had to find another forty recruits apiece in to order to bring the battalion up to its full wartime establishment. Therefore it was not until some six months later, in May 1740 that His Majesty’s 43rd Regiment of Foot was formally embodied as such at Taybridge, Aberfeldy, and kitted out in short red jackets with buff-coloured facings, as well as the now famous Black Watch tartan. The frequent furloughs disappeared at once and, as regular soldiers, they now had to become accustomed to some proper military discipline, which was doubtless something of a shock to the system after the easy ways of the Watch. They still kept their officially sanctioned Highland broadswords, and their dirks and their pistols, many of them personally owned, but the elaborately decorated round shields, or targes, and the elegant gold-laced tartan clothes, which they had been accustomed to wear away from the parade ground, were soon discarded as they learned how to form and march in line; to manoeuvre by companies, divisions and wings; to deploy from column into line and back again into column; and, above all, relentlessly practised the platoon firing drills that were then at the core of British tactical thinking. Predictably enough, while the conversion from a rural gendarmerie into a regular regiment of the line at first appeared to go very smoothly, there was some trouble in the end. Nevertheless, in the cold hard light of day it is rather difficult to avoid the impression that the infamous Black Watch mutiny of 1743 has been somewhat overblown (and perhaps wilfully misunderstood) both by contemporary propagandists trying to make political capital out of the affair, and by later historians
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all too eager to portray the Highlanders as the cruelly exploited victims of an alien regime. In outline the basic facts of the affair appear to be straightforward enough. Britain, while still rather half-heartedly at war with Spain, had by that time also contrived to become involved in the quite unrelated War of the Austrian Succession. Strictly speaking, it was the Electorate of Hanover that had entered the war in support of the Hapsburg claimant to the Imperial throne, Maria Theresa. However, as the Elector of Hanover also quite fortuitously happened to be King George II of Great Britain, it was inevitable that British troops should soon find themselves sent to the Continent. Equally inevitably, as the war grew in intensity and spread to involve France and most of the other European powers, more regiments soon followed that first expeditionary force. Amongst them, on 11 March 1743, three Scottish units; 1/1st Royals, the 25th Foot and the 43rd Highlanders were all given their marching orders for Flanders. As might be expected of regular units with a long and glorious pedigree – much of it earned fighting in those same Low Countries – both the Royal Scots and the Edinburgh Regiment (as the King’s Own Scottish Borderers were then known) went without a murmur, but the Black Watch, now commanded by Lord Sempill, reacted rather differently. On 14 May they were reviewed by their old mentor, General Wade, at Finchley, which was then just a small village north of London, and there too they received their final embarkation orders. Notwithstanding all the supposed warning signs helpfully dredged up afterwards, the new regiment’s behaviour during its long march from Scotland had been quite unexceptional. But now the trouble began, with rumours quickly spreading through the ranks that the regiment was not to be shipped to Flanders after all, but to the West Indies. In the wake of the disastrous Carthagena expedition three years before, in which more than half the troops involved – including two commanding generals in quick succession – had succumbed to the dread Yellow Fever, it was understandable enough that rumours of a Caribbean posting should be greeted with dismay by the soldiers. Nevertheless, whilst the sudden fear that they were to go to the Fever Islands may well have provided the trigger for the mutiny, the real underlying problem that emerged in the subsequent courts martial was
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actually a combination of otherwise quite mundane grievances arising from unpaid bounties and allowances, and the startling possibility that a significant number of the men in the ranks may never have been properly enlisted in the first place. In simple terms some of the longerserving soldiers took the view that they had joined the part-time Highland Watch, not His Majesty’s 43rd Regiment of Foot. Some of them also claimed at the courts martial that they had done so without going through the usual tedious formalities of oaths, and the ritual, but very necessary, reading of the second and sixth clauses of the Articles of War relating to obedience to officers and the penalties for desertion.6 Just how much truth there might have been in these mitigating claims still remains unclear, although they are certainly consistent with the casual, almost sociable way in which the Watch was being run before its embodiment as a regiment of the line. At any rate, shortly before midnight on 17 May 1743 some of those reluctant heroes dramatically took matters into their own hands by embarking upon a mutiny. Surprisingly perhaps, it should be noted that there was nothing at all unique or even particularly unusual in this. Far from being confined to the Highland regiments, as sometimes seems to be suggested, mutinies in the eighteenth-century British Army were astonishingly common affairs and generally tended to follow certain unwritten rules, which were clearly understood by both officers and men. In the first place, mutiny was normally only resorted to in pursuit of certain clearly defined and usually quite limited objectives – sanctioned as it were by the immemorial custom of the service – such as those unpaid allowances and arrears. Secondly, a mutiny almost always took place at home, not in the middle of a campaign or out in some lonely garrison, and usually at the point of departure or embarkation to foreign parts. Thirdly, when it did occur, a mutiny normally amounted to little more than a fairly polite but robust refusal by the troops involved to march or to embark until their grievances were addressed, however inconvenient that might be from an operational or a bureaucratic point of view. Depending upon the particular local circumstances their demands might occasionally be accompanied by some noisy shouting and tumult – sometimes a particularly unpopular officer could even be beaten up if he was unlucky enough to be encountered without his friends, but otherwise real violence was almost unheard of. Consequently most
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mutinies ended quite quickly with senior officers giving in to the mutineers’ demands and only very rarely punishing those involved. Far from being bloody rebellions against established authority, mutinies by both British soldiers and sailors at this period were in effect tacitly recognised by all concerned as nothing more than relatively routine industrial disputes conducted according to familiar, albeit sometimes rowdy, eighteenth-century grievance procedures. In May 1750, for example, Lieutenant Colonel James Wolfe was grumbling that: ‘If any man of the party for the roads presumes on any occasion, or for any cause whatever, to shew the same sort of disposition to mutiny and disobedience, as was observed in some soldiers of the last year’s detachment . . . the officers ordered to command them are to make an immediate and severe example of the offenders.’ However, notwithstanding the emotive use of the words ‘mutiny’ and ‘severe example’, he then went on to say that offenders were to be immediately returned to the regiment. Road work was apparently regarded as something of a holiday and the punishment threatened was therefore a withdrawal of privileges rather than the prospect of the lash or firing squad.7 That is not to say that violence was unknown, but what made the Black Watch mutiny of 1743 different from most disputes of this kind was that instead of simply sitting tight and holding out for a proper resolution of their complaints, many of those involved attempted to march off in a body and return home to Scotland. It was, of course, hopeless. Since no-one actually wanted to fight anybody, far less to embark upon the brisk massacre of tyrants popularly associated with such revolts, the regiment’s officers and senior NCOs quickly regained control. Within less than an hour it was all over. The greater part of the regiment was paraded under their watchful eyes on Finchley Common and when the rolls were called at daylight it was found that only some 120 men had gone. The mutineers initially made good speed first by way of St Albans and thereafter across country, but lacking provisions they then went to ground in a Northamptonshire wood and were persuaded to surrender a few days later. Normally mutiny might be condoned by the authorities with a certain weary tolerance, but premeditated and organised mass desertion was a different matter entirely and called for exemplary punishment. Thus three of the ringleaders, Samuel and
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Malcolm MacPherson, and Farquhar Shaw, were condemned to death by a court martial and duly shot by a firing squad on Tower Hill, while their followers were all drafted away from the Watch and into other units – some of them, ironically enough, serving in the West Indies! In the meantime the rest of the regiment quietly embarked for Flanders, just as the Government had intended all along; they underwent a very creditable baptism of fire at the great battle of Fontenoy, near Tournai, on 11 May 1745 and thereafter, as they say, never looked back.8 While much has been made by both contemporaries and historians of the ‘heroic’ or even the romantic nature of the mutiny and its supposed long-remembered legacy of distrust in the Highlands, it actually appears to have had very little, if any, real effect on recruiting in the years that followed. Just two years later in 1745 not only were three additional companies of the 43rd formed in order to provide reinforcement drafts for the regiment, but letters of service were granted to a regular officer, Colonel John Campbell, Earl of Loudoun, for the raising of a second Highland regiment. This time there was to be no ambiguity about its status, and from the very outset it was clearly understood that, while wearing the Highland dress, the new 64th Regiment of Foot was otherwise going to be regarded in every respect as an ordinary regiment of the line. As it turned out, both Loudoun’s regiment and the additional companies got off to a rather unlucky start, for it was of course in the late summer of that year when the last Jacobite rising erupted in Scotland, and to the Earl’s chagrin a number of officers and men, including at least one complete company led by Cluny MacPherson, promptly defected to the rebels.9 Nevertheless the majority of his men remained faithful to King George and three companies commanded by Lieutenant Colonel ‘Jack’ Campbell of Mamore and Captain Colin Campbell of Ballimore fought at Culloden in a composite Highland battalion that even included one of the Black Watch ‘additional’ companies commanded by Captain Dugald Campbell of Auchrossan.10 Afterwards both Highland regiments went on to fight bravely in Flanders, but nevertheless when peace was signed in 1748 there was a decided feeling in some quarters that care should be taken to ensure they were included amongst those units marked for disbandment in the inevitable post-war cutbacks.
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