~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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