The Chief's Immediate Ancestors

The MacMillans of MacMillan & Knap trace their descent back to John MacMillan in Carrine, Kintyre,
younger brother of Duncan MacMillan 3rd of Dunmore who matriculated arms in 1742 as "representative of the ancient family of MacMillan of Knapdale".
See the Genealogy section for more information about the MacMillans of Dunmore.
When Duncan's grandson Alexander MacMillan WS 4th of Dunmore died in 1770 he made his cousin Duncan (grandson of John in Carrine) his heir,
and following the death of the childless Duncan in 1799, the representation of the family eventually fell to the descendants of his brother
Alexander MacMillan "the Merchant" (died 1789). Alexander's son Capt. William Bennett MacMillan RM died in Campbeltown in 1817, leaving one son,
John Gordon MacMillan, and two daughters, Elizabeth MacMillan and Martha Hay MacMillan.

John G. MacMillan
John Gordon MacMillan (1808-1894)

After the death of his father, John Gordon MacMillan and his sisters were taken to Australia by their mother Catherine Campbell.
John later returned to Scotland and, not being able to buy back Dunmore, he acquired the neighbouring estate of Balnakill. 
He married Margaret C. Holmes and had five sons and four daughters - for whom he built a house in Ayr called "Dereel", where he died in 1894.

John Gordon MacMillan's eldest son Robert Gordon MacMillan (1865-1936) played Rugby Union for Scotland (whom he captained on a tour to South Africa) 
and became an insurance underwriter at Lloyds. He had no children, and the representation of the family fell to the son of his younger brother, 
Dugald Alexander MacMillan.

Dugald A. MacMillan
Dugald Alexander MacMillan (1836-1935)

Dugald Alexander MacMillan went out to India as a young man to become a coffee planter where he met and married Laura Winifred Allardyce. 
When they returned to the UK Dugald settled in Surrey, England, and became a stockbroker. Their only child was Gordon H. A. MacMillan.

Gordon Holmes Alexander MacMillan became a professional soldier. He was decorated a number of times for valour in the First World War, 
served in many theatres in the Second World War, and commanded the Army in Palestine prior to British withdrawal in 1948. 
He was knighted and eventually returned to Scotland as the General Officer Commanding and Governor of Edinburgh Castle.

Sir Gordon MacMillan
General Sir Gordon H. C. MacMillan
of MacMillan and Knap (1897-1986)

Sir Gordon MacMillan was married to Marian Blakiston-Houston, the grand-daughter of George Jardine Kidston, 
proprietor of the Clyde Shipping Company and laird of Finlaystone.
Lady MacMillan inherited Finlaystone and she and her husband named their eldest son, 
George Gordon MacMillan, after her grandfather.