The McMillans in Galloway
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Though probable descendants of Gilchrist Maolan can be found in Galloway as
early as the 12th century, the first "McMillan" as such only appears
on the record in the early 14th century - and it's not until the mid 16th
century that one can identify the earliest certain ancestors of the Galloway
clan chiefs, the McMillans of Brockloch. They were almost certainly a branch of the
McMillans of Arndarroch, who are first documented in 1507, and by the 17th
century there were a number of other landed families in and to the south of the
Glenkens of Galloway - such as the McMillans of Garcrogo, Caldow & Barr, and
the McMillans of Barwhinnock. In the early 19th century, when the direct male
line of the Brockloch family died out, the chiefship passed by marriage to the
McMillans of the Holm of Dalquhairn, with whom it remained until the death in
1977 of John Goldie McMillan - whose youngest daughter, Mrs Susan Seed, still
farms this ancient McMillan holding.
Amongst the
most notable of Galloway McMillans were the Rev. John McMillan of Balmaghie, the
founder in the early 1700s of the Reformed Presbyterian Church, and Kirkpatrick
McMillan, the inventor in the 1830s of the bicycle.
See the
Genealogy section of this website for the descent of the Arndarroch, Brockloch,
Holm of Dalquhairn, and other McMillan families in Galloway.
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| The kirkyard at Carsphairn where the McMillans of Brockloch are buried |
The monument at Dalserf, Lanarkshire, to the Reverend John McMillan of Balmaghie |
The smithy at Penpont, near Thornhill, where Kirkpatrick McMillan invented the bicycle. |