A Summary of Clan MacMillan History
The MacMillans are one of a number of
clans - including the MacKinnons, the MacQuarries, and the MacPhees - descended
from Airbertach, a Hebridean prince of the old royal house of Moray who
according to one account was the great-grandson of King Macbeth. The kin of
Airbertach were closely associated with the Clann Somerhairle Ri Innse Gall
("Kings of the Hebrides"), the ancestors of the MacDougalls and the
MacDonald "Lords of the Isles"; and like their allies their interests
in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries ranged throughout the Hebrides and the
western coastal regions of the Scottish mainland, and into Ireland. Though most
of the clans certainly descended from Airbertach were associated with the Inner
Hebrides (Tiree, Iona, Mull, Ulva and Colonsay) some others claiming the same
descent were later settled inland along the strategic corridor that connects
Lorn - the mainland region opposite those islands - to Dunkeld in Perthshire,
where Airbertach's son Cormac was the Bishop in
the early twelfth century. Tradition connects the MacMillans with a number of
different places in the areas associated with Airbertach's kindred: Glencannel
on Mull; Craignish in Lorn, Leny and Loch Tayside in Perthshire.
Bishop
Cormac's son Gilchrist, the prognenitor of the Clann an Mhaoil,
was a religious man like his father; and it was because of this that he wore
the tonsure which gave him the nickname Maolan or Gillemaol.
The church origins of the MacMillans are reflected in the connection of some of
the earliest “children of Maolan” to two religiously based clan
confederations: the Clann GhilleFhaolain (“Devotees of St. Fillan”)
in Perthshire and Galloway; and the Clann GhilleChattain (“Devotees of
St. Catan”) in Ulster, the Hebrides, and particularly Badenoch and Lochaber.
Feuding with the Mackintoshes for the Captaincy of "Clan Chattan" -
the devotees of St. Catan - involved the MacMillans in defeat at the Battle
of the Clans at Perth in 1396; and finished with the chiefly family’s
near-extermination at The Palm Sunday Massacre of 1430. A survivor
of the massacre, Alexander mac Lachlan, fled to Knapdale, where
some of the clan had probably been settled since the mid-13th century; and the
famous cross that he later erected there may well be a memorial to the family
and lands he lost in Lochaber. The MacMillans' charter from the Lord of the Isles
for their lands in Knapdale was said to have been carved in rock on the beach at
the Point of Knap:
Coir MhicMhaolain
air a Chnap MacMillan's
right to Knap shall be
Fhad's a bhuaileas tonn ri crag
As
long's this rock withstands the sea
Alexander MacMillan is
also remembered in Knapdale for the tower he built at Castle Sween - often said
to be the oldest stone castle in Scotland - which he held for the Lord of the
Isles in the 1470s. Following the demise of the Lordship
of the Isles at the beginning of the sixteenth century, Knapdale was given by
the crown to the Campbells, whose tenants the MacMillans thereafter became; and
it was probably at this time that a son of the last MacMhaolain Mor a Chnap who
remained loyal to the Lords of the Isles fled Kilchamaig in South Knap to
re-establish a branch of the family in Lochaber, who became the Macmillans of
Murlagan. The chief of the Camerons - the clan that had succeeded the
orginal Clan Chattan as the lairds of Lochaber - let Murlagan and the
neighbouring farms on Loch Arkaigside to the Macmillans for sword-service, and Clann
'ic 'illemhaoil Abrach ("Clan Macmillan of Lochaber") were among
Lochiel's most important and loyal followers from the time of the last risings
in favour of the forfeited Lords of the Isles in the middle of the sixteenth
century, to the Jacobite rebellions of the eighteenth century. From Loch
Arkaigside Macmillans settled further north on the mainland in Ferrintosh on the
Black Isle, in Kincardine on Speyside, and particularly in Glen Urquhart where
quite a large branch of the clan flourished in the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries.
Following the loss of Knapdale many MacMillans from there settled to the south in Kintyre,
much of which remained MacDonald territory for a century or so before also
falling to the Campbells. A branch of the clan who were minor lairds in
Carradale - and from whom the sept of Brown are said to originate - moved to the
nearby island of Arran; while other Knapdale and Kintyre MacMillans settled across
the water on Jura, Islay and Colonsay. One of the branches of the old MacMillans
of Knap, having been engaged in the cattle-droving business, was able to purchase the lease of part of the clan's old lordship from the Campbells;
and in 1742 Duncan MacMillan of Dunmore was recognised by the Lord Lyon
as "the representative of the ancient family of MacMillan of Knapdale";
i.e. as chief of the clan.
Meanwhile the
Galloway branch of the clan had continued to grow, despite the loss of much of
its original possessions for supporting the Douglases in their fifteenth century
rebellions in association with the old Lords of the Isles. The clan became
particularly numerous in the Glenkens, where their chieftains for many centuries
were the McMillans of Brockloch and later of The Holm of Dalquhairn
(where their descendants still live). McMillans from Galloway - as well as from
Arran - settled in Ayrshire; and also in Glasgow and Edinburgh; where in in the
nineteenth century they were to be joined by a mass of distant cousins from the
highlands and islands who could no longer get a living from the land or from the
wielding of the sword for which the clan were famous.
Old World Branches and
Surnames
Their early history meant that the MacMillans, though an ancient and
numerous clan, were by the 17th century split into branches within different
parts of Scotland; most of whom had to become followers of the more powerful
chiefs of the other clans that came to dominate those areas. So the remnants of
the Lochaber Macmillans became attached to the Camerons - and are sometimes even
considered as a sept of that clan - while the Galloway McMillans were closely
associated with the Black Douglases. Even the later chiefs of the clan in
Knapdale were obliged to follow the politics of their landlords, the Campbells -
which in the Jacobite rebellions of the eighteenth century put them at odds with
some of their own kin in Lochaber and Glen Urquhart who were staunch supporters
of the Stuarts. Indeed, Clann 'ic 'illemhaoil Abrach formed a company of Lochiel's regiment in "The '45" and
fought as such at the battle of Culloden.
When surnames
became necessary - which in the Highlands of Scotland was not until the late
1700s, or even the early 1800s - some of these "children of Maolan"
took, or were given, the surnames of the chiefs they followed. There are
examples as late as the middle of the nineteenth century therefore of the same
family using both the names Cameron and Macmillan; whilst other clan members are
to be found recorded as Buchanans because of the "tradition" widely
accepted in the eighteenth century - though now discredited - of the MacMillans
being a sept of that clan. The Buchanan connection and claims probably derive
from their inheritance in the fifteenth century of the estate of Leny in
Perthshire which had been owned by a branch of Maolan's descendants; and this
resulted in the Buchanans also claiming as their septs a number of names that an
ancient Leny family tree show were really also descendants of Maolan (such as
the MacCalmans and MacIldonichs, as well as the Lennies themselves). See the Septs page.
Branching Out into the
New World
The first significant settlements of MacMillans outside Scotland were probably
in Northern Ireland in the 17th and 18th centuries as part of the Protestant
“plantation”. While some came there from Knapdale and Arran, most probably
belonged to the nearby Galloway branch which contained the most devout
“covenanters” in the clan. Indeed many Presbyterians in southern Scotland
were called “McMillanites” after the Rev. John McMillan of Balmaghie
who founded the Reformed Presbyterian Church in the early 18th century.
Ulster
McMillans were among the Scots-Irish who settled the east coast of America later
that century - in the Carolinas especially - along with their cousins from
Galloway, Knapdale and Kintyre. Other MacMillans from Argyll were among the
earliest of Scots settlers further north; particularly in New York, where they
seem to have been joined in the second half of the 18th century by cousins from
elsewhere in Scotland.
The American
Revolution diverted many emigrant MacMillans away from the rebellious colonies
to loyal Canada. Nova Scotia came to be favoured by the Glen Urquhart and
Hebridean branches of the Macmillans; while "Upper Canada" became the
destination for many of the Lochaber clan. In 1802 Glengarry County, on
Ontario's border with Quebec, received a particularly large influx of Macmillans
in a mass exodus from Loch Arkaigside organised by the Lochaber clan's de facto
chieftains who no longer benefited from the "kindly" relations their
ancestors had so long enjoyed with the chiefs of the Camerons.
One group of
M'millans from the western isles of Scotland, who initially settled in Nova
Scotia, later left Canada for New Zealand; which, with a similar climate to
Scotland's, became an especially favoured destination for many Highlanders of
all clans. Others also settled in Australia and in South Africa; while some
leading MacMillan families were associated for a time with India, including that
of the present chief, whose father the late Sir Gordon MacMillan was born there.