Clan Donald Magazine No11 (1987) Online
Obituaries
Peter Alexander MacDonell
Peter, the younger son of the late Ranald MacDonell, CBE, 21st Chief
of Glengarry and brother of Donald, the present chief, died
peacefully at his home in Fortrose, Ross-shire, on 7th November
1986, aged 69.
He was born in the British Consulate at Baku in Southern Russia and,
at the age of six months, was brought home to Scotland by his
mother; a journey of great discomfort across Russia, Finland, Sweden
and Norway and the U-boat infested North Sea to Aberdeen.
Peter was educated at Bryanston School, Dorset, where he became Head
of School and Captain of the Rugby XV. He displayed considerable
talents as a painter and in 1937 went to the Edinburgh College of
Art. While he always painted with originality and considerable
artistic effect, in 1945 he decided on acting, joined the Everyman
Theatre in Edinburgh and, a year later, transferred to the Citizen's
Theatre in Glasgow. In 1949-50 he became a free-lance broadcaster
and acted in the West End of London. He was then appointed Deputy
Entertainments Manager at the South Bank site of the Festival of
Britain in London.
In 1952 Peter married Mary McAlpine, whom he had met when with the
Citizen's Theatre in Glasgow. In the same year they came to the
Highlands when Peter was appointed Drama Adviser to the Highland
Division of the Scottish Community Drama Association. Peter and
Mary's first daughter, Charlotte, was born in 1954 and Maria, their
second daughter, arrived in 1959: it was in that same year that
Peter was appointed Drama Adviser to the County of Leicester and the
family moved to England, coming back to Fortrose for the holidays.
They returned to their home in Scotland in 1971 when Peter accepted
the job of Manager of Landmark Visitors' Centre at Carrbridge, from
which he retired in 1982.
He gave a great deal of his time to Clan Donald, particularly during
the immediate post-war years when, following the death of his father
in 1941 and the assumption of the Chief ship by his elder brother
Donald, recently repatriated as a POW from Germany, the presence of
Glengarry was missing in Clan Donald. Peter represented his elder
brother and Chief with charm and understanding; indeed he displayed
an abiding interest in Scottish genealogy and established many
contacts with the Clan which were of great help to Donald when his
Service and family commitments eventually made it possible for him
to fulfil his role as Glengarry.
Peter was a man of many parts: a talented painter, carpenter and
furniture-maker, a dedicated and knowledgeable gardener and a lover
of music and the arts. Somewhat of an eccentric, he had great moral
courage and held firmly to his beliefs regardless of convention or
opposition. His contribution to the local community was
considerable. He worked tirelessly and meticulously to promote
drama, music and art. For many years he was Chairman of the Black
Isle Arts Society: he was a very talented producer for the Black
Isle Theatre Club. He will also be remembered for the valuable
advice he so willingly gave to organisations such as Groam House
Museum and to individuals interested in the arts. He will be greatly
missed by all who knew him.
A.R.D. MacD.
Angela, Dowager Countess of Antrim
Angela, Dowager Countess of Antrim, widow of the 13th Earl and
mother of Viscount Dunluce, who died on 27th September, 1984 was
buried in the family burial ground near the family seat, Glenarm
Castle, Antrim.
Born in Yorkshire in 1911, the third daughter of Sir Mark Sykes MP
and privately educated she studied sculpture and drawing from the
age of fifteen in Brussels and Rome. When seventeen she had two
large works accepted by the Royal Academy and subsequently exhibited
in London, Dublin and Belfast in mixed shows and independently in
The Beaux Arts and Hamet galleries in London. She executed for the
Northern Ireland Hospitals Authority and several churches works in
stained glass, bronze and stone. She was the first president of the
Association of Ulster Drama Festivals and she and her husband were
among the original directors of Ulster Television. She had published
in 1977 by Ulster Television, The Antrim McDonnells a profusely
illustrated volume containing the basic historical information
concerning the Antrim Branch of Clan Donald (South).
Angela Antrim, as she was known professionally, is survived by her
sons, The Rt. Hon. The Viscount Dunluce and The Hon. Hector
MacDonnell, her daughter and their families.
N.H.M.
Miss Margaret H.E. Cuninghame of
Balgownie
It was with deep regret that we noted the passing, on 10th August
1985, of Miss Margaret H.E. Cuninghame of Balgownie, a member of the
Clan Donald Society of Edinburgh since 1957. Miss Cuninghame, a well
known personality at the Edinburgh Society's annual gatherings over
many years, was a direct descendant of the Chiefs of Glengarry, and
bore a striking resemblance to her great-great grandfather, Colonel
Alasdair Ranaldson MacDonell, 15th of Glengarry, the friend of Sir
Walter Scott and subject of a famous painting by Sir Henry Raeburn.
Miss Cuninghame inherited, through her grandmother, Helen Rebecca
MacDonell, daughter of Aeneas Ranaldson MacDonell, 16th of
Glengarry, who married Captain John Cuninghame of Balgownie, the
Glengarry heirlooms, the ruined Castle of Invergarry, the Well of
the Heads monument (Loch Oich) and the family burial ground at
Kilfinnan. The last three properties were, by agreement with Miss
Cuninghame and her sister, transferred to a charitable trust set up
in December 1960, consisting of a board of trustees, which included
the Chief of Glengarry and his brother, Peter MacDonell, the Misses
Cuninghame and the President of the Clan Donald Society of Edinburgh
(ex officio). The funds of the Invergarry Castle Trust have been
administered by the Clan Donald Society of Edinburgh from the time
the trust was set up. We shall miss the presence of Miss Cuninghame,
who had a wonderful sense of humour, besides a keen interest in the
activities of the Clan. She is survived by her sister, Miss
Josephine Marsaili Cuninghame.
N.H.M.
Norman Macdonald
The death occurred on 26th December 1984, of Norman Macdonald, a
past President of the Clan Donald Society of Edinburgh for many
years known in the Society as Tormod Mor, or Big Norman to
distinguish him from the Hon. Secretary, who was known as Tormod Og,
or Young Norman. Big Norman joined the Society around 1950 and had
been a life member since 1959. He served on the Council for many
years and was elected President in 1962, which position he held
until 1965 when he was succeeded by his great friend, the late
Donald J. Macdonald of Castleton. While employed as the Highlands
and Islands Representative for Walls, the ice cream manufacturers,
Norman seldom failed to provide the children at the Society's annual
Christmas parties with a surprise treat, usually in the form of a
generous supply of delicious ice cream. Well-known for his immense
generosity, a characteristic of the true Highlander, Norman was a
popular president and a colourful figure in Highland dress. At the
Society's Annual Gathering in 1964, he presented, on behalf of the
Society, to the Pipe Major of what was then the 432 City of
Edinburgh Royal Engineers (TA), a silk pipe banner, bearing on one
side the armorial quartering, as shown in Lyon Register, for
MacDonald (MacDonell) of Keppoch, in honour of the regiment's first
Colonel, Ronald MacDonald, who adhered to Keppoch, and on the other,
the coat-of-arms of the City and Royal Burgh of Edinburgh. Norman
took the salute on the Edinburgh Castle Esplanade in 1965 at beating
retreat by the pipes and drums of the regiment who also wore and
still wear the Keppoch tartan. He attended the unveiling ceremony,
with Donald J. Macdonald of Castleton, both as representing the
Clan, at the Scottish Memorial to Sir John A. MacDonald, first Prime
Minister of Canada on the site of the family residence at Rogart in
Sutherland. The ceremony, which was arranged by Hugh MacPherson, was
attended by another Canadian prime minister with Scottish roots, the
Rt. Hon. John G. Diefenbaker, PC, QC. Norman was a founder member of
the Clan Donald Lands Trust and served on the original Appeal
Committee of that body. Ill health latterly prevented him from
taking an active part in Society activities. He is survived by his
wife and family.
N.H.M.
Robert E. MacDonald, OBE
The death occurred on 18th July 1984, of
Mr Robert E. MacDonald, who succeeded the late Reginald MacDonald of
Kingsburgh as High Commissioner for Clan Donald in the U.S.A. Mr.
MacDonald was President and Chairman of the J.G. White Corporation
of New York, which built the Trans-Greece Highway and the general
contractor in the building of the Gateway Arch in St. Louis. He was
made an Officer of the (Most Noble) Order of the British Empire.
N.H.M.
Mrs Donald J. Macdonald of Castleton
Mrs Donald J. Macdonald, widow of the late Donald J. Macdonald, 12th
of Castleton, died suddenly at her home, "Dundonald", Ardvasar,
Sleat, Isle of Skye, on 26th January, 1987.
"Bunty" as she was known to her family and friends, along with her
husband became a sphere of influence in the Clan Donald Society of
Edinburgh and the Clan at large for the space of thirty years or
more. She assisted her husband in all his Clan activities during his
terms first as Secretary and latterly as President of the Society.
She loved nothing better than to entertain visiting clansfolk,
particularly those from overseas and took a keen interest in the
activities of the Chiefs and cadets of the Clan and their families.
A lady of high intellect and wide knowledge, she was actively
engaged in numerous organisations including the Society of
Antiquaries of Scotland, of which she was a fellow, The 1745
Association and The Clan Donald Lands Trust and for a time acted as
Librarian of The Clan Donald Centre Library.
We offer our deep sympathy to her daughters Fay, Stella and Ruth,
her son Ranald, 13th of Castleton and their families.
N.H.M.
William Merrilees, Esq., OBE
The death took place on 21st August 1984, in an Edinburgh hospital,
of Mr William Merrilees, OBE, a former Chief Constable of the
Lothian and Peebles Police, at the age of 85. Willie Merrilees, as
he was universally known, was born in Leith and always had an
ambition to join the police, but his shortness of stature acted to
prevent him from ever achieving this aspiration through the normal
channels. Willie, however, had, as a young man, among his many
talents, that of being a good swimmer and on one occasion when he
received a life-saving award his ambition to join the police came to
the notice of the Lord Provost of Edinburgh, who used his influence
with the establishment and the result was that the Secretary of
State for Scotland waved the minimum height regulations in his case,
and Willie became a policeman. He was a master of disguise, and one
of the most daring operations in which he took part was when dressed
as a railway porter, he brought about the arrest of a German spy at
the Waverley Station in 1940. In another operation he was dressed as
a baby and wheeled through the Edinburgh streets in a pram and on
another occasion he dressed as a woman to apprehend a bag-snatcher.
He had been described as "the pocket-sized detective with a
battleship reputation". He became Chief Constable of Lothian and
Peebles Police in 1950 when he was 51 - a post which he held until
his 70th birthday, being the only Chief Constable in Britain to be
asked to stay on after the retirement age of 65. In the autumn of
1966 his autobiography: "The Short Arm of the Law", was published.
Almost as prominent as his police work, and latterly even more so,
was the work he did for charity, particularly to help the elderly
and children. The holder of an OBE and the King's Police Medal, he
was a Knight of the Order of St. Lazarus and a member of over 50
organisations, including The Clan Donald Society of Edinburgh since
1954 as a life member, his grandmother having been a MacDonald. In
1959 he appeared on the television programme "This Is Your Life". A
widower, Mr Merrilees married Miss Roberta Dayhoff, of Kansas City,
Missouri, at South Leith Parish Church in 1968. They had met through
a common interest in crippled and orphaned children, more than 400
of whom were among their wedding guests. Many members will recall
his presence as a story and joke teller at ceilidhs and other
Society functions. He was also a founder member of The Clan Donald
Lands Trust. He has a son John, by his first wife, and granchildren.
N.H.M.
Miss Ann MacDonald Morrison
The death occurred on 11th December
1984, in her 77th year, of Miss Ann MacDonald Morrison, who was
Honorary Secretary of the Clan Donald Society of Edinburgh during
the crucial years 1939 and 1940 when, due to the Second World War,
it was no easy task to keep a clan society alive; but this she and
other members of the Council succeeded in doing. She and other
ladies of the Society were deeply involved in the work of sending
food parcels to clansfolk serving in the Armed Forces, one, at
least, of whom subsequently served as President of the Society. Ann
had been a life member of the Society since 1930 and had served also
as a Vice-President and Council Member almost continually from 1937
till 1960 after which the duties of her occupation required her to
live in Glasgow.
N.H.M.
Mrs Elizabeth B. MacDonald
The death took place on 16th April,
1984, in her 83rd year of Mrs Elizabeth B. MacDonald, a former
Vice-President of the Clan Donald Society of Edinburgh. Mrs
MacDonald joined the Society with her husband, the late Alexander C.
MacDonald, and son in 1955 and became a life member in 1975. During
her years of membership she served diligently as a member of the
Council and as a Vice-President. Mrs MacDonald played an active part
in the Society's activities until when, on leaving a Council
meeting, she was involved in an accident, resulting in a broken hip,
which severely restricted her for the rest of her life.
Nevertheless, with fortitude and the aid of a zimmer, she continued
to attend the annual gatherings until 1979, thereafter being
confined to her home. She was the mother of Norman H. MacDonald,
Hon. Secretary of the Society, and ably assisted her son whenever
possible in his secretarial duties. She also gave him every
encouragement in historical research and in his literary endeavours.
In the early days of the Clan Donald Lands Trust, Mrs MacDonald was
an enthusiastic fund-raiser, tireless in her efforts, as indeed she
was in all the Society's ventures. Although suffering acute
discomfort in her latter years, her keen interest in the Society,
its members and its activities never dimmed.
D.M.M.
William J. McDonald, Esq.
The death occurred on 25th May 1984, in
his 77th year, of William J. (Bill) McDonald, President of the
Victoria Metropolitan Branch of the Clan Donald Society of
Australia, at his home, 5 Russell Street, McCrae, Victoria. He made
two visits to Scotland; on the second of which he was accompanied by
his wife, Irene, who gave him full support in his Clan Donald
activities. He and his wife became Life Members of the Clan Donald
Society of Edinburgh. Bill was a tireless worker for the Clan in his
area and beyond in many roles which included being organising
secretary for the State of Victoria, founder member Peninsula,
President of Metropolitan and Patron of Dandenwong branches. He was
a good conversationalist on Scottish history and traditions and
assisted those interested in tracing family history. His knowledge
of early settlement throughout Victoria by Scottish migrants and
families earned him respect. Through his work as a skilled
tradesman, he has left behind lasting examples of fine
craftsmanship, including additions and restorations to churches at
Dromana, Rye, and Sorrento. His recent activities included the newly
formed Pipes and Drums of Clan Donald. His funeral at Dromana
Cemetery was attended by a large gathering while a lone piper played
a fitting lament which drifted down the slopes of Arthur's Seat. He
is survived by his wife, Irene and his sons John and Alan.
N.H.M.
David MacDonald Stewart
The death occurred in Montreal on 27th
April 1984 of Colonel David MacDonald Stewart, one of the early
subscribers to and an original trustee of the Clan Donald Lands
Trust. His untimely death at the comparatively early age of 63 was a
great blow to Clan Donald and to the Scottish cultural bodies both
in Canada and Scotland with which he was associated. He held the
rank of Honorary Colonel in the 78th Fraser Highlanders (which he
resuscitated) and the Queen's York Rangers, was an officer of the
Order of Canada and Chevalier of the Legion of Honour for the
promotion of Canadian and French culture. He was President of the
St. Andrew's Society of Montreal and sponsored the production of the
film "The Massacre of Glencoe".
N.H.M.
Feedback.
If you have any comments, additions or corrections to this article,
please post them in the forum as a new thread
here. Please make the title of your post the title of the
article and put a link back to the article in your post. You will
have to register to join the forum. |