Clan Donald Magazine No 12 (1991) Online
The MacDonells/MacDonalds of
Glengarry / Stormont, Canada
By Duncan (Darby) MacDonald UE
While there are areas
in Canada that can boast of large settlements and emigrations of
MacDonalds (most notable being that of Eastern Canada, i.e. Nova
Scotia and Prince Edward Island) there are none that can lay claim
to having had more members of the Clan MacDonald or MacDonell (Clan
Donald) emigrate in greater numbers to what was then called "Upper
Canada", than those by that name who arrived and settled in the two
Eastern-Ontario Counties of Glengarry and Stormont.
The first census
(1851/52) lists the following names for the County of Glengarry, and
I mention here the names of the Townships and the reader will soon
wonder if he is in Canada or the Highlands of Scotland:
Surname |
Charlottenburg |
Lochiel |
Lancaster |
Kenyon |
Total |
MacMillan |
7 |
351 |
49 |
138 |
545 |
MacDougall |
156 |
147 |
167 |
71 |
541 |
MacRae |
69 |
90 |
134 |
163 |
456 |
MacLeod |
12 |
218 |
76 |
131 |
437 |
MacGillis |
88 |
60 |
186 |
25 |
359 |
MacLennan |
111 |
89 |
78 |
44 |
322 |
Grant |
290 |
8 |
72 |
45 |
415 |
Cameron |
93 |
43 |
35 |
228 |
399 |
Kennedy |
119 |
31 |
30 |
153 |
333 |
Campbell |
51 |
84 |
14 |
155 |
304 |
MacIntosh |
50 |
120 |
39 |
53 |
262 |
MacGillivray |
15 |
184 |
24 |
20 |
243 |
MacKinnon |
27 |
99 |
37 |
79 |
242 |
MacPherson |
57 |
35 |
64 |
39 |
195 |
Fraser |
67 |
50 |
25 |
34 |
176 |
MacPhee |
3 |
97 |
9 |
48 |
157 |
MacIntyre |
49 |
9 |
17 |
65 |
140 |
Ross |
67 |
24 |
35 |
13 |
139 |
Chisholm |
45 |
34 |
16 |
38 |
133 |
MacGregor |
88 |
7 |
16 |
16 |
114 |
Ferguson |
73 |
12 |
6 |
19 |
110 |
MacLaurin |
28 |
74 |
0 |
0 |
102 |
MacKenzie |
35 |
39 |
3 |
22 |
99 |
Morrison |
0 |
50 |
22 |
27 |
99 |
MacCormick |
7 |
66 |
1 |
9 |
83 |
MacMartin |
63 |
7 |
0 |
2 |
72 |
MacKay |
30 |
13 |
6 |
23 |
72 |
MacArthur |
52 |
12 |
1 |
5 |
70 |
MacLauchlan |
35 |
1 |
18 |
14 |
68 |
Cattanach |
10 |
20 |
12 |
8 |
50 |
MacDonald & MacDonell |
880 |
419 |
1126 |
803 |
3228 |
Is it any wonder that
in Glengarry, and likewise in Stormont, they called this part of
Eastern Ontario "MacDONALD COUNTRY".
Clan Donald Branch
Formed
It is in this area
(of Eastern-Ontario. CANADA) that Clan Donald can now report that
the latest Branch of the Clan has been formed and indeed has already
issued the first Newsletter "From Sea To Sea" to members and
selected interested Scots. One can see from the above figures that
of all the areas in Ontario that demanded such a Clan Donald Society
be formed this should have been the premier location and indeed
organizers are looking forward to one of the largest and strongest
societies in Canada in the years to come.
Early Migrations
Of the 10 or so early migrations dating from 1772 through 1820 to
Upper Canada (the early 1773 date includes two groups who arrived
and settled for a time in America and who fled to Canada, and
adhered to the Unity of the Empire and joined the Royal Standard
before the Treaty of Separation in 1783, and from which many
descendants bear the initials "UE" after their name, indicating that
they are a descendant of a United Empire Loyalist, which was the
"Mark Of Honour"), were, for the great part, from that area of the
Highlands of Scotland known as Western Inverness [Glengarry]
predominantly that of Knoydart, Lochiel and Glenelg.
The record of Crown Lands shows that those of the name MacDonell or
MacDonald outranked in number those of any other individual name in
the Province (of Ontario) and that there were more Loyalists of that
name than any three English names combined in the whole Province.
Although most historians will document that the Scots first settled
in the areas of Upper Canada around 1784 having waited since the end
of the Revolutionary War (1776-1783), in Lower Canada (Quebec) or
St. John's, for direction and permission to "take up lands" as
Loyalists, there is now evidence of earlier Scots locating in both
Stormont and Glengarry.
Some of these early Scots, members of the same Regiments as those
waiting in Quebec for lands; The Royal Highland Emigrants (later the
84th Regiment of foot). The King's Royal Regiment, Butler's Rangers,
etc., would be those who would tell the others how well this new
land was that they had squatted on and where they had begun to edge
out a living (most were removed or given proper lands later) and
others were Scots who took their discharge from the 78th or Fraser's
Highlanders, after doing their duty at Quebec (Plains of Abraham,
1759) and had remained in the area.
Stormont, Dundas & Glegarry Highlanders
A letter from Downing Street, dated 1st March 1803, and
addressed by Lord Hobart, Secretary of State for the Colonies, to
the Lt. Gov. of Upper Canada, explains the migration of 1803 which
was made up of many members of the Glengarry Fencibles, (the
forerunner of the famous Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry
Highlanders still an active unit in these Counties, and who still
wear the kilt of "The MacDonells of Glengarry" and a hat badge that
bears the "Raven On The Rock". The Claymore of the Commanding
Officer, to be handed down from CO to CO, is one presented by Ellice
and Rosa McDonald, Jr., of Clan Donald):
"A body of Highlanders, mostly
MacDonells, and partly disbanded soldiers of the Glengarry
Fencible Regiment, with their families and immediate
connections, are upon the point of quitting their present place
of abode, with a design of following into Upper Canada some of
their relatives who have already established themselves in that
Province ..."
The late Right Rev. Monsignor Ewen J. Macdonald, VG MC ("Father
Ewen") would remark in an address given on the Diocese of Alexandria
(in Glengarry, Stormont, Canada):
"The early Scot settlers were, for
the greatest part, Roman Catholics, The Catholic Clans,
notably Glengarry and Clan Ranald, were faithful to the Stuart
cause. Their story of devotion and heroism is familiar to all.
They suffered the "Disarming Acts", the "Proscribing Acts" and
"Jurisdiction Acts", and intolerable conditions generally,
forced them to leave their Highland glens.
"And so they came
to this new world, to the wilderness, and for a large proportion
of the people of Glengarry and Stormont. were for several
generations necessarily shut out from intercourse with the rest
of the world, the world of newspaper and magazine. For them the
art of reading had not killed the art of story-telling, so that
stories and traditions were handed down over the years and a
heritage was protected."
In Glengarry, Canada,
there still is spoken, and indeed taught, the Gaelic language.
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