John MACLEOD (IV of Pabbay)

Father: Alexander MACLEOD

Family 1: Frances MACKENZIE
  1. Alexander MACLEOD
  2. Rev. Neil MACLEOD
  3. Captain Donald MACLEOD
  4. William MACLEOD
  5. Captain Alexander MACLEOD
  6. Norman MACLEOD
  7. Janet MACLEOD
Family 2: Miss BEATON
  1. Alexander MACLEOD
  2. Rev. John MACLEOD

                                                                        _Alexander Alasdair Ruadh MACLEOD _
                                                        _Neil MACLEOD _|___________________________________
                      _Norman Tarmod MacNeill MACLEOD _|
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 _Alexander MACLEOD _|
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|--John MACLEOD 
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INDEX

Notes

!SOURCE: Rev. Dr. Donald MacKinnon and Alick Morrison, THE MACLEODS -- THE GENEALOGY OF A CLAN, Section III, "MacLeod Cadet Families", Edinburgh, The Clan MacLeod Society, 1970, pp. 206, 214. John was born in the island of Pabbay, Harris, in 1696 and died one of the oldest men in Skye, at Bay in 1792. He succeeded in the farm of the tack In Pabbay and also in the stewardship of St. Kilda some time about 1727. In that year the Rev. Alexander Buchan, in his DESCRIPTION OF ST. KILDA, referred to him as follows: "The Laird of MackLeod is proprietor of this Isle (i.e., St. Kilda); and with the Bailie or Steward, who at present is one called John MackLeod, and lives all the winter in another Isle called Paba, with his family, and such as he is pleased to take along with him". [Buchan, DESCRIPTION OF ST. KILDA, 1727, p. 23.] In 1734, the Steward and his brother, norman, conveyed Lady Grange (Rachel Erskine, nee Chieseley), from the little island of Heisker, off the coast of North Uist, to the lonelier island of St. Kilda. William MacLeod of Hamer (Alias Theophilus Insulanus) also referred to John MacLeod of St. Kilda in his very interesting book, a TREATISE ON SECOND SIGHT in 1763. "John MacLeod, tacksman of Bay in the Isle of Skye, a gentleman not in the least tinctured with enthusiasm, declared to me and several others, that, in a morning before he awaked, he dreamed that a person whom he intimately knew, came into his room where he lay told him with much concern that His late Majesty, George II, of glorious memory, was departed this life, which he told directly to his spouse in bed with him. That same day the post having come on before he had well dressed, he goth the public news, in which he found his dream verified: which is the more remarkable, that the King's death was so sudden, the account of his ailment could not have travelled to many parts in England, much less have time to circulate to the most remote parts of Scotland". George II died on the 25th October 1760. In 1735, John MacLeod became factor on the MacLeod Estates in Skye, a position he held jointly with Norman MacLeod of Waterstein (son of Theophilus Insulanus, above). This position John MacLeod held until 1748. By 1743, he is the tacksman of Bay in Skye. This tack probably came into his hands as a result of his marriage with Margaret, only daughter of John Beaton or Bethune, the previous holder of the tack. Theophilus Insulanus' statement that John MacLeod lacked 'enthusiasm', indicated that he had not sympathy with the Jacobite cause. On the 8th January 1746, he, along with 14 other tacksmen, 9 of them MacLeods, signed an Address of Loyalty to their Chief in his endeavor to assist the de facto Hanoverian government of George II against Prince Charles Edward Stuart. On 14th September 1773, he dined with Dr. Johnson and James Boswell, who described him as a "substantial gentleman of the Clan". In 1775, John of Bay, along with 15 other tradesmen, 8 of whom were MacLeods, signed the following remarkable document in support of their chief, "We hereby bind and oblige ourselves not to make any demands for our principal sums for the space of 6 or 7 years barring unforeseen accidents or misfortune. We are truly sorry that the heavy buden of debts and annuities will not afford the young Chief (Norman, 23rd Chief, then aged 21) the proper maintenance equal to his forefathers and wish £300 at least to be set aside for his use". John's signature is second on the list. Two years later, the tacksmen gave a further demonstration of their attachment to the chief and their determination to save the ancestral estate of the clan from alienation. In 3 remarkable documents, the tacksmen of Harris, Skye and Glenelg entered into a voluntary obligatio to pay an additional 7 1/2 % increase of rent to the Chief. This action proves the non-feudal or family element inherent in the clan system. In 1786 John Knox visited John MacLeod at Bay and found him "a venerable person aged 90". He died at Bay in 1792, and was buried in the old churchyard of St. Mary's, Kilmuir, Dunvegan. John MacLeod married (1) Frances MacKenzie of Davochmoluag (she died in 1741), with issue.


Created by Sparrowhawk 1.0 (4/17/1996) on Mon Apr 2 10:50:29 2001