Bernard's history

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Historical input from Bernard Gilchrist

                           MACLACHLAN


                 Extract from "Scottish Clans and Tartans" by Ian
         Grimble.  MacLachlan " is one of the clans which descends
         according to tradition, fortified by a Gaelic manuscript of
         1450, from the oldest traceable family in Europe.  The line of
         Lachlan passed, according to this tradition, through the
         historical O'Neill kings from Niall of the Nine Hostages, who
         was High King of Ireland in 400,.   Aedh, younger grandson of
         King Flaithbertach, married a Scottish princess who was the
         heiress of Cowal and Knapdale.  In about 1238, their descendant
         in these properties, Gilpatrick son of Gilchrist, witnessed a
         charter by which one of their cousins increased the endowments
         of Paisley Abbey.  Gilpatrick was the father of Lachlan Mor
         (Lachlan the Big) from whom the clan takes its name though it
         descends in the male line from the house of O'Neill."

                The clan lands, to this day, lie within the Cowal
         Peninsula, on the south side of Loch Fyne, opposite Inverary on
         the north side of the loch, which is the seat of the very much
         larger and more powerful Clan Campbell.   Here, Castle Lachlan
         lies within Strathlachlan through which runs the Lachlan Water.

                "Gil", as the prefix to a name, indicated that the
         bearer was follower, devotee or servant to "St Patrick" or
         "Christ".  These devotees were succeeded by Lachlan Mor and
         then naming harked back to the older form in his son Gillescop
         MacLachlan but by that time the familiar clan name had become
         established.  In 1536, then current chief Lachlan MacLachlan
         visited France in company with the Campbell Earl of Argyll for
         the marriage of James V to Madeleine of Valois.

                The MacLachlan chief gave support to Robert Bruce and
         attended the King's first Parliament at St. Andrews in 1308.
         Friendship with the Campbell's also brought benefit as that
         clan steadily expanded its influence throughout Argyll.  However
         the MacLachlans were supporters of the Stewart kings and
         probably fought at Killiecrankie in 1689.   They were present
         among the forces of the old Chevalier in 1715 and the clan
         rallied to Prince Charles in 1745, fighting at the battle of
         Culloden.  Another chief Lachlan MacLachlan was aide-de-camp to
         the Prince during the campaign and, leading the clan into
         battle on the day of Culloden, was shot from his saddle by a
         cannonball and killed.  Castle Lachlan was bombarded from the
         sea and left in ruins.  However, their chief having been killed,
         he was no longer a target for attainment, and the clan escaped
         the worst of the harm that followed he defeat of Culloden.  The
         long-standing friendship with the Campbells probably deflected
         some of the potential damage too.   Nevertheless it was a period
         of great misery in the Highlands and members of the clan
         MacLachlan fled from their former lands, some seeking refuge in
         Ireland.


                         MACLACHLAN - GILCHRIST

                  Ancestors who left Strathlachlan for Ireland after
         1745, initially and for the hundred or so years of their time
         in that country, probably followed a pattern of life very
         little different from the one they had followed previously in
         Scotland.  No written record from that time in Ireland has so
         far been obtained and one is dependent on what has been
         reported by just two people- Sidney Harry Gilchrist (1888-1978)
         and his sister Dorothy Ellenea Wilson (1906- ). They were most
         likely to have been Roman Catholic and there may be Church
         records from the area where they are reported to have lived,
         near Lough Ree on the Shannon in Central Ireland.

                  As incomers these ancestors would have had no claim on
         any particular piece of land being historically a thousand
         years away from any involvement in Ireland by their
         forebearers.  Though they shared a similar language and culture
         with their new country and there must have been a significant
         level of trading between Scotland and Ireland at the time, they
         would be very much incomers when it came to taking over a piece
         of land on which to live and to cultivate crops.  It may have
         been a case of accepting what they could get.  The population
         of Ireland was rising rapidly at the time and was to reach a
         peak some one hundred years later in the famine decade 1840 to
         1850 brought on by blighting of potato crops on which the
         populace was largely dependent.  The MacLachlans in Ireland
         must have suffered with the rest.

                  General conditions in Ireland, brought to a head by
         the famine, caused the displacement of many people from Ireland
         to other countries.  Gilchrist ancestors moved the short
         distance to England where the Industrial Revolution was making
         Manchester a place of great opportunity and were to end up
         living in the northern sector of the city.  The timing of that
         move, and who were the individuals in the Gilchrist line to
         carry out the move, are uncertain.   Equally in doubt is the
         date of the adoption of the name "Gilchrist" as a surname.
         However, it is likely that the move to Manchester and the
         establishment of the name had been effected by 1860.

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