Rob
Roy MacGregor (1671 – 1734)
In Victorian
times, the people were enthralled by the novels of Sir Walter Scott,
who portrayed a man called Rob Roy in his stories …a dashing and
chivalrous outlaw.
The truth however was a little less glamorous
of course.
For centuries the ‘Wild Macgregors’, cattle
rustlers and brigands to a man, were the plague of the Trossachs in
Scotland.
The most famous, or infamous member of the clan
was Robert Macgregor, who acquired the name of ‘Roy’ early in life
due to his mop of red curly hair.
The Wild Macgregors earned their name and
living through ‘cattle lifting’, and extracting money from people,
in exchange for offering them protection from thieves.
In the early eighteenth-century, Rob Roy
Macgregor had established a flourishing protection racket, charging
farmers an average 5% of their annual rent …to ensure that their
cattle remained safe.
He had complete control over the other raiders
in Argyll, Stirling and Perth, and so could guarantee that any
cattle stolen from his customers would be returned to them.
Those who did not pay regretted it …as he had
them stripped of all they possessed.
Rob Roy was not the sort of man to argue with!
Apart form leading a raid in the Lowland parish
of Kippen in 1691, his early days were spent peacefully as a drover,
buying and selling Highland cattle, under the patronage of the Duke
of Montrose.
But 1712 was not a good year and Rob Roy lost
most of his capital; as there was a ‘slump’ in the cattle market.
However he was not deterred, and absconded with Ł1000 that had been
invested in the business by various chieftains, and became a cattle
thief.
He stole most of the cattle from his earlier
benefactor, the Duke of Montrose.
The Duke was not happy about this especially as
his archenemy the Duke of Argyll was supporting Rob Roy, and giving
him refuge in Glenshira, not far from Inverary. Montrose took his
revenge by seizing Macgregor’s house and throwing his wife and four
young sons out into the depths of winter.
Following his annus horribilis of 1712,
Rob Roy was accused of fraudulent bankruptcy, and in 1715 he was to
be found trailing in the wake of the rebel army of the deposed
Stuarts at Sheriffmuir, waiting patiently for any booty that he
could lay his hands on.
The end came when he had to surrender to the
Duke of Atholl in 1717, but he managed to escape, probably through
the protection of the Duke of Argyll, but he was eventually caught
and imprisoned again.
On the point of being transported to Barbados
in 1727, he received a pardon and decided, as he was not getting any
younger (he was now in his mid-fifties) that it was time to settle
down.
This he did and lived the rest of his life as a
peaceful, law-abiding citizen …well, apart from the odd duel or two.
The same cannot be said about his violent sons,
James and Rob Oig (Robert the Younger), but that is another story!
Suggested reading - in association with Amazon.co.uk

Rob
Roy MacGregor: His Life and Times
W.H. Murray |
 Rob
Roy
Sir Walter Scott |
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EPC