Page xviii, [line 20], ‘September 3rd’ should be ‘September 1st.’

Page xxv, [line 25], the age of Glenbucket should be ‘sixty-four,’ and at page lxi, [line 6], his age should be ‘seventy-two.’

In a letter in the Stuart Papers (Windsor), from Glenbucket to Edgar, dated St. Ouen, 21 Aug. 1747, he states his age to be seventy-four.

Page 97, [line 22 of note], ‘Clan Donald iii, 37,’ should be ‘iii, 337.’ [Transcriber’s note: found in footnote 301]

Page 164, [note 1] [Transcriber’s note: found in footnote 388], and again in Genealogical Table, [page 422], ‘Abercromby of Fettercairn’ should be ‘of Fetterneir.’

June 4, 1917.

CONTENTS

PAGE
INTRODUCTION[ix]
Papers of John Murray of Broughton[xlix]
Memorial concerning the Highlands[liii]
The late Rebellion in Ross and Sutherland[lv]
The Rebellion in Aberdeen and Banff[lvii]
Captain Daniel’s Progress[lxiv]
Prince Charles’s Wanderings in the Hebrides[lxx]
Narrative of Ludovick Grant of Grant[lxxiii]
Rev. John Grant and the Grants of Sheugly[lxxvi]
Grossett’s Memorial and Accounts[lxxviii]
The Battles of Preston, Falkirk, and Culloden[lxxxiv]
Papers of John Murray of Broughton found after Culloden [3]
Memorial Concerning the Highlands, written by Alexander Macbean, A.M., Minister of Inverness [71]
An Account of the Late Rebellion from Ross and Sutherland, written by Daniel Munro, Minister of Tain [95]
Memoirs of the Rebellion in 1745 and 1746, so far as it Concerned the Counties of Aberdeen and Banff [113]
A True Account of Mr. John Daniel’s Progress with Prince Charles Edward in the Years 1745 and 1746, written by himself [167]
Neil Maceachain’s Narrative of the Wanderings of Prince Charles in the Hebrides [227]
A Short Narrative of the Conduct of Ludovick Grant of Grant during the Rebellion [269]
The Case of the Rev. John Grant, Minister of Urquhart; and of Alexander Grant of Sheugly in Urquhart, and James Grant, his Son [313]
A Narrative of Sundry Services performed, together with an Account of Money disposed in the Service of Government during the late Rebellion, by Walter Grossett [335]
Letters and Orders from the Correspondence of Walter Grossett [379]
A Short Account of the Battles of Preston, Falkirk, and Culloden, by Andrew Lumisden, then Private Secretary to Prince Charles [405]
APPENDICES—
I. The Jacobite Lord Sempill[421]
II. Murray and the Bishopric of Edinburgh[422]
III. Sir James Steuart[423]
IV. The Guildhall Relief Fund[429]
V. Cardinal York’s Memorial to the Pope[434]
VI. The Macdonalds[449]
VII. Tables showing Kinship of Highland Chiefs[451]
VIII. Lists of Highland Gentlemen who took part in the ’Forty-five [454]
INDEX[459]

INTRODUCTION

James Francis Edward, King James III. and VIII. of the Jacobites, the Old Pretender of his enemies, and the Chevalier de St. George of historians, was born at St. James’s Palace on 10th June 1688. On the landing of William of Orange and the outbreak of the Revolution, the young Prince and his mother were sent to France, arriving at Calais on 11th December (O.S.);[1] the King left England a fortnight later and landed at Ambleteuse on Christmas Day (O.S.). The château of St. Germain-en-Laye near Paris was assigned as a residence for the royal exiles, and this château was the home of the Chevalier de St. George for twenty-four years.