The Massacre of Glencoe took place on 13 February 1692, when government troops slaughtered 38 members of the Clan MacDonald in their homes. Some survivors managed to avoid the attack and attempted to escape through the snow.


The Massacre of Glencoe, by James Hamilton (1883-1886)
© Glasgow Museums


Glencoe, 1692 by John Blake MacDonald (c.1879)
© Royal Scottish Academy of Art & Architecture

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King William wanted to make sure that the Jacobite chiefs would obey him, so he sent his soldiers into the Highlands to keep an eye on them. These soldiers built Fort William right in the middle of Lochaber.

Then King William told the Jacobite chiefs they had to make a promise to obey him. He gave them until 30 December 1691 to make their promises or else they would be punished.

MacIain, the old chief of the MacDonalds of Glencoe, waited until the very last day before he went to make his promise at Fort William. When he got there he was told he could only make his promise in front of the Sheriff of Argyll at Inveraray.

It took the old man five days to walk there through blizzards and very deep snow. When he reached Inveraray MacIain explained why he was late and made his promise to obey King William.

After that he thought everything would be fine. He was wrong. King William's government decided to make an example of the MacDonalds by killing the whole clan. They made careful plans. They sent so many soldiers to Fort William that it did not have room for all of them. Local people had to give these extra soldiers beds. 120 men, under the command of Captain Robert Campbell of Glenlyon, made their way to Glencoe, under the pretence of collecting tax in arrears. They persuaded MacIain to give them shelter, producing military documents as proof. The MacDonalds of Glencoe did not know that these soldiers would be used to kill them. Indeed, nobody knew about the plans until the very last minute.

A letter from Major Duncanson gave the soldiers in Glencoe orders to murder the families they were staying with at five o'clock in the morning of 13 February 1692. They thought the MacDonalds would be in their beds so it would be easy to kill them all. Extra soldiers from Fort William were sent to block the roads out of Glencoe to make sure that nobody could escape.

Their plan did not work. A terrible blizzard stopped the soldiers from Fort William reaching Glencoe in time. The soldiers in Glencoe got lost in the snow, so many MacDonalds escaped and hid in the mountains. 38 people were killed but about 450 escaped.

Date: 13 February 1692

Leaders:
• Robert Campbell of Glenlyon
• Alasdair MacIain, 'The Old Fox'


Captain Robert Campbell of Glenlyon, by David Scougall (c.1654)
PG 995 © National Galleries of Scotland


Portrait of a gentleman, traditionally identified as Major Robert Duncanson
Circle of John Vanderbank (London 1694-1739)


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