Mac Quarrie History
Like the names More and
Campbell, this derives from a Gaelic term of
description. Guaire, meaning noble or proud, is
the root of the clan called Macguire, Mac Guaire,
Mac Quarrie and Mac Quarie. According to
tradition, Guaire was the brother of Fingon, from
whom the Mac Kinnon chiefs descend, and the Mac
Quarrie chiefs had their seat in Ulva, which lies
off the far larger island of Mull. The first who
survives in historical records is lain of Ulva,
who witnessed a charter of the Lord of the Isles
in 1463 and died about ten years later. In the
perfidious expedition of 1609, when James VI
summoned Highland chiefs to attend the sermon of
a bishop, had them kidnapped, and compelled them
to sign the Statutes of lona, Mac Quarrie of Ulva
was among the magnates of the Isles who submitted
to this latest stroke of Stewart trickery. After
the downfall of the Lordship of the Isles the Mac
Quarries had attached themselves to the Mac Leans
of Duart, then dominant in Mull. This alliance
led to the disaster of 1651, when the Chief of
Ulva perished with so many of his men, fighting
for Charles II at Inverkeithing, whither they
had accompanied the Mac Leans.
When Johnson and Boswell
visited Ulva in 1773, Johnson found an Island of
no great extent, rough and barren, inhabited by
the Macquarrys; a clan not powerful nor numerous,
but of antiquity, which most other families are
content to reverence." They stayed with the
Chief, Lachlan Mac Quarrie, five years before he
sold his property. Boswell observed:
"M Quarries house was mean; but
we were agreeably surprised with the appearance
of the master, whom we found to be intelligent,
polite, and much a man of the world." The
visitors were equally impressed by the adjacent
island of Staffa that he owned, later to become
so famous for the strange rock formation of
Fingals cave and the music which
Mendelssohn wrote for it.
The descendants of the last
laird of Ulva distinguished themselves in the
army and in India; but the most famous of all was
his cousin Lachian Mac Quarie (1762-1824). Born
in Ulva, he rose to the rank of Major-General and
then returned to buy himself an estate in Mull.
After Captain Bligh had been dismissed from the
post of Governor of New South Wales, with the
assistance of John Mac Arthur, General Mac Quarie
was appointed to succeed him. Although Mac Arthur
soon became his arch-enemy, Mac Quarie was not
prevented from performing immense services to
Australia. He restored order, promoted education,
road building and exploration, and introduced
stern Sabbatarian rules. This ugly feature of
Calvinism was perhaps excusable as an aid to
promoting an orderly society that was largely
composed of transported convicts. In his efforts
to build a better world for them when they were
emancipated, Governor Mac Quarie earned well the
title that he shares with his rival Mac Arthur,
as a Father of Australia.
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