Alex wrote:
I am looking into the mckenzie family and would be pleased if you could let me have any information you have as regards the prisoners of the rebellion with that name
Hiya Alex,
Chief of the Mackenzies, Seaforth, declared loyalty to the Hanoverians, he raised several hundred Mackenzies to garrison Inverness against the rebels.
George Mackenzie, Earl of Cromarty, was head of the second most powerful Mackenzie family, with his 18 year old son John as Lieut-Colonel he raised a Jacabite regiment. Both Seaforth and Cromarty used threats of burning, hanging, and eviction to recruit. (Seaforth's wife did some recruiting for the Jacobites)
Cromarty recruited mostly from his Wester Ross estate of Coigach and the wider Lochbroom, he also got some from Easter Ross.
The Regiment fought in several battles, then was tasked with occupying Sutherland and Caithness. Ordered south to Inverness they left Dunrobin Castle in some disarray, the men ahead of the officers. The Sutherland Militia ambushed and defeated them, the officers surrendering at the castle. That was the day before the Battle of Culloden, their absence there was a contributing factor to defeat of the Rebellion.
There were some MacKenzies with other regiments, notably MacKenzie of Lentron with MacDonell of Glengary, but most Jacobite MKs were with Cromarty.
A few files on my website;
A study of interrelationships, mostly MacKenzies;
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~coigach/trees.htmA timeline of the Rebellion;
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~coigach/ardloch.htmDonald.