Mac Queen History
This Celtic name is also given
as "Macsween", of "son of
Sweyn". They are accordingly of the same
descent as the great Clan Donald, claiming
kinship with the Irish High Kings. The Macqueens
are said to have provided a guard for a daughter
of the house of Clan Ranald who married a
Mackintosh chief, and they elected to settle
around Findhorn and became part of that
confederation of clans known as the Clans of the
Cat, or Clan Chattan. They were known as Clan
Revan, after the leader of the original escort.
The principal family became the Lairds of
Cornborough and they remained highly regarded
among the supporters of the Mac Donalds. In 1778
Lord Macdonald of Sleat wrote, "it does me
great honour to have the sons of Chieftains in
the Regiment and as the MacQueens have been
invariably attached to our family, to whom we
believe we owe our existence, I am proud of the
nomination".
The Macqueens or Macsweens
were numerous throughout the islands. The
Reverend Donald Macqueen, minister of Snizort,
was a man of such intellect that he even
impressed the great Dr. Samuel Johnson, who met
him on his visit to the Hebrides. The fortunes of
the family failed, and the chiefs are believed to
have emigrated to New Zealand and the family
scattered throughout Scotland and the
English-speaking world.
The name was not always highly
regarded, however: Robert Macqueen, a famous
Scottish judge, was elevated to the Bench with
the title, "Lord Braxfield". He was feared
for his savage sentences and his predilection for
the death penalty. One famous incident is related
where he found an old friend, and constant
adversary in a game of chess, before him on a
capital charge. He is said to have delivered the
death sentence and then looked his old friend in
the eye and declared, "and thats
checkmate to me". Professor John Macqueen is
a distinguished twentieth-century academic and
for many years held the chair of Scottish Studies
at the University of Edinburgh.
|