Old photograph of cottages in Port Appin fishing village in Argyll, Scotland. Elizabeth Macquarie, maiden name Campbell, wife of the fifth governor of New South Wales, Australia, was born in the area. During his term the governor named the towns of Appin and Airds after his wife's birthplace and her family's estate respectively. The Appin Murder occurred on 14 May 1752 near Appin in the west of Scotland, and it resulted in what is often held to be a notorious miscarriage of justice. It occurred in the tumultuous aftermath of the Jacobite Rising of 1745. The murder inspired events in Robert Louis Stevenson's novel Kidnapped. On 14 May 1752, Colin Roy Campbell of Glenure, 44, the government-appointed Factor to the forfeited estates of the Stewart Clan in North Argyll, Scotland, was shot in the back by a marksman in the wood of Lettermore near Ballachulish. The search for the killer targeted the local Clan, the Jacobite Stewarts of Appin, who had recently suffered evictions on Campbell's orders. James Stewart was arrested for the crime and tried for the murder. Although it was clear at the trial that James was not directly involved in the assassination, he had a solid alibi, he was found guilty as an accessory; an aider and abetter, by a jury consisting of people from the locality where the crime occurred. The presiding judge was pro Hanoverian Archibald Campbell, 3rd Duke of Argyll, Chief of Clan Campbell. Eleven Campbell clansmen were on the 15 man jury. James Stewart was hanged on 8 November 1752 on a specially commissioned gibbet above the narrows at Ballachulish, now near the south entrance to the Ballachulish Bridge. He died protesting his innocence and recited the 35th Psalm before mounting the scaffold. To this day in the Highlands, it remains known as " The Psalm of James of the Glens. "
All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.
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