Tour Scotland travel video, with Scottish music, of Achanduin Castle on ancestry visit to the North West Coast of the Island of Lismore in the Inner Hebrides. The castle was likely built by the MacDougalls around 1290 who held it throughout the fourteenth century. The castle was also thought to have been held by the Bishops of Argyll until the middle of the sixteenth century. The MacDougalls were forfeit in 1308, and lost most of their lands following the Battle of the Pass of Brander and the loss of their stronghold of Dunstaffnage Castle. Of interest to folks with ancestry, genealogy or Scottish Family Roots in Scotland who may wish to visit one day.
The surname McDougal was first found in Galloway, Gaelic: Gall-ghaidhealaibh, an area of southwestern Scotland, now part of the Council Area of Dumfries and Galloway, that formerly consisted of the counties of Wigtown and Kirkcudbright, where they were descended from Dugall eldest son of Somerled, first Lord of the Isles, and his son Duncan who received the lands of Lorn.The Clan was a bitter foe of Robert the Bruce, who made a narrow escape during one battle with the MacDougals only by discarding his cloak. The brooch of this cloak, now known as the Brooch of Lorn, is a treasured possession of the Chief of the Clan. The Clan faced heavy retaliation and was stripped of their lands once Robert the Bruce secured the Scottish throne. The lands were restored to the Clan upon the death of the king, but passed to the Stewarts in 1388 when the last member of the senior branch of MacDougals died without issue. Of interest to folks with ancestry, genealogy or Scottish Family Roots in Scotland who may wish to visit one day.
James McDougal arrived in Adelaide, Australia aboard the ship Sir Charles Forbes in 1839; Christina McDougal, aged 20, a seamstress, arrived in South Australia in 1858 aboard the ship Frenchman; Mr. McDougal, a Scottish settler travelled from Greenock by Glasgow aboard the ship Philip Laing arriving in Otago, South Island, New Zealand on 15th April 1848; Archibald McDougal settled in St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada, in 1813; Mary McDougal arrived in Nova Scotia, Canada, in 1835; Allan McDougal, aged 29, arrived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, America, in 1864.
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