23 March

23 March 1746: Lieutenant-Colonel Haudring with an advance party of British dragoons and Hessian hussars clashed with Jacobite forces under Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Mercer at Inver, south of Dunkeld. The dragoons and Hessians were moving to relieve the besieged garrison of Blair Castle.1

23 March 1746: Patrick McGlashan, the innkeeper at Blair, wrote to Captain Colin Campbell of Glenure to inform him that the Argyllshire men taken prisoner by the Jacobites during the Atholl Raid on 16-17 March were being well looked after. Glenure was absent at the time of the attack on his outpost.2

Notes:

  1. The History of the Rebellion in 1745 and 1746, Extracted from the Scots Magazine, p 169. ↩︎
  2. RA CP/MAIN/12 f.424. ↩︎
Neil Ritchie
Neil Ritchie
Neil Ritchie is the founder and editor of JacobiteWars.com. Neil has a keen interest in the military history of Scotland and in particular the military history of the Civil Wars and the Jacobite Risings. He is also the editor of other online publications covering military history and defence matters. Neil can be found on Bluesky: @neilritchie.bsky.social

further reading

Balfour Stone at Killiecrankie

The Balfour Stone in the Pass of Killiecrankie supposedly marks the grave and the spot where Brigadier Barthold Balfour was killed while trying to...

Lord George Murray’s letter to Charles Edward Stuart after Culloden

On 17 April 1746, the remnants of the Jacobite army which had been defeated by the Duke of Cumberland's government forces at Culloden the...

latest

read more