CLAN
GORDON
(Adams)
Condensed from Highland Clans of Scotland
George Eyre-Todd, 1923
Through the origin of the name and family of Gordon has often been debated, the wight of evidence favors the
assumption that the ancestor of the house came from the manor of Gourdon in Normandy about the time of the
Norman Conquest, and that he or a descendant was one of the feudal settlers encouraged to come to Scotland in the
days of Malcolm Canmore and his sons. Early in the twelfth century, at any rate, according to Chalmers' Caledonia,
the ancestor of the race is found settled on the lands of Gordon, in Berwickshire. A tradition runs that the first of the
name to cross the Tweed was a valiant knight, a favorite of Malcolm Canmore, who, having killed a wild boar which
seriously distressed that district of the Border, obtained from the King a grant of these lands, to which he gave his
own surname, and, settling there, assumed the boar's head for his amoral bearing in commemoration of his exploit.
For three centuries at least the heads of the house were most closely associated with Border history, and when at last
they removed their chief seat to the North of Scotland they left scions of the race, like the Gordons of Lochinvar,
afterwards Viscounts Kenmore, and Gordon of Earlston, to carry on the traditions of the name in the south. In the
Berwickshire parish, a little north of the village of West Gordon, a rising ground now covered with of the village of
West Gordon, a rising ground new covered with plantation, but still called "the Castles" and showing the remains of
fortification is pointed out as the early seat of the family. The original Huntly was a village now vanished in the
western border of Gordon parish, where two farms are still known respectively as Huntly and Huntly-wood.
In 1270 Adam de Gordon took part in the Crusade organized by Louis XL. of France. From this fact the Adam
family are said to derive their crest and motto.
In 1309 Sire Adam de Gordon, in return for giving up certain temporal claims, obtained from the monks of Kelso
leave to possess a private chapel with its oblations here. It was this Sir Adam de Gordon who along with Sir Edward
Mabuisson was sent to Rome by King Robert the Bruce in 1320 as the bearer of the famous letter to the Pope drawn
up at Arbrouth by the Scottish barons, to declare the real temper and rights of the Scottish people as against the
claims of the English Edwards. And it was this same Sir Adam who, in recognition of his services, appears to have
received from Bruce a grant of the lands of Strathbogie in Aberdeenshire, which had previously belonged to that
king's enemies. Strathbogie was one of the five ancient lordships or than ages which comprised Aberdeenshire, and
covered an area of a hundred and twenty square miles.. Sire Adam fell at the battle of Halidon Hill in 1333. In 1357
Sir Adam's grandson, Sir John de Gordon, obtained a confirmation from David II. of King Robert's grant of these
lands, and he or his successor obtained another confirmation from Robert II. in 1376.
The chief interests of the family, however, were still on the Border, and in the following year the Earl of March,
with whom was Sir John de Gordon, having burned the town of Roxburgh, and the English Borderers having
retaliated on Sir John de Gordon's lands, the latter crossed the Border, carried off a great booty, and, when
intercepted by a force twice the strength of his own, in a desperate affray overthrew Sir John de Lilburn at Carham.
In the following year, after another fierce conflict, Sir John had a chief hand in defeating and taking captive Sir
Thomas de Musgrave, the English Governor of Berwick. Finally, he was one of the knights who took part with the
young Earl of Douglas in the famous encounter with the forces of the Earl of Northumberland on the moonlit field of
Otterbourne in 1388, and there he fell.
In that famous encounter, as the well-known ballad puts it,
The Gordons good, in English blood, They steeped their hose and shoon
Fourteen years later, in the days of King Robert III., took place the great battle of Homildon Hill, in which again
the leaders on the two sides were an Earl of Douglas and Hotspur, son of the Earl of Northumberland. On this
occasion occurred a chivalric episode. Sir John Swinton, seeing the carnage made in the close Scottish ranks by the
English bowmen, couched his lance and was about to charge. At that moment Sir Adam de Gordon, who had long
been at deadly feud with him, knelt at his feet, begged his forgiveness, and asked the honor of being knighted by so
brave a leader. Swinton gave him the accolade and tenderly embraced him, then the two, at the head of their
followers, dashed upon the English. Alas! their bravery was not followed up; they both fell, and the battle was lost.
Sir Adam, who was the son of Sir John de Gordon mentioned above, was the last male of his line. By his wife,
daughter of Sir William de Keith, Marischal of Scotland, he had an only daughter, Elizabeth. This lady married
Alexander, second son of William Seton of Seton, and from that day to this the heads of the great house of Gordon
have been Setons in the male line, these Setons being, like the Gordons themselves, descended from one of the
Norman settlers planted in Scotland by King David I.
In right of his wife, Alexander Seton was known as Lord of Gordon and Huntly, and his son, another Alexander,
assuming the name and arms of Gordon, and marrying a daughter of Lord Crichton, Chancellor of Scotland, was
created Earl of Huntly by James II. in 1449 with limitation to his heirs male by Lord Crichton's daughter. The Earl
had been twice previously married, first to a granddaughter of the first Earl Marischal, by whom he acquired a
great estate, but had no children, and secondly to the heiress of Sir John Hay of Tullibody, by whom he had a son,
Sir Alexander Seton, who inherited his mother's estates and was ancestor of the Setons of Touch.
The Earl had in 1424 been one of the hostages sent to England as security for the ransom of James I., and his son
George, the second Earl, married the Princess Joanna, daughter of that King, from whom all the later heads of the
house have the royal Stewart blood in their veins. Earl George's second son, Adam, Lord of Aboyne, marrying
Elizabeth, Countess of Sutherland, became Earl of Sutherland in her right, and ancestor of the great Sutherland
family, while the third son, Sir William Gordon, became ancestor of the Gordons of Gight, and so of George
Gordon, Lord Byron, in the nineteenth century. The eldest son, Alexander, the third Earl of Huntly, was he who
before the battle of Sauchieburn, counselled James III. to come to terms with his rebellious nobles, but, his advice
being overruled, retired like the Earl Marischal and other nobles to his estate. Huntly nevertheless took part at
Sauchieburn. Two years later Huntly was appointed Lieutenant of James IV. north of the Water of Esk, and from
this time the Gordon family figures as perhaps the most powerful in the north of Scotland.
Shortly afterwards occurred the curious episode of Perkin Warbeck's visit to Scotland. This "Prince of England,"
as he was called, was received with royal honors by James IV. as one of the sons of Edward IV., slain by Richard III.
in the Tower. The Scottish King addressed him as cousin, gave tournaments and other courtly entertainments in his
honor, and bestowed upon him the hand of the Earl of Huntly's daughter, the beautiful Catherine Gordon, who was
through her mother, daughter of James I. of the blood royal of Scotland. It is of interest in this connection to note
that when Perkin Warbeck was finally sent out of the kingdom, setting sail from Ayr in the ship of Robert Barton,
he was accompanied by his beautiful wife, who remained faithfully by his side throughout all his future reverses of
fortune. After his execution in 1498 she was kindly treated by Henry VII., who placed her in charge of his queen,
and gave her a pension. She was known by the English populace as the White Rose of Scotland, and afterwards
married Sir Matthew Craddock, ancestor of the Earls of Pembroke. Her tomb is still to be seen in the old church at
Swansea.
When insurrection broke out in the Western Isles in 1505, the Earl of Huntly was sent to quell the northern area,
and he stormed and took Torquil MacLeod's stronghold of Stornoway. Lastly, on Flodden's fatal field, Huntly, along
with the Earl of Home, led the Scottish vanguard, and opened the battle with the furious charge which routed the
English van, the only part of the action in which the Scots were successful. Sir William, the Earl's younger brother,
fell in battle, but Lord Huntly himself survived till 1528. His eldest son John, Lord Gordon, who died in 1517,
married Margaret, natural daughter of James IV., and it was his elder son, George, who succeeded as fourth Earl.
This nobleman took an active part in the affairs of Scotland in the times of King James V., Mary of Lorraing, and
Mary Queen of Scots. He was made Chancellor of the kingdom in 1546. He also, two years later, obtained a grant of
the earldom of Moray, but the acquisition led to an act which has left a stain upon his name, and it ultimately for a
time brought about the complete eclipse of his house. Among other things, the new earldom made him feudal
superior of the Clan Mackintosh lands in Nairnshire, in addition to those he already controlled in Badenoch. Huntly
appears to have endeavoured to secure complete control of his feudal vassal by getting him to sign a bond of
manrent, but the chief, William Mackintosh, refused to bind himself. The Earl then proceeded to deprive
Mackintosh of his office of Deputy Lieutenant. Presently a certain Litchlan Malcolmson who owed Mackintosh a
grudge, saw in the difference between him and the Earl a means of possible profit and revenge. He accordingly
brought a charge against the chief of conspiring to take Huntly's life. Mackintosh was accordingly seized, and
thrown into a dungeon at Bog of Gight. Thence Huntly carried him to Aberdeen, tried him there in a court packed
with his own followers, and had him condemned to forfeiture and execution. The provost, it is said, convened the
town in arms to prevent the execution, and accordingly Huntly carried his victim to his own castle of Strathbogie.
There, it is said he left him to his lady to deal with, and that lady - Elizabeth, daughter of Robert, Lord Keith -
promptly had him beheaded. This was in 1550. Sir Walter Scott and Skene in his Highlanders of Scotland give a
highly picturesque account of this incident, but the fact as above stated appears to be authentic. Nemesis came to
Hunlty later. He was looked upon as the main champion of the Catholic faith. In this character his interests were
opposed to those of the Queen's brother, James, and when Mary conferred upon the latter the northern earldoms,
first of Mar and then of Moray, Huntly felt compelled to support his own interest by force of arms. His grandfather
had been made hereditary keeper of the castle of Inverness in 1495, and when Queen Mary went thither in the
course of the royal progress which she undertook to establish her brother in his earldom, she found the gates of the
castle closed in her face by Huntly's castellan. In the upshot the castle was taken and the castellan hanged, and
Mary, marching eastward through Huntly's country, encountered his with her army on the slopes of Corrichie of
Ceeside. The struggle ended disastrously for the Gordons. The Earl, a stout and full-blooded man, having been
taken prisoner, was set upon a horse before his captor, when he was suddenly seized with apoplexy and fell to the
ground dead. His body, produced in Parliament in a mean sack-cloth dress, was condemned to forfeiture of titles
and estates. His son, Sir John Gordon, was butchered by a bungling executioner at the Cross of Aberdeen, while
Mary was compelled by her brother to look on at the horrid end of the man whom, it is said, she had once dearly
loved. At the same time George, the eldest surviving son, sentenced in the barbarous fashion of the time to be
hanged, drawn, and quartered, only escaped by the special clemency of the Queen, who, however, appointed him
Chancellor in 1565, and reversed the sentence of forfeiture against his house.
This fifth Earl married Ann Hamilton, daughter of the Regent Earl of Arran, herself a descendant of King James
II., and so established still another connection with the royal house of Stewart.
Amid the feuds between the houses of the north at that time a striking incident stands out, and forms the subject of
a well-known ballad, "Edom o' Gordon."
The rivalry, however, between the houses of Huntly and Moray was not over, and at the hands of George Gordon,
the sixth Earl, it culminated in a deed which has left a vivid record in ballad and tradition. The Regent Moray's only
daughter had married James Stewart, a descendant of that Murdoch, Duke of Albany, executed by James I. on
Stirling heading hill, and in right of his wife Stewart had assumed the title of Earl of Moray. Popular tradition,
enshrined in the ballad, asserts that James VI. was jealous of his Queen's admiration for the Bonnie Earl, and that
Huntly was afforded facilities for accomplishing his family revenge. The subject was dealt with by the late Andrew
Lang in an interesting paper. The upshot was that while Moray was staying at his house of Donibristle near Culross
on the Forth, it was suddenly assailed by Huntly. Moray escaped, but as he fled along the shore his long yellow hair
caught the light of the burning mansion, and betrayed him. After he was struck down Huntly reached the spot, and
being called upon by his followers to take an active part in the slaughter, slashed Moray across the face; whereupon
the latter is said to have exclaimed bitterly, "You have spoilt a better face than your own." Colour is lent to the
popular tradition of the King's concern in the act by the circumstance that, eight years later, in 1599, Huntly was
created Marquess, as well as Earl of Ensie, Viscount Inverness, and baron of seven other lordships.
In 1594 Huntly had been accused, along with the Earls of Angus and Errol, of conspiring with the King of Spain for
the restoration of the Roman Catholic religion in Scotland. The young Earl of Argyll was sent against him with four
or five thousand men, but on his way towards Strathbogie, on the confines of Glenlivet, he was confronted by
Huntly and Errol at the head of a force of fifteen hundred. Argyll took up a good position on the side of Benrinnes,
but he proved an indifferent leader, and in the end himself carried the tidings of his defeat to the king at Dundee. As
a result the King himself was forced by the Protestant nobles to lead an army into the north, where he demolished
Errol's castle of Slaines, and Huntly's stronghold of Strathbogie, said to have been the finest house of the time in
Scotland. It was not long, however, as we have seen, till Huntly received the ample amends of the King. Perhaps one
of the reasons for the favor shown him was the fact that he married Lady Henrietta Stewart, eldest daughter of the
King's favorite, Esme, Duke of Lennox.
His son George, second Marquess, was a staunch adherent of Charles I. In early life he commanded a company of
gens d'armes in France, and in 1632, during his father's lifetime, was created Viscount Aboyne. He refused to
subscribe the National Covenant in 1638, and in consequence was driven from Strathbogie by the Marquess of
Montrose, then a general on the Covenant side. For two days at that time the Marquess's second son, James, held
the Bridge of Dee at Aberdeen against Montrose, but in the end the latter succeeded by stratagem. He sent his
cavalry up the river bank, as if to cross at a higher point, and the Gordons on their side rode up to oppose the
crossing. While doing so they were cut to pieces by the canon of Montrose, and as a result the bridge was lost and
Aberdeen captured by the Covenanters. A Covenanting ballad, "Bonnie John Seton," which celebrates the occasion,
refers curiously to the effect of the unaccustomed cannon fire upon the Highlanders of that time.
The Highland men are clever men
At handling sword and gun;
But yet are they too naked men
To bear the cannon's rung.
For the cannon's roar in a summer night
Is like thunder in the air;
There's not a man in Highland dress
Can face the cannon's rair.
Huntly was captured and carried to Edinburgh, and afterwards outlawed and excommunicated, but, along with
Montrose, who by this time had taken the King's side, he stormed Aberdeen in 1645. After the defeat of Montrose at
Philiphaugh in that year he raised forces for Charles I. in the north, but was captured by Colonel Menzies at
Delnabo, and though his wife was a sister o the Marquess of Argyll, then head of the Scottish Government, he was
beheaded at Edinburgh by the Covenanters in 1649.
The Marquess's eldest son, George, Lord Gordon, had joined Montrose and fallen at the battle of Alford in 1645,
and his second son, James, who had inherited his father's Viscountry of Aboyne, and had also joined Montrose in
the interest of Charles I., during that young monarch's short reign in Scotland in 1651.
It was his only son George who succeeded as fourth Marquess in 1653, when he was no more than ten years old.
After seeing military service with the French under Turenne at the battle of Strasbourg and afterwards under the
Prince of orange, he was, at the recommendation of Claverhouse, created Duke of Gordon in 1684. James VII.
appointed him Privy Councillor and captain of Edinburgh Caste, but at the Revolution in 1689, he surrendered the
stronghold to the Convention of Estates. His wife, a daughter of the Duke brought an action against her for
restitution of conjugal rights. It was she who in 1711 sent the Faculty of Advocates a medal bearing the head of the
Chevalier, with the motto "Reddite."
Naturally her son, Alexander, the second Duke was an ardent Jacobite. During the Rising of 1715, while Marquess
of Huntly, he joined the forces of the Earl of Mar at Perth with two thousand three hundred men, and he was
present at the battle of Sheriffmuir; but he received pardon and succeeded to the Kukedom in 1716. He was Grand
Duke of Tuscany, after whom he named his eldest son, and he received presents from Pope Clement XII.
It was his eldest son, Cosmo George, who was head of the house during the critical period of the Jacobite Rebellion
of 1745. While the Duke himself did not join the rising under Prince Charles Edward, his brother, Lord Lewis
Gordon, did, and led a strong contingent of the clansmen in the campaign which ended at Culloden. The importance
in popular estimation of the part he played is commemorated in the well-known ballad, "Lord send Lewie Gordon
Hame." Another of the Duke's brothers, Lord Adam Gordon, was afterwards M.P. for Aberdeenshire and
Kincardineshire and Commander of the Froces in Scotland. The Duke himself died in France in 1752.
His eldest son, Alexander, the fourth Duke, was described by Kaimes as the greatest subject in Britain. He was
made a peer of the United Kingdom in 1784 and was a Knight of the Thistle and Lord Keeper of Scotland. But he
probably remains most famous as the author of the well-known song, "Cauld Kail in Aberdeen," and by reason of
his wife, the "Gay Duchess of Gordon," who was the chief of Maxwell of Monreith, she is said to have shown her
high spirit as a girl by riding with her sister down the High Street of Edinburgh on a sow's back. When the Duke
was raising his regiments of Gordon Highlanders to take part in the American war, she is said to have recruited a
battalion in a single day by standing at the cross of Aberdeen with the King's shilling between her lips as a prize for
every lad bold enough to come and take it. And it was then who, when Robert Burns paid his last momentous visit
to Edinburgh in 1780, set the seal upon his fame by her countenance and hospitality.
A strange contrast to Duke Alexander was his third brother, that Lord George Gordon who, beginning Life in the
Navy, and afterwards entering Parliament, acquired, notoriety as an agitator and leader of the No-Popery Riots of
1780, afterwards becoming a Jew, and dying at last in Newgate Gaol.
The fifth Duke, George, a general officer, Governor of Edinburgh Castle, and G.C.B., was the last of his line. His
statue as "The Last Duke of Gordon," erected by his Duchess, stands at the cross at Aberdeen. As Marquess of
Huntly he had a distinguished military career, commanding the regiment now known as the Gordon Highlanders, in
Spain, Corsica, Ireland, and Holland, where he was severely wounded, and commanding a division in the Walcheren
expedition of 1809. At his death in 1836, the dukedom became extinct. Most of the estates, including Gordon Castle
near Fochabers, passed to his eldest sister, Charlotte, wife of the fourth Duke of Richmond, whose son, a
distinguished statesman, was in 1876 created Duke of Gordon.
In 1836 the Marquessate passed to the late Duke of Gordon's kinsman, Gorge, fifth Earl of Aboyne. This nobleman
was descended from Lord Charles Gordon, fourth son of the second Marquess, who, in consideration of his loyalty
and service, was created Earl of Aboyne by Charles II. at the restoration in 1660. Aboyne Castle on Deeside, from
which he took his title, had belonged in early times to the Bissets, the Knights-Templar, and the Earl of Mar, but
had been in the possession of the Gordon since 1388. A popular ballad "The Earl of Aboyne," appears to refer to
some incident of the first Earl's time at the Court of the Merry Monarch. It describes the Earl's return from
London, and the great preparations made by his wife to receive him; but alas! he let slip a word of his too gay going
on with some fair damsel in the south. The result is a quarrel, the Earl rides away, and the lady's pleading are sent
after him in vain. It is only when these are followed by news of her death that he turns northward again.
My nobles a', ye'll turn your steeds
That comely face I may see then:
Frae the horse to the hat a' maun be black,
And mourn for bonnie Peggy Irvine!
It was the first Earl who built the present castle of Aboyne.
GORDON ASSOCIATED NAMES
Associated names have a hazy history. Sometimes they had more than one origin; also clouding the precise location
of a particular surname might be that name's proscription or of course a migrant population. Even the spelling of
surnames was subject to great variations, shifting from usually Latin or Gaelic and heeding rarely to consistent
spelling. In early records there can be several spellings of the same name. Undoubtedly contributing to this
inconsistency is the handwriting in official records, which was often open to more than one spelling interpretation.
With regard to the 'Mac' prefix, this was, of course, from the Gaelic meaning, son of. It wasn't long before it was
abbreviated to 'Mc' or 'M', until we have reached the position now where there are more 'Mc's' than 'Mac's'.
ADAM, ADAMS, Sir Adam de Gordon was the Clan Gordon founder, Adam sub-prior of Melrose Abbey became
abbot of Cupar, 1189. Adam, a witness to charter of lands of Kynemend (Annandale) about 1194 - 1214. Adam, in
1201, was abbot of Newbattle.
ADAMSON Son of Adam. John Adamson of Berewyke, took loyalty oath, 1296. Colin Adamson served as Aberdeen
provost, 1340. Cuthbert Adamson was notary public in Glasgow, 1587.
ADDIE, EADIE, EDDIE, EDIE Diminutive of Adam. William Ade of Inverkeithing rendered homage in 1296.
Andreas Ade recorded as resident of Edinburgh, 1357. Adam Reid, attendant to King James IV in 1513, called Ade
Rede. Salmon Aedie was Aberdeen burgess, 1607. William Aidy, in 1644, served as Marischal College regent,
Aberdeen.
AITCHISON, ATKINSON Son of Adam. Aitchison is from diminutive Atty. Atkinson roots from Adkin. Both
names originated in East Lothian. John Atkynsoun listed in North Berwick, 1387. John Atkynsoun appears as
forestaller, Aberdeen, 1402. Marc Aichesone in shown as a 'custumar' of the Newhavin in Preston, 1590.
AIKEN, AITKEN, ATKIN, ATKINS From Adam, with the suffix 'kin' used and the 'd' of 'Ad' sharpened to 't'.
Andrew Atkin, Aberdeen witness, 1469. William Ackin, Brechin witness, 1476. Andree Atkyn, Aberdeen, 1491.
BARRIE From Barrie in Angus. Sometimes confused with Barr, as early spelling 'Barre', is same. Suet Barry,
Aberdeen, 1408. John Barry, Aberdeen burgess, 1408. Henry Barry, Glaswegian notary public, 1473.
CANNON Diminutive of Conn. Old surname in Aberdeenshire and Banffshire. In 16th-17th centuries, families of
this name in Glenbuchat. Followers of earls of Huntly. Took part in battle of Glenlivat, 1594.
CRAIG In earliest records appears in several places, so likely originated in more than one place. For many years a
Craig family seated at Graigfintray Castle, near Kildrummie. William de Crag served as an Aberdeen councillor,
1398. Richard de Crag was Dundee vicar, 1443.
CROMBIE This surname has Aberdeenshire origins; derived from Crombie, parish of Auchterless, Aberdeenshire,
with the Gaelic 'b' silent and omitted in early spelling and local pronunciation. Robert Crumby was Brechin chapel,
1450. David Crommy, Aberdeen burgess, 1516. Thomas Crommy served as an Aberdeen witness, 1567.
CULLEN From nameplace, Cullen, Banffshire. John de Culane was Aberdeen baillie, 1440. Andrew Coleyn or
Colen, listed as Aberdeen merchant, 1438. John of Culane, 'abbot of boneacord', 1486.
DARG, DARGE Likely an English surname. John Darge, North Berwick tenement owner, 1477. Andrew Darg,
Aberdeen burgess, 1612. Janet Darge recorded as Dundee resident, 1613. Apparently common surname in Glenlivet.
DORWARD, DURWARD Originally meant door-ward to the king, a very prestigious office. This hereditary post
rested with the de Lundins, who migrated to Aberdeenshire. After prolonged dispute they gained large Dee Valley
holdings. Alan Durward from this family an important 13th century figure in Scottish history. Thomas de Durward,
Arbroath burgess, 1452. John Durewarde was Brechin landholder, 1508.
DUFF From Gaelic Dubh. Duncan Duff served as charter witness at Beauly in 1275. Machaebus Duff, in 1342, was
cullen burgess. Paul Duff recorded in Cawdor, 1414.
ESSLEMONT From name of place in Ellon parish, Aberdeenshire. Andrew Esslemont recorded in Newtown of
Damyards of Delgaty, near Turriff, 1760. William Esslemont died in Cottoun of Crumminour, Banffshire, 1829.
GARDINER, GARDNER From Accupation. Latin equivalent ortolanus, appears in name of Rogerus Ortolanus,
Peebles, 1296. Robert Gardner was notary public in Dunblane, 1426. William Gardennar was Glasgow resident,
1486.
GARRIOCH, GARRIOCK, GARRICK Orkney surname from 1427. That year Henry Garoch was a prominent
islander. An Aberdeenshire migrant introduced name variant.
GEDDES From lands of Geddes, Nairnshire. An offshoot family had lands in Kirkurd, Peeblesshire, 1406. Master
Matthew of Geddes was a churchman who appeared in the records, 1405. Matthew Geddas, in 1470, served as
canon of Aberdeen.
GERRIE Abbreviation of Garrich, etc. Donald Gerrie, condolick, Dunblane resident, 1652. Gerrie recorded in
Thursatter, Caithness, 1661.
HUNTLY Originally from Huntlie, Berwickshire. Robert de Hunteleghe, of Roxburghe county rendered homage,
1296. Through Gordon association, Huntly, Aberdeenshire used name with Gordon border association.
JESSIMAN Perhaps from Jesmond, Newcastle-on-Tyne, England. John Jesseman and William Jessieman recorded
in Huntly, 1600. James Jessiman, Westertoun, Strathbogie resident, 1654. John Jessieman, Drumdelgie, Moray
resident, 1710.
LAURIE, LAWRIE Abbreviations from Lawrence. Edzell church dedicated to St. Laurence, the Martyr. In Stichill,
Berwickshire, records of Lauri, 1655 and Laurie, 1665.
MARR Either from place name and surname Mar in Aberdeenshire or Marr, Yorkshire. William de Mar, a witness
of grant to Kelso Abbey, 1235. James de Mar in Aberdeenshire, rendered homage, 1296. Richard Mar, in 1302-3,
present at St. Andrews inquest.
MAVER, MAVOR From Gaelic manor, a steward in various functions. Name Mavor if from Speyside. John
Mawar, Aberdeen witness, 1577. Mark Mawar, Elgin member, Scots parliament, 1593.
MELDRUM From nameplace, Meldrum or Melgedrum, Aberdeenshire, Alexander de Melgefrum, Fife witness,
1278. William de Melkedron, Aberdeen sheriff, 1292.
MILL, MILLS Abbreviation of Miln or Milne. Alexander Myll, mill tenant, Kinrech, Couper Angus, 1483. John
Myl, Arbroath carpenter, 1510. James Mill, Angus-born father of John Stuart Mill.
MILNE, MILNES Common Aberdeenshire name derived from corn-mill. John Myll, dwelling in Aberdeenshire,
1492. Robert Myll, Arbroath witness, 1528. Gilbert Milne witnesses grant of Golspe chaplaincy, 1575.
MOIR From Gaelic, mor, big. An Aberdonian suname pronounced as More. Robertus More was Aberdeen burgess,
1317. Reginald More, Elphinstone witness charter, 1341. John More, Aberdeen canon, 1366.
MORRICE,MORRIS From Maurice, which from Latin Mauricius, moor, a martyred saint, 286 AD. Robert Morse,
tenant of bishop of Moray, 1565. James Morriss, Brechin charter witness, 1512. Malcum Morris, Aberdeen burgess,
1559.
TOD, TODD Possibly from designation of fox. Double 't' spelling usual only three centuries back. Baldwin Tod,
Landholder, Lambertoun, Berwickshire, 1270. Also appeared in Gordon, Berwickshire, Robert Tod, croft owner,
1280. John Tode, Aberdeen burgess, 1445.
TROUP From nameplace, Troup, Banffshire. Also appeared in Ayshire, John Troupe, landowner, about 1370-80.
Hamund de Troup, Lanarkshire resident, rendered homage, 1296. Hamelin de Troupe, Aberdeen clergyman, 1332.
SOME CLAN NOTABLES
Gordon, George (1810-1878) This innovative printer with more than 50 patents invented several successful presses
including the highly popular 'Franklin', later designated the 'Gordon' job press.
Gordon, Sir Arthur Hamilton (1829-1912) The youngest son of the 4th Earl of Aberdeen, he was appointed
lieutenant-governor of New Brunswick in 1861. During his tenure there he wrote' Wilderness Journeys in New
Brunswick'. As well he was governor of several other protectorates including New Zealand where he was designated
governor in 1880.
Gordon, John (1832-1904) This important military figure, from Georgia, whose grandfather came from Ayrshire,
Scotland, was a distinguished leader in the Confederate Army. He subsequently became a Georgia senator and
governor.
Gordon, Charles (1833-1885) Descended from the House of Huntly, General Gordon of Khartoum was the son of a
military officer. Following combat experience in the Crimea and China this unusual career soldier showed his
interests were much wider than military as he spent much of his free time in social work during his home posting.
When assigned to the Sudan he insisted on a huge pay cut. His humanitarian beliefs led to his resignation of this
post because the overseeing Egyptian governor-general disliked his opposition to the slave trade. In 1885 Khartum
and Gordon fell to the Mahdi's army. A day of mourning was observed in Britain for this great and unique hero.
Gordon, Sir John H. (1850-1923) This Scots emigrant became a successful Australian solicitor, who was elected to
the legislative council for the Southern District and for much of that time held cabinet office. Sir John was then
raised to the Supreme Court bench.
Gordon, Charles (1860-1937) A Canadian cleric far more noted under his pseudonym of Ralph Connor. His novels
such as The Sky Pilot from Glengarry were best sellers of the time.
Gordon, George (1870-1927) Of Scottish ancestry and Canadian birth, this dedicated archaeologist made his mark
in America where he became director of the University Museum, Philadelphia, with a special interest in American
anthropology.