Online Encyclopedia

KILLIECRANKIE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 795 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KILLIECRANKIE  , a pass of

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Perthshire, Scotland, 34 m . N.N.W. of
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Pitlochry by the Highland railway . Beginning close to Killiecrankie station it extends southwards to the
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bridge of Garry for nearly i2 m. through the narrow, extremely beautiful, densely wooded glen in the channel of which flows the Garry . A road constructed by General Wade in 1932 runs up the pass, and between this and the
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river is the railway, built in 1863 . The
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battle of the 27th of
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July 1689, between some 3000 Jacobites under Viscount Dundee and the royal force, about 4000 strong, led by General
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Hugh Mackay, though named from the
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ravine, was not actually fought in the pass . When Mackay emerged from the
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gorge he found the Highlanders already in battle array on the high ground on the right
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bank of the Girnaig, a tributary of the Garry, within
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half a mile of where the railway station now is . Before he had time to form on the more open table-
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land, the clansmen charged impetuously with their claymores and swept his troops back into the pass and the Garry . Mackay lost nearly half his force, the Jacobites about 900, including their leader . Urrard House adjoins the spot where Viscount Dundee received his
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death-wound .

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