Men's 1745 T-Shirt - Black with Scottish Thistle.
This is a Fruit of the Loom Heavy cotton tee.
It has a very large Scottish thistle in purple and green with the year 1745
underneath.
In 1745 Bonnie Prince Charlie traveled to Scotland, with a few supporters
(possibly less than a dozen), and arriving on the Isle of Eriskay. He set about
rousing the Highland Clans to support his cause of restoring the the Stuarts to
the Throne of Scotland and England. Many of the Scottish people believed in
the 'divine right of Kings', in other words, the unquestioning right of the
Stuarts, chosen by God, to regain the thrones they had lost. William III's
successors were from the German House of Hanover, and the current King, George II,
was regarded by many as a foreigner. The fact that Charles Edward was born in
Italy, his mother Maria Clementina Sobieski was Polish, and was therefore also
technically a 'foreigner' escaped them.
Bonnie Prince Charlie was embraced by some, but not all, of the Scottish
Clans.
The Prince raised his father's (the Stuarts) standard at Glenfinnan in
Scotland on the 19th August 1745, and so initiated what was to be referred to as the
"'45", effectively the last Jacobite Uprising. Among his supporters were 300
from the Macdonald Clan and 700 from the clan Cameron.
The rebels quickly took
control of Edinburgh and by September 1745 had defeated the King's army (led
by John Cope) at Prestonpans. Several victories followed and Bonnie Prince
Charlie's' army grew in number, at one point reaching over 6000.
Spurred on by the victories they crossed the border into England and got to
within 130 miles of the capital London. Unfortunately, the English Catholics
failed to support the Jacobite rebellion, the expected French support was
non-existent and many of the English were content with the stable, placid rule of
George II. This apathy and lack of support plus the might of the King's army
forced the Jacobites to withdraw back to Scotland. They had only managed to reach
Derby.
The Battle of Culloden, near Inverness, followed on the 16th April 1746 and
the Jacobite army suffered a crushing defeat at the hands of the 'Butcher of
Cumberland', William Augustus the Duke of Cumberland. The Battle itself lasted
for only about one hour but a widespread massacre of Scots, many of whom were
not even involved in the Jacobite Uprising, followed.
Thousands were killed and the Battle of Culloden Moor went down as one of the
bloodiest in Scottish history. The defeat effectively put an end to the last
Jacobite Uprising and the Prince was now a fugitive. On the run he spent the
next five months in hiding in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland assisted by
his supporters. A ransom of 30,000 pounds (equivalent to $1 million in
today's currency) was placed on his head but despite this no one betrayed him to the
authorities.
The defeat at Culloden had wide-reaching implications for the Scots. The
English government imposed strict laws, especially targeting the Clans. These
included making it illegal for Highlanders to carry instruments of War (e.g.
swords, targes and bagpipes) or to wear the tartan and the kilt. Jacobite
supporters were either executed or forced to emigrate and their land was turned over
to
George II who distributed it amongst his English supporters.
The 'Highland Clearances' also became law, where landowners now found it more
profitable to keep sheep on land that had always been used for farming. Many
Highlanders now found themselves without a home and there was a surge of
people moving from the country to the new, emerging cities.
Culloden thus changed the ancient Clan system forever. Emigration resulted in
Scots scattered all over the world and intermarriages with other cultures and
races became inevitable. Thus, Bonnie Prince Charlie's' failed attempt to
regain the thrones for the Stuarts had a wide-reaching and long-lasting impact on
Scottish culture and on suppression of the Scots by the English.
The greatest manhunt in history culminated when Bonnie Prince Charlie arrived
on the Island of Benbecula, and when he met Flora Macdonald. Flora was not an
ardent Jacobite supporter but felt that she could not betray the Bonnie
prince. They met in the summer of 1746; the islanders aware of the Prince's
presence on the island were frightened of British Government reprisals.
Flora helped to spirit him away to the Island of Skye, dressed in disguise as
her maid 'Betty Burke'. Legend has it that Flora and Bonnie Prince Charlie
fell in love that summer - she did keep a lock of his hair to remember him by -
but the reality was probably that she felt sorry for the handsome Prince. He
was assisted by supporters to escape to France where he lived before finally
settling in Rome under the alias of the 'Duke of Albany'.
Flora was captured for her part in the Prince's escape and spent some time in
the Tower of London before being released. She became famous for her role in
the Jacobite matter, subsequently marrying her childhood sweetheart Alan
Macdonald. They emigrated to North Carolina where her husband served on the British
side during the American Revolution. When he was captured she returned to
Scotland and Alan followed her back there when he was released. She died in 1790
and is buried on Skye. Legend has it that she was wrapped in the Prince's bed
sheet.