HERE IS A WEBSITE WITH A PDF OF MOREHEAD HISTORY.
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http://motherbedford.com/Muirhead/Short%20History%20Of%20The%20Muirhead%20Clan.pdf
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http://motherbedford.com/Muirhead/Short%20History%20Of%20The%20Muirhead%20Clan.pdf
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2017-02-20 FRIDAY 10 PM AC THD Q1 HCM VN JSA
JOEYARNOLDVN
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THE NAME MOREHEAD MIGHT DESCRIBE A SWAMP LAND.
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HERE ARE THE DETAILS ABOUT THAT AS FOLLOWS:
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Back
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Muirhead
James Grosset Muirhead
[1706-1776] is also credited with the recovery of the ballad of the "Laird
of Muirhead" which recounts the story of the defeat of the Scottish army by
the English at the Battle of Flodden, in 1513.
The Muirhead clan had the signal honour of serving as King James IV of
Scotland's royal bodyguards during the battle. King James, and his son,
Alexander, were both slain, along with the flower of Scottish chivalry,
including the Laird of Muirhead, John Muirhead [ca. 1443-1513], and over two
hundred of his clansmen also perished in the battle.
This ballad is on display at the oldest
house in Glasgow, seen above, built in 1471 by Bishop Andrew Muirhead, the
First Provands Lordship of Glasgow, as a church manse near Glasgow
Cathedral. [The house is presently undergoing renovation. Mary, Queen of
Scots, is reported to have spent a few days at the manse.]
It appears, from the Appendicx to Nisbet's Heraldry, p. 264, that Muirhead of Lachop and Bullis, the person here called Laird of Muirhead, was a man of rank, being rentaller, or perhaps feuar, of many crown-lands in Galloway; and was, in truth, slain in "Campo Belli de Northumberland suv vexillo Regis," i.e. in the Field of Flodden. Afore the King in order stude Before, stood The stout laird of Muirhead, Wi' that same twa-hand muckle sword two-handed great That Bartram fell'd stark dead. relates to the legendary story of the capture and decapitation of a ferocious killer, Bertram DeSchotts, by an earlier Laird of Muirhead. He sware he wadna lose his right swore. wouldn't To fight in ilka field; each/every Nor budge him from his liege's sight, lord's Till his last gasp should yield. Twa hunder mair of his ain name, two, more, own Frae Torwood and the Clyde, From Sware they would never gang to hame, swore, going, home But a' die by his syde. side And wondrous weel they kept their troth; well This sturdy royal band Rush'd down the brae wi' sic a pith, down the hill with such force That nane could them withstand. none Mony a bloody blow they dealt, The like was never seen; And, hadna that braw leader fall'n, had not, brave They ne'er had slain the king. Following the union of the crowns of Scotland and England in 1603, when James VI of Scotland ascended the English throne, and became James I of England, and following the subsequent political union which followed in 1707, when the Scottish Parliament dissolved in Edinburgh, and merged into the first British Parliament in London, the fortunes of the Muirhead family tended to follow that of the expanding British Empire. They acquired a home in Hanover Square, in London. Other family members emigrated to the now British colonies around the world. Some, like John Muirheid, mentioned earlier, who gained prominence in Mercer County, New Jersey and was the first sheriff of Pennington, New Jersey; others, the Moreheads of Galloway, for example, settled in the colonies of Virginia and the Carolinas; a contingent of Muirheads settled in Nova Scotia, and other Muirheads settled in other provinces of Canada. In the passage of time, Muirheads and Moreheads moved westwards into Kentucky, Tennessee and to the other states and provinces, as opportunities presented themselves. One family, that of James Muirhead [1740-1804] and his wife, Elphinstone MacKinnon, settled in Adelaide, in South Australia, and made a considerable mark in that part of the world. Muirheads have served their old and new homelands well; among the numerous attainments of this distinguished family have been, before the Reformation, Bishops of the Roman Catholic church, Deans of Glasgow University, Provosts [Mayors] of Hamilton and Glasgow, three Governors of the state of Kentucky, the discovery of the power of steam by James Watt, the great Scottish inventor, whose mother was Agnes Muirhead of Lachop, to the 1998 Engineer of the Year, Brian K. Muirhead, of the Mars Rover vehicle fame. Another, Major John Motley Morehead, a scientist and engineer for the Union Carbide and Carbon Company, of New York, was a discoverer of acetylene gas. He also wrote, "The Morehead Family of VA and NC", in 1921. More recently, Ray Jerome Morehead, who spent forty years researching the Muirhead history , wrote a book, "The Henry Muirheid/Muirhead Family of Virginia and Mississippi", in 1989. [The book is available for purchase through his son, Raymond Lloyd Muirhead] . Another Muirhead of note, Roland Eugene Muirhead, founded, and served as the first president of, the Scottish Nationalist Party [SNP]. The SNP is presently a major political force in the new Scottish Parliament which opened its first session in Edinburgh in 1999, after an absence of 292 years. Captain Charles Morehead [1609-1705], the eldest child of David Muirhead, a wealthy merchant with business offices in both Edinburgh and London, emigrated to Kent Island on the Chesapeake River in 1630 to oversee his father's enterprises in the English colony of Virginia. It is located just east of the US Naval Academy at Annapolis, MD. He subsequently moved, in 1645, to Great Wicomico, in Northumberland County, Virginia. Two nieces of the aformentioned James Grosset Muirhead married into the English aristocracy; in 1780, Diana Grosset , daughter Walter Grosset of Logie, married the Hon. Robert Walpole, the youngest son of Baron Walpole of Wolterton, and nephew of Sir Robert Walpole, the first British Minister. Her descendants may properly claim a distant kinship with Princes William and Harry of the British royal family. Her cousin, Elizabeth, a daughter of Major Alexander Grosset, of Bredisholm, married Robert Wright, of Eyam, Derbyshire. [Eyam is the village noted for stopping the Plague of 1666]. Her son, John Thomas, married Catherine Jane Northcote, a daughter of Sir Stafford Northcote. Both Alexander and his younger brother, Walter, are mentioned in British history books in connection with the events surrounding Prince Charles Edward Stuart - 'Bonnie Prince Charlie's - attempt to return the British crown to its rightful owner, his father, King James VII of Scotland, in 1745. Captain Alexander Grosset was killed, a shot to the chest, while serving as aide-de-camp to Lieutenant Colonel Lord Ancram at the Battle of Culloden in 1746. Lord Ancram commanded the right wing of the government forces of the Duke of Cumberland. Lord George Murray, Prince Charles Stuart's military commander, with his own force of Atholl Highlanders, commanded the right wing of the Jacobite forces. Forty years later, Captain Grosset's nephew, John Grosset Muirhead, married Lady Jane Murray, the youngest child of the Duke of Atholl, and grand-daughter of Lord George Murray. Truly, love does conquer all! Jonathon Muirheid, of Hunterdown County, New Jersey, personally led General George Washington to the most suitable site on the Delaware River from which spot the general launched his first successful attack on the British forces in Trenton during the Revolutionary War. Many members of the Muirheid family served with great distinction in the American Revolution, including one who rose to the rank of Brigadier General. In the Civil War, a Morehead was Chief of Staff to General Sherman of the Union Army. There is much more to the history of this ancient Scottish family than is contained herein. Let us do our best to follow in the footsteps of our ancestors in piety, honor and comradeship. As our President, Raymond Lee Morehead, urges us, "Remember the men and women from whence you came, for, in remembering them, they live once again for all those who follow".
David Grossett, Elder
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