
Simon Fraser, Lord Lovat
Simon Fraser, Lord Lovat (c.
1667 – 9 April 1747,
London
), Scottish Jacobite,
chief of Clan Fraser, was famous for his
violent feuding and his changes of allegiance. In 1715, he had been a
supporter of the House of Hanover,
but in 1745 he changed sides and supported the Stuart claim on the crown of Scotland
.
Lovat was
among the Highlanders defeated at the Battle of Culloden
and convicted of treason against the Crown.
He was the
last man in Britain to be beheaded on Tower Hill, London
.
Early life
He was the second son of Thomas Fraser, third son of the
7th Lord Lovat.
The barony of Lovat
dates from about 1460, in the person of Hugh Fraser, a descendant of
Simon Fraser (killed at Halidon Hill in 1338) who acquired the
tower and fort of Lovat near Beauly
,
Inverness-shire, and from whom the clan Fraser was called Macshimi
(sons of Simon).
Young
Simon was educated at King's College
, University of
Aberdeen, and his correspondence afterwards gives proof, not
only of a command of good English and idiomatic French, but of such
an acquaintance with the Latin classics as to leave him never at a
loss for an apt quotation from Virgil or
Horace. Whether Lovat ever felt any
real loyalty to the Stuarts or was actuated by self-interest is
difficult to determine, but that he was a born traitor and deceiver
there can be no doubt. One of his first acts on leaving college was
to recruit three hundred men from his clan to form part of a
regiment in the service of
William and
Mary, in which he himself was to hold a command, his object
being to have a body of well-trained soldiers under his influence,
whom at a moment's notice he might carry over to the interest of
King James.
Exile in France

Simon "the Fox" Fraser
Among other outrages in which he was engaged about this time was a
rape and forced marriage committed on the widow of the
10th Lord Lovat with the view
apparently of securing his own succession to the estates; and it is
a curious instance of influence that, after being subjected by him
to horrible ill-usage, she is said to have become seriously
attached to him. A prosecution, however, having been instituted
against him by Lady Lovat's family, Simon retired first to his
native strongholds in the Highlands, and afterwards to France,
where he found his way in July 1702 to the court of
St Germain.
In 1699, on his father's death, he inherited the title of Lord
Lovat. One of his first steps towards gaining influence in France
seems to have been to announce his conversion to
Catholicism. He then proceeded to put the
project of restoring the exiled family into a practical shape.
Hitherto nothing seems to have been known among the Jacobite exiles
of the efficiency of the
Highlanders as a
military force. But Lovat saw that, as they were the only part of
the British population accustomed to the independent use of arms,
they could be at once put in action against the reigning power.
His plan
therefore was to land five thousand French troops at Dundee
, where they
might reach the north-eastern passes of the Highlands in a days
march, and be in a position to divert the British troops till the
Highlands should have time to rise. Immediately afterwards
five hundred men were to land on the west coast, seize Fort
William
or Inverlochy, and thus
prevent the access of any military force from the south to the
central Highlands. The whole scheme indicates Lovat's
sagacity as a military strategist, and his plan was continuously
kept in view in all future attempts of the Jacobites, and finally
acted on in the outbreak of 1745. The advisers of
the Old Pretender seem to have
been either slow to trust their coadjutor or to comprehend his
project.
At last, however, he was despatched (1703) on a secret mission to
the Highlands to sound out those clan chiefs who were likely to
rise, and to ascertain what forces they could bring into the field.
He found, however, that there was little disposition to join the
rebellion, and he then apparently made up his mind to secure his
own safety by revealing all that he knew to the government of
Queen Anne. He persuaded the
duke of
Queensberry that his rival, the
duke of Atholl, was in the
Jacobite plot, and that if Queensberry supported him he could
obtain evidence of this at St Germain. Queensberry foolishly
entered into the intrigue with him against Atholl, but when Lovat
had gone to France with a pass from Queensberry the affair was
betrayed to Atholl by Robert Ferguson, and resulted in
Queensberry's discomfiture. The story is obscure, and is
complicated by partisanship on either side; but Lovat was certainly
playing a double game. His agility, however, was not remunerative.
On
returning to Paris
suspicions
got afloat as to Lovat's proceedings, and he was imprisoned in the
castle of Angoulême
. He remained nearly ten years under
supervision, till in November 1714 he made his escape to
England.
Return to Britain and "The '45"
For some twenty-five years after this he was chiefly occupied in
lawsuits for the recovery of his estates and the re-establishment
of his fortune, in both of which objects he was successful. The
intervals of his leisure were filled with Jacobite and
Anti-Jacobite intrigues, in which he seems to have alternately, as
suited his interests, acted the traitor to both parties. But he so
far obtained the confidence of the government as to secure the
appointments of sheriff of Inverness and of colonel of an
independent company. His disloyal practices, however, soon led to
his being suspected; and he was deprived of both his
appointments.
When the
rebellion
broke out, Lovat acted with characteristic duplicity. He
represented to the Jacobites — what was probably in the main true —
that though eager for their success his weak health and advanced
years prevented him from joining the standard of the prince in
person, while to the Lord President Forbes he professed his cordial
attachment to the existing state of things, but lamented that his
son, in spite of all his remonstrances, had joined
Bonnie Prince Charlie, and succeeded
in taking with him a strong force from the clan of the Frasers. The
truth was that the lad was unwilling to go, but was compelled by
his father.
Lovat's false professions of fidelity did
not long deceive the government, and after the Battle of
Culloden
he was obliged to retreat to the Highlands, after
seeing from a distant height his castle of
Dounie burnt by the royal army. Even then, broken down
by disease and old age, carried on a litter and unable to move
without assistance, his mental resources did not fail; and in a
conference with several of the Jacobite leaders he proposed that
they should raise a body of three thousand men, which would be
enough to make their mountains impregnable, and at length force the
government to give them advantageous terms, but the project was not
carried out.
Arrest and execution
Lovat was
arrested on an island in Loch Morar
. He was conveyed in a litter to London, and
after a trial of five days (with evidence given against him by the
fellow Jacobite
John Murray of
Broughton) sentence of death was pronounced on 19 March 1747.
His execution took place on 9 April 1747. Coincidentally, a
scaffold for spectators viewing the beheading collapsed, leaving 20
dead. Just before submitting his head to the block he repeated the
line from Horace:
Dulce et decorum est pro
patria mori.
References
External links
- http://www.annongul.i12.com/page_11.htm Simon Fraser, Lord
Lovat