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  1. Flora MacDonald and Bonnie Prince Charlie. After the defeat of his army at Culloden on 16 April 1746, Prince Charles Edward had been led to safety by a Jacobite general. But, as a wanted man with a price on his head, escaping Scotland would not be easy. By late April he and four companions had made their way through a storm to Benbecula.

  2. Flora, born in 1722, was the daughter of a tacksman, a substantial tenant, of the chief, MacDonald of Clanranald, and therefore a member of a staunchly Jacobite clan. On his death, her mother married a MacDonald of Sleat from Skye, and Lady Clanranald herself effectively adopted Flora.

  3. Flora Mac Donald, Santiago, Chile. 558 likes · 1 was here. Importación, venta y distribución de instrumentos musicales, violines, violas, cellos, contrabajos

  4. Flora MacDonald’s statement on the escape of Charles Edward Stuart from South Uist (Outer Hebrides) to Skye, 12 July 1746. She gives details on how his escape was managed, his disguise and where he stayed. (SP 54/32 f.49E). Transcript. Copy of the Declaration of Miss MacDonald, Apple Cross Bay, July 12th 1746. Miss Mc. Donald, Daughter in Law ...

  5. www.ncpedia.org › biography › macdonald-flora-0MacDonald, Flora | NCpedia

    Flora MacDonald was a prominent Loyalist during the American Revolution and a Scottish folk hero. She is known for the aid she gave Charles Edward Stuart, also referred to as “the Young Pretender'' or “Bonnie Prince Charlie.”. Flora was the daughter of Ranald and Marion MacDonald, who lived at Milton on the Isle of Uist in the Hebrides ...

  6. Flora MacDonald (1722-1790) was a heroine of the Jacobite cause, who helped Bonnie Prince Charlie escape the Hanoverians after the Battle of Culloden (1746). Flora is depicted with her collie dog looking out over the valley of the River Ness. It is thought the statue was paid for by Captain J. Henderson MacDonald of Caskieben, and of the 78th ...

  7. 28 de mar. de 2021 · Relics of Flora Macdonald, pp.152-154. LENT BY MRS WYLDE. (Nos. 652-664.) SILVER SNUFF-BOX, which belonged to Flora Macdonald and her husband. Captain Allan Macdonald of Kingsburgh, with their initials ‘A. M c D.’ and ‘F. M c D.’ engraved on it. Flora Macdonald, daughter of Ranald Macdonald of Miltoun in South Uist, was born about 1722.