Thomson
History
From the Clan Thompson Web Page
http://clanthompson.org
There was no single originating
family named Thomson responsible for all the Scottish Thom(p)sons found today.
The name is patronymic, in that the next generation is named after the father's
personal name. Although many have been linked by the Thompson DNA project.
Thomsons are very numerous over a large part of Scotland and are primarily found
south of the Forth and Clyde. The lowlands or border lands are neither purely
English nor purely Scottish. In fact, the border lands and the region known as
Lothian just north of the border have now become the center of Scotland with
Edinburgh as it's capital.
The earliest Thomsons; spelled with
an (a), (e), and sometimes a (p), slowly evolved from the 12th century into
families with a central head or leader in the border and Lothian areas of the
Scottish lowlands from Dunfriesshire to Rosburghshire.
The Thomsons of Eskdale were
a rather small fifteenth-century clan closely aligned with the larger clans
Beattison snd Nixons. In the 1540's the English Lord Wharton reported to the
Earl of Shewsbury that the Batysons, Thomsons, and Lytles of Esskdayle have made
raiding (reiving) forays on several English towns.
In 1547 the English Lords
Lennox and Wharton crossed the Esk River to subdue the south of Annandale and
Castlemilk. The continuing reiving on the borders resulted in several lairds and
clans being forced to give an oath of obeisance to the King of England. Bell's
MS, preserved in the Carlisle Cathedral Library, lists the names of 166 Beatties
and Thomsons who had surrendered to the English King. The 1551 peace accord
created the Debatable Lands between the Esk and Sark rivers which belonged to
neither kingdom.
The farmers of the fertile
plains of Berwickshire and the middle Tweed valley saw themselves as different
from the horsemen of Liddesdale. In 1569 the
lairds of the eastern and middle marches asserted that, while they themselves
were peaceable, the thieves of the western ranges were not. In a memorandum to
the Scottish Privy Council, they insisted that reivers must be controlled. They
produced a black list
of the surnames of the worst offenders: All Armstrongs, Batesons, Bells,
Crosiers, Elliots, Glendinnings, Hendresons, Irvines, Nixons, Routledges and
Thomsons.
"The
Steel Bonnets by George MacDonald Fraser has a list of reivers he calls the
riding surnames. In the west march the "Nixons' were located on the upper
Liddesdale, Bewcastle, Line rivers. Less compact than the Armstrongs, they were
important enough to have Thomson,
Glendennings, and Hunters associated with them. Like other Liddesdales clans,
they sometimes allied with England. In the Middle March, Fraser listed the
Thomsons as
riding with the English.
In 1581, The Scottish
Parliament rendered a whole clan jointly answerable, in the way of retaliation
for the delinquencies of each individual. In another statute passed shortly
thereafter, the chief of each clan was made responsible for all the misdeeds of
his surname. In consequence of these acts, in 1587, a roll was made of the
nobles, barons, chieftains and clans residing in the Borders, Isles and
Highlands. In this roll of the clans with chiefs in the West March appear the
surnames: Scotts of Ewesdale, Batesons, Littles,
Thomsons,
Glendinnings, Irvings, Bells, Carruthers, Grahams, Johnstons, Jardines, Moffats,
and Latimers. In addition, Monypeny's Chronicle, published in 1587, enumerates
sixty-five Lairds and gentlemen as residing in Dumfriesshire. There were also
twenty "chief men of name, not being Lairds, among which are included
Young Archie Thomson and Sym Thomson.
"The Scotch-Irish" by Charles A.
Hanna, 1902, lists Thomsons,
Battison, and Beattie as border clans located in
Eskdale in 1547. Fifty years later, he notes the
Thomson clan has
relocated to Annandale along with Irving, Bell, Carlye, Graham, et al.
A 1594 Act of the Scottish
Parliament for the "punishment of theft, robbery and sorning lists the
clans.Bells, Carlisles, Beatsons, Littles,
Thomsons Johnstons, et al.
At the union of the crowns
in 1603, King James VI of Scotland left Scotland for London as King James I of a
United Kingdom. He was determined to put down the continuing lawlessness on both
sides of the border. His wishes were carried out through with sword, noose and
torch until hardly a building stood in the whole of Eskdale and Liddesdale.
Chiefs were hanged, those who survived were later ordered to sell out.
The clans began to scatter in the
17th century. Littles, Beatties, Thomsons, Elliots, Armstrongs and Irvings fled
from persecution, poverty and overcrowding to the Ulster plantations. Many moved
later into neighboring English Cumberland, and crossed the oceans to North
America, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand, proud of their origins, but over
the generations losing contact with the descendants of those who stayed behind.
Tartan:
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The Scottish Register of Tartans has listed this information note: The Thomson Dress Blue has been adopted by the Clan Thom(p)son Society as the official Clan
Society tartan and worn by many Thomsons regardless of spelling.
The Clan Thom(p)son Society also wear the Thomson Hunting, Grey Dress, and Camel tartans.
Thompson Walls Historic site:
The site is described as a Pele Tower. Nothing visible remains. The tower appears on 1584 "plan' by Dacre,
though apparently this map illustrated houses he would like to see built as well
as those standing. The name Thompson Walls has lasted through, suggestive of a
structure, and a long history is given of ownership. The site was a barren waste
in 1541 with farming development planed. Antechester is a DMV. Informational notes:
The claim that Thomson is an anglicized form of MacTavish is inaccurate. Consider these common sense facts:
The Argyll Hearth Tax Roll of 1694 lists Donald MacCombis and a single tenant (Brown) as living on Dunardry. If there was a
MacCombis (MacTavish) clan it would have consisted of only these two individuals. In fact, the tax roll has a total of only 17 MacCombis in all of
Argyll. The spelling evolution resulting in the surname MacTavish on Dunardry went from VcCauus, to VcKavissl, to MacCawis, to Dugald McTavish on/about about
1720, as son and heir of Archibald McCzawis.
MacTavish is anglicized from the Gaelic McCawis.
How can you further anglicize an English name? If all 17 (1694 Argyll Hearth Tax Roll) of the
MacCombis scattered throughout all of Argyll changed their names to MacTavish,
their number would not begin to compare with the numbers of Thomsons living in
the lowlands where they had flourished for hundreds of years
as Thomsons.
King James pardoned, by name, 40 fighting men
with the Thomson surname riding with John [Maxwell], Earl of Morton for all
crimes committed between 1569 and 1585. Common sense tells us that 40 Thomsons
of fighting age, from Eskdale, recorded more than 100 years before there even
was a name MacTavish cannot be descended nor connected to a wee family in
Argyll. The McCombis were not included in the 1587 roll
of clans because a handful of related individuals does not make a clan. A chief can only be the head of ONE family
surname. The chief of Clan MacTavish is only
the legitimate chief of the clan and name
MacTavish. The Scottish Parliament repeatedly recognized
MacThomas and Thomson as two separate and individual names/clans already present
in the 1500s. Thomson and MacThomas are both derivatives of 'Thomas.'
Lord Lyon has formally recognized three distinct
names: Clan MacThomas of Glenshee, Clan MacTavish and Clan Thompson
International. In the 21st century, these three names cannot be co-mingled or
interchanged. An individual named MacThomas is no more a member of Clan Thompson
International than he is a member of Clan MacTavish and so on. |