Thursday, August 30, 2007





Gathering of Macgregors


Modern technology has bridged kinsfolk oceans and cultures apart--the Macgregor descendants in the Philippines connecting to heretofore unknown cousins in South Africa. Photo shows Stuart feted to dinner on Aug. 22 by the Macgregor-Esposo clan in the Philippines. Despite the discomfort of a leg injury, Stu took the circuitous side trip to Manila via Singapore from a business trip in Vancouver. But he carried the sun with him, ending two weeks of rain and floods, a fitting backdrop to accompany the cheer and joy in our hearts that celebrated our new connection with relatives we had hoped all along existed.

The reunion brought together second cousins, their spouses and offsprings, or what they refer to as cousins-once-removed. Our homegrown Pinoy Piper Roy capped a truly wonderful and memorable evening with old Scottish melodies.






Sunday, August 12, 2007

BREAKING NEWS....

Dorothy writes:

"En route to Vancouver, Stuart Macgregor had a 4-hour layover in Singapore yesterday. Although we will meet in Manila on August 21, I just couldn't wait and decided to meet up with him at the airport. It was great! Now I can say I've met my closest Macgregor relative. "

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Leading by the Chin





Some went East, some went West

But the Trotter chin did it best!


Photo (left) shows Donald McCaw (Richie's Dad) and my late brother Dicky (3rd from left) joining Stu and Andrew to demonstrate the mesmerizing charm of the Trotter chin.

Thursday, August 9, 2007

And the winner is...Richie McCaw!!!!

Richie McCaw, Team Captain of NZ All Blacks is a grandson from the Trotter side

Thursday, August 2, 2007

CHAPTER III: Long-lost Macgregor Cousins

Uncle Roderick Ronald Macgregor, son of Granduncle Roderick Robert is flanked by sons Stuart, Robbie and Andrew in South Africa. Our uncle passed away in 2006 before we established connection with our second cousins .



Our South African kins are second cousins who descend from the same Macgregor-Trotter line. This means we share some common DNA codes in our genetic soup that would make us a good study in inherited characteristics.

On the following week after we first established contact, I had to phone one of them--it happened to be Andrew in Cape Town. My sister Dodo (Dorothy) did the same. In fact she called everyone, first Robbie, then Andrew, then Stuart. Hearing Andrew's disembodied voice confirms amazing reality better than a pinch in the arm, that's for sure.

After an exchange of pics, I couldn't help scrutinizing the faces, the posture, how they smiled, did they have big ears like Billy, thick eyebrows like my son, Roy? Andrew found my question amusing-- I had asked: "Did anyone of you three get the same Kirk Douglas chin my grandfather Ian had?"

Andrew sent a picture of him and Stu in surfing gear. I thought their chins looked like my late brother Dicky's so I cut and pasted Dicky's image between them in the picture and emailed this to Billy and Dodo. Dodo then cut and pasted a picture of one of the Trotters in the McCaw line to make a foursome collage . The result---Stu, Andrew, Dicky and Donald McCaw made up a composite showcase of the delectably roundish Trotter chin!

What a relief that we did not share a Hapsburg lip-- Angelina Jolie would have sued us for multinational copyright infringement!

Interesting question to resolve now is what physical feature did we actually inherit from the Macgregor gene? But that can wait...for now, we are all very eager to finally meet Stuart in the flesh when he comes over for a brief visit in late August.

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DNA Update:

Today, Andrew Macgregor sent off this email to Richard Macgregor, chairman of the Clan Gregor Society in compliance with requirements for participating in the Society's DNA project. Can't wait to find out if we indeed descended from our famous kinsman Rob Roy!

Dear Richard,

6 Robert, 6 Stuart and I believe we are descended from 1 Roderick Rory MacGregor.
Our father 5 Roderick Ronald Macgregor always told us that we were descended from our famous kinsman Rob Roy
We are very keen to do the full ancestral DNA test and will be ordering the test in the next few days.
6 Robert will do test when he returns from Tanzanian in about a months time.
We are very excited to finally have made contact with our cousins in the Philippines, Australia and New Zealand.

1 Roderick Rory MacGregor circa 1725 – 1788?? md (Anne ????) McKenzie
2 William MacGregor b 1785/88 + 9/12/1869 m18/02/1820 Stornaway Isle of Lewis Scotland Helen Gillanders, b1801 +23/11/1864
3 Roderick b.5/8/1826 Barvas, Isle of Lewis +18/3/1910 md. Annie Trotter b.29/7/1843
4 Roderick Robert Macgregor b09/04/1877 +23/08/1951 m Emily Jane McIntyre b.1877 d1963 (1925 G. M’s Office SAR Pretoria)
5 Roderick Ronald Macgregor b.11/04/1914 Durban +29/04/2006 Durban m Alice Agnes Bezuidenhout b.22/09/1920? Cape Town +07/06/2003 Durban
6 Roderick Robert Macgregor b.31/5/1940 Port Elizabeth m.4/1/1969 Christine Louise Furness b.5/5/1948 retired/manager living Durban SA
6 Andrew Ian Macgregor b09/10/1948 Windhoek Namibia m 1975 Jeanette Lee Clover b01/05/1955 Graduate divorced living Cape Town SA
6 Duncan Stuart Macgregor b17/01/1950 Windhoek Namibia m 1967 Ann Clarke Businessman divorced living Durban SA


We do hope that this meets with your approval?

Thanks and kind regards,

Andrew Macgregor


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It is traditional custom and a military regulation for soldiers in Highland regiments that no undergarments are to be worn underneath the kilt. Photo at left was taken during the Hong Kong turnover in 1997. Great custom for a windy day, indeed!

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Wednesday, August 1, 2007

CHAPTER II : My Abuelito

The beloved Abuelito we never met



This is my grandfather, Ian Collier Trotter Macgregor. Born Aug. 13, 1880 in Nairn, in Inverness, Scotland, he came to the Philippines as part of Smith Bell & Co. which was then actively engaged in exporting abaca from Bicol. This was where he met my grandmother, Leoncia Cipriano. My mother, Praxedes was born on July 21, 1910.

My grandmother, Leoncia Cipriano, was born in Ligao, Albay, a wonderfully quirky rural lassie. She must have been a looker because she had quite a number of suitors. When this dashing young red haired, green-eyed Scot with a Kirk Douglas chin came to town, he held her hand and she did not protest. Her folks regarded that gesture a violation of her chastity and had them married to the delight of my Abuelita. And the rest of course is history.

Ian worked on Philippine railway projects, like his brother Roderick Robert who had once worked on the railway link between Pretoria and Pietersburg in South Africa. Scottish railway engineers are credited for building the first golf courses in the country, and it is highly likely that Ian had either known them or had been one of them.

Ian is part of Philippine golf history. He became the Philippine Open Golf Champion in 1919 and 1920 : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippine_Open_(golf)

His caddy, Celestino Tugot became Philippine National Open Champion for many years. I met him when I went to Bukidnon as a journalist sometime in the early 1980s. He shared fond memories picking eggs with Abuelito in our farm in Damilag. That was when Abuelito was finance officer of the Bukidnon-based Philippine Packing Corp., now known as Del Monte. My big regret is not having stayed longer to talk with the erstwhile Filipino golf champ. I am sure he would have contributed a lot to our scant collection of stories and anecdotes on Abuelito.

Grandfather Ian died on February 14, 1945 during the shelling of Manila towards the close of World War II. Her Papa's death must have been far more devastating for Mommy than the ravages of the war. When we were little, on All Soul's Day, Mommy would always take us to a crypt in Paco church where Abuelito's remains used to be interred. She would always shed tears remembering.




"Mommy" Praxedes Macgregor spoke fluent Spanish, English, Tagalog, Bicol and Cebuano . A consummate cook who trained with another Scot Mrs. Nicols, we were nurtured by her fantastic culinary wonders. (Some of them are in my other blog: http://pinoyfusion.blogspot.com/)





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Excerpts form Sir Ronald Trotter's book: "Hasten with Care" Ron Trotter's great grandfather John Trotter (born 1822) and my great grandmother Ann Trotter (born 1843) were siblings.

My sister Dorothy provides excerpts from that book:

Chapter 4 ROBERT TROTTER (1785-1856) AND HIS WIFE CATHERINE URQUHART (1800-1872)

Of their thirteen children, five died in infancy - Annie 1825, Margaret 1828, Catherine 1830, Ann Margaret 1835, and Robert 1837. Mary, born 1827, died in her twenties some time after the 1851 census and Elizabeth died in 1863. Elizabeth had some form of handicap; one note (Anna Cameron, 1925) described her as deformed. The remaining children all reached maturity and married.

(Here follows the information on all their children, but I have included only my great grandmother)

Ann Trotter, christened 21 August 1843, married Roderick McGregor at Garguston on 6 January 1864. This family scattered widely around the world. The following notes of their whereabouts were written by Anna Trotter Cameron in 1925:

Ann and Roderick McGregor had seven children, six of whom were living in 1925:

William Lewis McGregor, born 21 January 1865, King George Medical College, Lucknow, United Provinces, India

Catherine Elizabeth McGregor and Helen Mary McGregor (twins), born 27 January 1867, Lyndale Childs HIll, Middlesex

Annie Mabel McGregor, born 6 December 1870. Annie married Walter Percy Milstead on 1 November 1914 at the parish church of St. John, Calcutta

Roderick Robert McGregor, born 9 April 1877, general manager's office, South African Railways, Johannesburg, South Africa

Ian Collier McGregor, born 13 August 1880, c/- Smith Bell & Co., Manila, Philippines

Ian's grandson, Billy McGregor Esposo, provided the following information following a visit he had made to Garguston in Scotland some years ago:

Ian came over to the Philippines in the early 1900s to manage the team that built the railroad system linking Manila to Legaspi City (a southern Luzon city about 450 km from Manila). Towards the end of the job, Ian met our grandmother who was of Spanish and Malay origins. Fell in love. Had to turn his back on his Presbyterian orientation in order to marry her in Roman Catholic rites (Grandma will never have it any other way). Upon settling in the Philippines, Ian became the principal agent in the country for Smith Bell and Company. Later, he became a management consultant of the Del Monte Plantation and Company in Bukidnon (located in the southern island of Mindanao). In 1919 and 1920 he won, back-to-back, the Philippine Open Golf Championship - golf after all is a game of Scots.

During the war years his ability with languages allowed him to talk his way out of a Japanese concentration camp where all nationals from allied countries were herded. During the retaking of Manila by that famous general who himself has Scottish roots (MacArthur), Ian decided to go out from the safety of a bomb shelter to observe the battle of Manila. On the eve of victory and in typical Celtic fashion, a shell exploded right behind him, killing him 30 minutes later.

Billy was born in 1949 and has a background in media and public relations. He was the director-general of the Philippines Information Agency. His mother, Praxedes, was the only child of Ian McGregor; she had four children, of whom Billy was the eldest.

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Scottish presence left a mark in Manila. San Andres Bukid is known to have been named after St. Andrew, patron saint of Scotland. There is a place called "Imbiernes" in Pedro Gil. Scottish friend Angus Campbell of the Manila Club quotes old timers as saying that the street was named after "Inverness" in Scotland, the same city where my grandfather was born.

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CHAPTER I: Discovery




Clan MacGregor Crest: Outlawed for nearly two hundred years after losing their lands in a long power struggle with the Clan Campbell, the Clan Gregor believes descent from the third son of Kenneth MacAlpin, the first King of Scotland, a descent which is proclaimed in the motto, 'S Rioghal Mo Dhream, translated as Royal is my Race.





Our Eureka moment in genealogy research



Sir Ronald Trotter, one of New Zealand's distinguished industrialists had sent my family copies of his book which bore the motto of the Trotter clan as its title.

"Hasten with Care," told the story of a pioneering Trotter family that made a mark in New Zealand's economy and social life. We connect to Sir Ronald Trotter through my great grandmother Anne Trotter who was married to Roderick Macgregor, my great grandfather.


One part of Sir Ronald's book mentions my brother William's own research into our clan history. I will be reproducing that excerpt in a later account but for the moment, I want to share that glorious eureka moment that had led to the exciting discovery of our long lost cousins who happen to be the only male descendants of our particular Macgregor line.

From the book, I learned for the first time that my grandfather Ian Collier Macgregor's brother Roderick Robert had worked for the South African Railways in the early 1900s.

Just a week before, another cousin in Australia, Robert Russel and I were exchanging emails, wondering if we will ever discover our roots in this lifetime.

I had assured Robert that if worse comes to worse, we could exhume my grandfather's bones for DNA testing. Since Grandfather Ian is a male Macgregor descendant he holds the key Y chromosome which will help us cross-match his DNA markers with those already being processed by the Clan Gregor Society in Scotland.


The Clan Gregor Society's DNA project would help re-connect the descendants of many MacGregor clansmen who had assumed different names in the 17th century to escape execution. In 1603, King James VI proscribed or made it a capital offense to bear the MacGregor name. To prevent execution, most Macgregors assumed different names and these names became known as septs of Clan Macgregor. The ban on the name MacGregor was lifted in 1774, but the different septs remains.

Today the Clan Gregor Society hopes to reunite the Clan MacGregor using modern DNA technology. The idea is to draw comparisons to a genetic profile from a known descendant of the chief's line (known only as "kit 2124"). Anyone who shares 31 out of the 37 DNA markers with this individual will be given full membership in the Clan Gregor Society, regardless of current surname.

However, only the male line bearing the Macgregor surname or a name known to be a Macgregor alias, may submit their cheek cells for testing. Since my grandfather's only child was my mother, the maternal descendancy disqualified us from tesing.

The reconnection with our long-lost second cousins thus presented a real opportunity to trace our origins --do we come from the original Macgregor that descended from King Alpin? Or, are we part-takers who joined the clan as allies and friends and may have come from any of the prehistoric Viking or Celtic tribes?

Following a hunch, I sent off this email to the South African Railway webmaster on July 16, 2007.


Dear Sir,
I am Carolyn Macgregor Esposo, descendant of a Roderick Robert Macgregor who I believe had once worked in the South African Railways anytime in the early part of the 1900. He is the brother of my grandfather, Ian Macgregor. Would appreciate it so much if you could give me some idea where I could possibly find out what's happened to him. We are in the process of completing our family tree.

Thank you very much,
Carolyn

The next day, on July 17, this email came:

Dear Carol,

Your email arrived as a surprise . I am Roderick Robert Macgregor , the same name as as my grandfather who came out from Inverness to work on the Pretoria to Pietersburg railway line around the 1900's and later on with the South African Railways. Where are you in the world and can you supply me with more family details re your grandfather and his brothers and family? would appreciate the details.

Regards, Robbie



Robbie then emailed the obituary of granduncle Roderick Robert. Below is the obit, as so kindly transcribed by cousin Robert Russel from a vaguely legible news clip from the Inverness Courier:




THE INVERNESS COURIER, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1951
Mr R. R. Macgregor, South Africa
The death occurred at Piettenberg Bay South Africa of Mr Roderick Robert Macgregor on 23rd August 1951 at the age of 74. Mr Macgregor who was born at Kincraig in 1877 was educated at Nairn Academy and Inverness College. He went to South Africa in 1896 after having worked as a boy with Messrs F Urquhart and Co., seed merchants, Union Street Inverness to take up an appointment with the Pretoria-Pietersburg Railway Limited, in the days of the South African Republic. He served with Thorneycroft’s Mounted Infantry from the outbreak of the South African War until recalled to Pretoria for railway service in August 1900. He served in various capacities in the locomotive, mechanical, stores, and transportation departments of the Imperial Military Railways and C.S.A.R. from 1900 until appointed to the General manager’s office of the South African Railways and Harbour Administration in September 1910 in which office he was appointed successfully to the position of Principal Clerk, 1915; Assitant Superintendent (Financial) 1924; Special Duties Assistant 1929; Parliamentary Assistant , 1930; and Superintendent (Special Duties Parliamentary), 1933; His railway service in South Africa extended over a period of more than forty years and he retired in 1937.
At his retirement Mr Macgregor was on the board of the South African Iron and Steel Corporation, and at the outbreak of the last war he was appointed Secretary to the Director-General of War Supplies and later served in the same capacity with the National Supplies Council under General Smuts. At the end of the war in 1945 Mr Macgregor received very warm and appreciative letters of thanks from the late Field Marshall Smuts and from the late Dr H. J. van der Bijl, then Director-General of Supplies. In January 1951 some of the details of the work for which Mr Macgregor had been responsible during the war were mentioned in our columns when reference was made to the official “Record of the Organisations of the Director-General of War Supplies (1939-1943) and Director-General of Supplies (1943-1945).

When Mr Macgregor finally retired from the Director-General of Supplies organisation when it was wound up in 1943 he was described in a Johannesburg newspaper as “first man in, last man out”. He then left Johannesburg and went to live in Biton Knysna Cape Province. Mr Macgregor is survived by his widow and a married son Roderick Ronald Macgregor, and three grandsons, Robert, Andrew and Stuart all of whom reside in Windhoek, South-west Africa.



In exchange, my sister Dorothy emailed the chronology of information she had painstakingly gathered from researches that included digging into the National Archives in Edinburgh.

You can just imagine the rejoicing and the cheers breaking in our part of the world when all the information and chronology of events in Roderick Robert's life checked out with our own records!

From Dorothy's research:

FAMILY OF WILLIAM MACGREGOR AND HELEN GILLANDERS


1820 Feb 27
In Stornoway, Ross & Cromarty, proclamation of banns & marriages: William Macgregor, tacksman of Galson, to Helen, eldest daughter of Mr. George Gillanders, tacksman of Shadir

1822 Nov 1
In Barvas, Ross & Cromarty, baptism of Christian Macgregor, child of William Macgregor, ground officer at Galson and Helen Gillanders

1824 Aug 7
In Barvas, Ross & Cromarty, birth of Ann Macgregor, child of William Macgregor and Helen Gillanders of South Galson

1826 Aug 5
In Barvas, Ross & Cromarty, birth of Roderick Macgregor, child of William Macgregor and Helen Gillanders of South Galson

1828 Dec 7
In Barvas, Ross & Cromarty, birth of Margaret Macgregor, child of William Macgregor and Helen Gillanders of South Galson

1840 Feb 17
In Barvas, Ross & Cromarty, birth of Helen Macgregor, child of William Macgregor and Helen Gillanders of South Galson

1841 Jun 7
Census of Barvas, Ross & Cromarty
Living in South Galson, William (farmer) & Helen Macgregor and child Helen plus 6 servants

1841 Jun 7
Census of Stornoway
Living in Melbost, Christian, Ann, Roderick, Mary, Alexander, Margaret, and George Macgregor (children of William & Helen Macgregor) plus 6 servants and 1 laborer

1851 Mar 31
Census of Urray
William (farmer, born in Ross-shire Gairloch) & Helen Macgregor (born in Lews Islands) and children Mary, Alexander, Margaret, George, Helen and William (all born



in Lews Islands). Visitors Christian Macgregor Cameron (born in Lews Islands and widow of excise officer) and her children Agnes, William, John. Plus 4 servants and 1 laborer

1861 Apr 8
Census of Fodderty
Living in Conon Cottage [7 rooms with window(s)], William (farmer of 36 acres, born in Ross Gairloch) and Helen Macgregor (born in Ross Stornoway) and children Helen (born in Ross Galson) and William (born in Ross Melbost) plus 2 servants

1862 Sep 18
In Inverness, marriage of Helen Macgregor of Maryburgh (daughter of William & Helen Macgregor) to J. MacRae of Stornoway, son of a minister. Marriage witnessed by Keith Stewart Mackenzie of Seaforth.

1864 Nov 23
In Conon Cottage, Fodderty, Ross & Cromarty, death of Helen Macgregor at the age of 63 from chronic bronchitis (4 months)

1869 Dec 9
In Conon Cottage, Fodderty, Ross & Cromarty, death of William Macgregor at the age of 81 from chronic disease of the bladder (several years) and acute attack (four weeks).


FAMILY OF RODERICK MACGREGOR & ANNE TROTTER


1864 Jan 6
In Killearnan, marriage of Roderick Macgregor (gentleman) of Maryburgh, Fodderty to Anne Trotter of Garguston, Killearnan, daughter of Robert Trotter (farmer, deceased) and Catherine Urquhart. Marriage witnessed by J. McRae and Robert Trotter

1865 Jan 21
In Urquhart, birth of William Lewis Macgregor, child of Roderick Macgregor (gentleman) and Anne Macgregor

1867 Jan 27
In Brae Rannoch, Drummond, Inverness, birth of Catherine and Helen Macgregor (twins), children of Roderick (gentleman) and Ann Macgregor

1870 Dec 6
In Brae Rannoch, Inverness, birth of Annie Macgregor, child of Roderick (gentleman) and Ann Macgregor

1871 Apr 3
Census of Alvie
Living in Kincraig Farm House [16 rooms with window(s)], Roderick Macgregor (retired Ceylon ???, Farmer of 1,000 acres employing 10 servants and Anne Trotter Macgregor and children William Lewis, Catherine Elizabeth, Helen Mary, and Annie Mabel. Plus 1 coachman/servant, 1 housemaid, 1 cook, 1 head nurse, 1 undernurse.

1874 Jun 15
In Alvie, Inverness, death of Georgina Macgregor at the age of 17 days for unknown cause lasting 10 days (child of Roderick & Ann Macgregor)

1877 Apr 9
In Brae Rannoch, Inverness, birth of Roderick Robert Macgregor, child of Roderick (sheep farmer) and Anne Macgregor

1880 Aug 13
In Bellevue House, Seafield Street, Nairn, birth of Ian Collier Macgregor, child of Roderick (retired coffee planter gentleman) and Anne Macgregor

1881 Apr 4
Census of Alvie, Inverness
Living in Kincraig House [15 rooms with window(s)], Roderick (farmer of 1,000 acres employing 8 servants) and Anne Macgregor and children William L., Catherine E., Helen M., Annie M., Roderick R., and Ian Collier. Plus 1 coachman/gardener/domestic servant, 1 domestic servant, 1 housemaid/domestic servant, 1 nurse/domestic servant, and 1 nursemaid/domestic servant

1891 Apr 6
Census of Nairn
Living in Waverley Road, No. 1 [12 rooms with window(s)], Roderick (retired coffee planter) and Anne Macgregor, and children Helen, Annie Mabel, Roderick R. and Ian Collier

1901 Mar 31
Census of Killearnan
Living in Lettoch House [10 rooms with window(s)], Roderick (retired sheep farmer and coffee planter) and Anne Macgregor and Ian C. (clerk in railway office)

1910 Mar 18
At 18 Waverley Road, Nairn, death of Roderick Macgregor (coffee planter) at the age of 83 from senile debility. Informant was daughter Helen Macgregor

1911 Dec 17
Death of Anne Trotter Macgregor (source: "Hasten With Care" the Trotter Family History by Sir Ronald Trotter)







Clan Gregor gathering 2003, marking the 400th year since the Glen Fruin massacre (1603). ( I am in white, partially seen, and next to the person to the right of our chieftain, Sir Malcolm Macgregor) --click photo to enlarge Photo courtesy of Richard Walker.