Archibald Cameron of Lochiel

Archibald Cameron of Lochiel (1707 – 7 June 1753) was a Scottish physician and prominent leader in the Jacobite rising of 1745. He was the personal physician of Charles Edward Stuart, and younger brother of Donald Cameron of Lochiel, otherwise known as the Gentle Lochiel, who led Clan Cameron during the rising. In 1753 at Tyburn, he was executed for high treason, being the last Jacobite to be executed. In popular memory, he is sometimes referred to as Doctor Archie.

Early life
Archibald Cameron was born in 1707 at Achnacarry Castle, the sixth child (and third surviving son) of John Cameron, Lord Lochiel and Isobel Cameron, Lady Lochiel (née Campbell).

His father, made Lord Lochiel in Jacobite peerage, had participated in the failed 1715 Jacobite rising and, as a result, had become an exile, living first in Paris and then Boulogne. Archibald Cameron's elder brother was Donald Cameron of Lochiel, who was the Clan Cameron chief in the absence of their father, and is known in Jacobite history as "The Gentle Lochiel".

Aside from Donald Cameron of Lochiel, the Doctor's brothers included John Cameron of Fassiefern (1698–1785), future Roman Catholic priest and martyr Alexander Cameron (1701–1746), and Colony of Jamaica Sugar Planter Ewan Cameron.

Archibald Cameron initially attended the University of Glasgow to study law, before transferring to study medicine at University of Edinburgh. He completed further studies at the Sorbonne in Paris and the University of Leiden in the Netherlands. He subsequently returned to the Scottish Highlands, married within the clan to his Lochaber cousin, Jean Cameron of Dungallon, and fathered seven children.

1745 uprising
When Charles Edward Stuart ("Bonnie Prince Charlie") first arrived in Scotland Cameron was despatched by his brother to Loch nan Uamh to communicate the futility of the enterprise and persuade the Prince to return to France. However, Prince Charles persuaded Cameron otherwise and soon the Camerons joined him in armed revolt.

Archibald Cameron first saw action in late August 1745, when he helped to lead a fairly futile attack on Ruthven Barracks. In the campaign that followed Cameron seems to have been promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel in his brother's clan regiment. The Newgate Calendar's hagiography portrays him as a non-combatant during the Rising, who refused to offer more than his surgical skills, but some historians consider this very likely to be inaccurate since Cameron was slightly wounded in action at the Battle of Falkirk in January 1746. He is also recorded as having performed surgery on his brother after he suffered two broken ankles and other injuries at the Battle of Culloden.

The defeat at Culloden ended the Jacobites' hopes, and all three Cameron brothers, along with their father, became fugitives from government troops. After the burning of the family seat, Achnacarry House, the Cameron family hid at Badenoch.

After a covert meeting and interview with Jean Cameron of Dungallon, the Doctor's wife, about (Bliadhna nan Creach lit. "the year of the pillaging") on 25 August 1747, Robert Forbes wrote, "It was common practice by the red-coats, dispersed up and down the Highlands, to raise the bodies of man, woman, and child out of the graves for greed of the linen, or whatever was wrapped about them and after they had taken that off to leave the bodies above ground. She herself had two children that died at that time, and she was advised to bury them privately in some remote healthy Brae, to prevent their being taken up again; but she could not think of burying them in any other place than where their forefathers were laid, and therefore she was obliged to bribe a sergeant to keep the fellows from digging up the bodies again. She and her poor children were behooved to take to the hills, no houses being left in the whole country about them. Mrs. Cameron said she never saw the Prince in his skulking, nor knew not where he was."

In early July 1746, the Doctor's elder brother, Roman Catholic priest and former Jacobite Army military chaplain Alexander Cameron was taken prisoner on the White Sands of Morar, while hiding along the coast of The Rough Bounds in Lochaber. He died on 19 October 1746 after months of incarceration in inhumane and unsanitary conditions aboard the prison hulk H.M.S. Furnace.

However, despite the danger, the Prince was determined to meet The Lochiel. Archibald Cameron was sent to Loch Arkaig to escort the Prince to the family's hiding place (3 September). The whole party then moved to Ben Alder, the seat of Ewen MacPherson of Cluny, keeper of the Loch Arkaig treasure. At Ben Alder Castle on 13 September 1746 word came that the French Royal Navy were waiting at Loch nan Uamh, and, on this sixth attempt ordered by the Comte de Maurepas, the French Minister of Marine, to find and rescue the Prince, the whole party was finally evacuated to France on 19 September 1746.

Betrayal and execution
In exile Cameron remained in Prince Charles's service, travelling with him to Madrid in 1748 and returning to Scotland privately in 1749. In 1753, he was sent back to Scotland again to obtain money from Loch Arkaig and to participate in plans for a decapitation strike of the Government by assassinating George II and other senior members of the House of Hanover. However, while he was staying secretly at Brenachyle near Loch Katrine, his location was leaked to the government by MacDonell of Glengarry, the notorious "Pickle the spy", and members of Clan Cameron who by this time were sickened by his Jacobitism. Archibald Cameron was arrested and attainted for high treason under the Attainder of Earl of Kellie and Others Act 1746 (19 Geo. 2, c. 26) for his part in the 1745 uprising. He was imprisoned in Edinburgh Castle then taken to Tower Hill in London. His wife was pregnant with their eighth child at the time and was among those who begged in vain for a reprieve for the “gentle and humane” physician.

Over the four days before his execution, Dr. Cameron was spiritually counselled and prepared by James Falconar, a non-juring Scottish Episcopal clergyman resident in London, who had been aboard the prison hulk HMS Furnace with the prisoner's late brother, Alexander Cameron.

On 7 June 1753, Cameron was drawn on a sledge to Tyburn. He addressed the crowd before his death, "Sir, you see a fellow-subject just going to pay his last debt to his King and country. I the more cheerfully resign my life, as it is taken from me for doing my duty according to my conscience. I freely forgive all my enemies, and those who are instrumental in taking away my life. I thank God I die in charity with all mankind. As to my religion, I die a steadfast (tho' unworthy) member of that Church in which I have always lived, the Church of England, in whose communion I hope, thro' the merits of my blessed Saviour, for forgiveness of my sins, for which I am heartily sorry."

According to James Falconar, "Turning to the clergyman he said, 'I have now done with this world and am ready to leave it.' He joined heartily in the commendatory prayer, etc., then repeated some ejaculations out of the Psalms. After which he embraced the clergyman and took leave of him. As the clergyman was going down from the cart he had like to have missed the steps, which the Doctor observing, called out to him with a cheerful tone of voice, saying, 'Take care how you go. I think you don't know the way as well as I do.

Archibald Cameron was hanged for 20 minutes before being cut down and beheaded. James Falconer later wrote a detailed account of his death for non-juring bishop and historian Robert Forbes. Dr. Cameron's remains were buried in the Savoy Chapel, Westminster. He was the last Jacobite to receive the death penalty. In his final papers, written from prison, he still protested his undying loyalty to the House of Stuart and his non-juring Episcopalian principles.

Cameron was buried in the vaults of the Savoy Chapel, off the Strand in London. The Rev. John Wilkinson, who was thought to have Jacobite sympathies, was said to have paid the burial costs himself. There was previously a stained glass window to Cameron, but this was later destroyed. A brass plaque now records the event.

Assessment
Archibald Cameron is generally regarded as a benevolent figure; his betrayal and execution in 1753 was greatly lamented. According to James Browne in his work A History of the Highlands: "his fate was generally pitied". His benevolence is demonstrated by his having prevented the execution of prisoners after Prestonpans and for treating a wounded Hanoverian officer. It is not certain whether he ever took part in battle with some arguing that he probably did, while others insist he was a noncombatant and that his role was limited to being a physician. Furthermore, there was also perceived indignation surrounding the cruel method, and place of execution: Tyburn was the location for the executions of low-born criminals, whereas the nobility were traditionally executed at Tower Hill, where for example in 1747, Lord Lovat was beheaded.

There have been numerous proposals as to why Cameron was executed. Generally, it is thought that his overt attainder and execution served as a final warning to the Jacobite cause and any further attempts conceived. His own account given in his memoir is that it was "to cover the Cruelty of murdering me at [such a] Distance of Time from the passing of [the act of attainder]."

Sir Walter Scott later commented that Dr. Cameron's execution, "threw much reproach upon the Government, and even upon the personal character of George II, as sullen, relentless, and unforgiving."

In popular culture

 * In 1753 John Cameron (An Taillear Mac Alasdair) of Dochanassie in Lochaber, composed (Òran d'on Doctair Chamshròn) "A Song to Doctor Cameron", an Aisling song in Gaelic in commemoration of Cameron's life and lamenting his absence from the Clan's lands after his death. The poem was included among those published in John Lorne Campbell's groundbreaking volume "Highland Songs of the Forty-Five."
 * Cameron appears in D. K. Broster's novel The Flight of the Heron (1925), and is a leading character in its sequel The Gleam in the North (1927), which fictionalises the events leading up to his execution.