towards
Rùm. In 1946, the
Irish Folklore Commission dispatched trained
folklorist Calum Maclean from
Inverin in the
Connemara Gaeltacht to the
Hebrides with orders to begin systematic folklore collecting, with Campbell's assistance, that he later continued for the
School of Scottish Studies. During the early 1950s, American ethnomusicologist
Alan Lomax used several of Campbell's field recordings without permission for a vinyl album of
Scottish traditional music for
Columbia Records, much to Campbell's chagrin. In 1961, Campbell published
Stories from South Uist, which he had begun collecting with a
wire recorder from
seanchaidh Angus MacLellan. Campbell explained that he had modeled his Gaelic-English translation of MacLellan's stories upon the recently published volume
Tales from the Arab Tribes by Charles Grimshaw Campbell, which Campbell praised as, "a masterpiece of translation of folk-tales from another language into readable English." Angus MacLellan's similarly dictated
autobiography,
The Furrow Behind Me, was published in the same year. The first collection of Fr.
Allan MacDonald's Gaelic verse,
Bàrdachd Mghr Ailein: The Gaelic Poems of Fr Allan McDonald of Eriskay (1859–1905), was both edited and self published by Campbell in 1965. In 1966, future Gaelic
literary scholar Ronald Black received a suitcase full of Gaelic books from Campbell and brought them to
Eriskay for sale aboard a ferry from Ludag,
South Uist. At the time, Eriskay still had many Scottish Gaelic
monoglot speakers who had known Fr. Allan MacDonald personally and Black has since recalled that the poetry book and Campbell's "little blue biography of Father Allan", both accordingly, "sold like hotcakes". Following the
Second Vatican Council, Campbell and Shaw disliked the abandonment of the
Ecclesiastical Latin liturgical language and the subsequent introduction of the
Mass of Paul VI in the
vernacular. They accordingly joined the Scottish Branch of
Fœderatio Internationalis Una Voce, which still presses for the greater availability of the
Tridentine Mass, immediately upon its foundation in 1965. In a 2023 article,
Traditionalist Catholic biographer
Charles A. Coulombe wrote, "As with most isolated folk in those days, they were at the mercy of whatever the Diocese gave them - but the Campbells were not quiet about their preferences. For John Lorne Campbell, the Latin and
Koine Greek once so well known by local priests were a bridge to the greater world for Gaeldom - as reflected in their songs and stories - without the medium of English. In addition to the religious issues the changes raised, they also threatened to submerge various Catholic subcultures around the globe through forcing worship in the ever encroaching dominant vernacular. Subsequent experience has shown him to be entirely correct." For much of the 1970s, Campbell fought a bitter but ultimately successful battle to maintain ferry service to Canna, which both he and the local population saw as a desperately needed lifeline to the outside world. Campbell later explained, "It was from my Campbell grandfather that I learned that it was the duty of a Highland laird to defend his tenants and employees - as Highlanders we did not consider a cash nexus the sole basis of our personal relationships with them. That was the basis of my own relationship with the Canna people. I can see that nowadays it is considered to be an old fashioned one, but I am prepared to stand by it at all times. If the laird wants loyalty from his tenants and employees, he must be loyal to them." In 1981 Campbell donated
Canna to the
National Trust for Scotland, but continued to live on the island. Interviews with Campbell and Shaw were broadcast in 1985 on Scottish Television, in a programme called "Canna – an Island Story". In 1990, Campbell was awarded an
OBE by Queen
Elizabeth II, but declined to travel to
Holyrood Palace for the ceremony. His biographer, Ray Perman, suspects that, "The thought of bowing before a
Hanoverian monarch may have been too much for him." Instead,
Ian Campbell, 12th Duke of Argyll,
Chief of
Clan Campbell, and
Lord Lieutenant of
Argyll and Bute travelled to Canna to present the award, but Campbell remained painfully shy and had to be coaxed with difficulty into attending the ceremony. In 1991, Campbell went on the record as a vocal sceptic and harsh critic of the
Orkney child abuse scandal, which involved allegations of
Satanic ritual abuse against the minister and nine sets of parents on the island of
South Ronaldsay. Campbell compared the allegations to the 1614 investigation by the
Spanish Inquisition into a
witch hunt in the
Basque Country, which concluded that no
witchcraft had ever taken place. Campbell was harshly criticized for making this comparison, but he was later proven to have been correct. The Orkney allegations were later found to be
completely baseless. According to Ray Perman, "In 1992, he received a
Papal Knighthood. This accolade pleased him most, since it was granted on the recommendation of the Catholic priests of the islands and West Highlands -- men he respected and had worked with over decades. A
Traditionalist in religious matters who always favored the
Latin Mass, he nevertheless petitioned the Church authorities to have the service of investiture in Gaelic." and in accordance with his wishes was "buried where he fell". In 2006, however, Cambell's body was repatriated and reburied in a birch wood planted by himself near St. Columba's Catholic chapel on Canna. In 2008, a headstone was taken from the garden at Taynish House on the Inverneill estate, brought to Canna, and set in a small
cairn, with the inscription: :Iain Latharna Caimbeul :1. 10. 1906 - 25. 4. 1996 :Fear Chanaidh His widow remained living at Canna House until her death in 2004 at the age of 101. As Campbell had stipulated in his Will, money was left to the
Diocese of Argyll and the Isles for the
Tridentine Requiem Mass to be offered annually for the souls of Campbell and Shaw. The request continues to be honored annually by
Una Voce Scotland. ==Legacy==