The Jacobite rising of 1745 At the start of the
Jacobite rising of 1745, the privateer
Du Teillay arrived at Eriskay On 2 August 1745 and temporarily put
Prince Charles Edward Stuart and the
Seven Men of Moidart ashore. The sandy beach where the prince first set foot upon Scottish soil is called in his honour ''Coilleag a' Phrionnsa'' ("The Cockleshell Strand of the Prince"). In 1995, a memorial
cairn was erected with an inscription that includes the first stanza of
Alasdair Mac Mhaighstir Alasdair's iconic song-poem
Òran Eile don Phrionnsa:
19th century According to the
Napier Commission testimony of local resident John McCaskill, the islanders of Eriskay had consisted as recently as the 1830s and '40s of only three families and less than 30 people. They had been radically multiplied, though, during the subsequent phases of the
Highland Clearances. The estate
Factors, who considered Eriskay "agriculturally worthless", accordingly used the island as a dumping ground for evicted tenants from the many other islands owned by Colonel
John Gordon throughout the
Sound of Barra and the southern
Outer Hebrides. For the most part, however, the newly arrived islanders of Eriskay belonged to the
Catholic Church in Scotland and had their family roots in
South Uist. Even so, for decades after
Catholic Emancipation in 1829, there was still no resident
Roman Catholic priest in Eriskay, and the island's population was largely served by visiting priests from St Peter's Roman Catholic Church at
Daliburgh,
South Uist. Such priests had walk down to "The Priests' Point" along the south coast and kindle a bonfire as a signal for Eriskay fishermen to sail over and ferry them across the
Sound of Barra. The first St. Michael's Roman Catholic Church was stated to have been built in 1852, "shortly after the arrival of hundreds of evictees from South Uist and elsewhere. It was no more than a big stone crofthouse, a single-storey rectangle, at first with a thatch and later with a corrugated iron roof." The current
St Michael's Roman Catholic Church stands atop
Cnoc nan Sgrath, a hill overlooking the main village on Eriskay. It was built with stones and homemade mortar by the local population.(). The site of the 1852 stone chapel is now marked by a Marian shrine with a statue of
Our Lady of Fatima, overlooking the Sound of Barra. Eriskay is also important to both
Christian poetry and
Scottish Gaelic literature. In his 19th century iconic song poem
Eilein na h-Òige ("Island of the Young"), MacDonald praises the beauty of Eriskay, its wildlife, and the fondness of its people for telling tales from the
Fenian Cycle of
Celtic mythology inside the
ceilidh house. He also commented upon the visits to Eriskay by
Saint Columba,
Iain Mùideartach (
chief of
Clanranald), and
Prince Charles Edward Stuart.
20th century Eriskay: A Poem of Remote Lives is documentary made in 1934 by early German
documentary filmmaker
Werner Kissling, was filmed on the island and is comprised 15m 40s of silent, black-and-white footage. An introduction was added and a
sound track featuring narration,
Scottish traditional music,
waulking songs, and recorded conversations in
Scottish Gaelic. Kissling's film formed the centre-piece of a "Hebridean Evening", hosted at the
Marquess of Londonderry’s
London residence, on Tuesday, 30 April 1935, in the presence of the
Prince of Wales, Queen
Mary of Teck,
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Ramsay MacDonald,
Macleod of Macleod and
Cameron of Lochiel. The funds raised were used to build Eriskay’s first major road, running from the old pier at
Na Hann in the north to the harbour at
Acairseid in the south. While the roads have long since been upgraded, part of the old road, which is named
Rathad Kissling ("Kissling Street") in the filmmaker's honour, still survives near Acairseid. The Politician Lounge Bar in
Na Hann is named after the
SS Politician which ran aground off the island's coast in 1941. The accident provided the whole island with a generous supply of free
whisky in defiance of both customs duties and
wartime rationing and subsequently inspired
Compton Mackenzie's 1947 comic novel
Whisky Galore! and its
1949 film adaptation. During the 1930s, '40s, and '50s, an audio archive of
Hebridean mythology and folklore and stories about local history were recorded from the Eriskay
oral tradition by island schoolmaster Donald MacDonald and by
Calum Maclean, both of whom were in the employ of Prof.
Séamus Ó Duilearga and the
Irish Folklore Commission. The recordings have since been digitized and made available online through the
Tobar an Dualchais – Kist o Riches website.
Prince Charles and
Princess Diana visited Eriskay during their tour of the
Western Isles in July 1985.
21st century After a protracted campaign, local residents took control of the island on 30 November 2006 in a community buy-out. The previous landowners, a sporting syndicate, sold the assets of the estate including
Benbecula, South Uist and Eriskay for £4.5 million to a community-owned organisation known as Stòras Uibhist, which was set up to purchase the land and to manage it in perpetuity. In 2018, legal issues around governance from the buyout were reported.
Comann Eachdraidh Eirisgeidh ("The Eriskay Historical Society") was established in 2010 and, as of 2021, had recently purchased the island's schoolhouse, which had been closed down since 2013, to turn it into a
local history and heritage museum. In honour of
Allan MacDonald, the Society has also established "Maighstir Ailein's Poetry Trail", a hiking trail where particularly scenic locations are accompanied by bilingual and laminated verses in boxes of the priest-poet's famous poem,
Eilein na h-Òige ("Isle of Youth"). ==Transport==