Bulloch was a prolific author of works on Scottish regiments and clans, concentrating on
Clan Gordon. The
Oxford Companion to Scottish History mentions Bulloch's contribution to the understanding of relations between Scotland and
central Europe. In 1921 Bulloch was a founder member of the
Society for Army Historical Research, and was active on their Council and Publications Committee, as well as writing articles for their
Journal. He was one of a group of experts on Scottish military history and dress, that included also
William Skeoch Cumming and Iain Hamilton MacKay Scobie.
Gordonology As for the
one-name study on
Gordon (surname), Bulloch commented on it in 1909 in the terms that "all the best work in Gordonology is done by people who are only half Scots, or by Scots who have left their native hearth". In
The Gordons in Forfarshire from the same year, he mentioned the research of David Stewart Ramsay Gordon (1845–1905), a merchant in
Chile, known for his transcription of
parish registers; and Charles James Gordon (1853–1944) from
Ringford, rector of
Great Salkeld. An annual report of 1911 by the
New Spalding Club noted the appearance, since the previous report, of 117 newspaper articles by Bulloch, in 13 newspapers, dealing with Gordon family branches. •
The House of Gordon, vol. I (1903). Vol. II appeared in 1907; and vol. III in 1912. Bulloch was general editor of these volumes, the third of which,
Gordons under Arms, was compiled by Constance Oliver Skelton. She was brought in to work on military Gordons by
Peter John Anderson. •
The Name of Gordon: patronymics which it has replaced or reinforced (1906) •
The families of Gordon of Invergordon, Newhall, also Ardoch, Ross-shire, and Carroll, Sutherland (1906) •
The family of Gordon in Griamachary, in the parish of Kildonan (1907) •
The Gordons in Sutherland, including the Embo family (1907) •
The gay Gordons: some strange adventures of a famous Scots family (1908) •
The Gordons in Forfarshire with the lairds of Ashludie, Donavourd, Tarvie, Threave, and Charleton (1909) •
Gordons of Salterhill and their Irish descendants (1910) •
The Gordons and Smiths at Minmore, Auchorachan, and Upper Drumin in Glenlivet (1910) •
Gordons of Cairnfield : and their hold on the lands of Echres, Auchinhalrig, Arneidlie, Cufurrach, Mayne, Myrieton, Coynach, Whitburn, Lunan, Briggs, Arradoul and Rosieburn (1910) •
The Gordons of Cluny: from the early years of the eighteenth century down to the present time (1911) •
The strange adventures of the Reverend James Gordon, sensualist, spy, strategist (?), and soothsayer (1911) •
The Gordons of Coldwells, Ellon: Now Represented by the Family of Von Gordon of Laskowitz, West Prussia (1914) •
The Making of the West Indies. The Gordons as colonists (1915) •
Thomas Gordon, the "Independent Whig" (1918) •
Bibliography of the Gordons (1924) •
The Caterans of Inveraven (1927) •
The gay adventures of Sir Alexander Gordon, Knight of Navidale (1925) •
The Gordons in Poland: "Marquises of Huntly" with a Line in Saxony (1932)
Other books •
The Lord Rectors of the Universities of Aberdeen (1890) •
University Centenary Ceremonies (1893) •
A History of the University of Aberdeen: 1495–1895 (1895) •
The Rectorship: In Scotch Universities (1902) •
The Art of Extra-illustration (1903). Bulloch had made a collection of portraits of Boer War officers, now in the British Library. •
Territorial soldiering in the north-east of Scotland during 1759–1814 (1914) •
Class Records in Aberdeen & in America (1916), with a bibliography of Aberdeen class records by P .J. Anderson •
The Scottish Tongue: A Series of Lectures on the Vernacular Language of Lowland Scotland (1924), contributor with
John Buchan,
William Craigie and
Peter Giles. The lectures were delivered in 1921 to the Vernacular Circle of the Burns Club of London, Bulloch speaking on "The delight of the Doric in the diminutive". The introduction by William Will of the Burns Club explained that the lecture of Christopher Grieve (Hugh MacDiarmid) had not been included. •
A Centennial Bibliography of George Macdonald (1925). On
George MacDonald (1824–1905). It was reprinted in the 1984 bibliography by Mary Nance Jordan. •
The Centenary of James Morison the "Hygeist" (1935), on
James Morison •
The Bairds of Auchmedden and Strichen, Aberdeenshire (1934) •
The last Baird Laird of Auchmedden and Strichen. The case of Mr. Abington (1934). On
George Alexander Baird.
C.K.S.: An Autobiography; a Fragment by Himself (1927) was by Clement Shorter, who died in 1926. Bulloch was the editor. ==Legacy==