The island in Loch Morar known as Eilean Bàn was traditionally used by the local population as grazing for their cattle herds and was, until trees began being planted in the 19th-century, completely bare of the "dense, barely penetrable growth of timber", that covers the island today. The same island was briefly the location first of a
Mass stone and then of an
illegal and clandestine Catholic
minor seminary founded by Bishop
James Gordon, until the
Jacobite rising of 1715 forced its closure and eventual reopening at
Scalan in
Glenlivet. Even long afterwards, Eilean Bàn remained a secret chapel and library for Bishop Gordon's successors. According to
Strathglass historian Flora Forbes, however, "a Catholic chapel at this time anywhere throughout the Highlands was usually a barn-like structure, with no windows and a mud floor." After the
Battle of Culloden, a combined force of
Royal Navy sailors under the command of Captain John Fergussone of and Captain Duff of and troops from the
Campbell of Argyll Militia portaged over nine miles of uncharted, rough, and previously thought to be impassable terrain. They were seeking to capture Bishop
Hugh MacDonald, the underground
Roman Catholic Vicar General of the Highland District, and high-ranking local
Jacobite Army veterans, mainly from
Clan Donald, who were correctly suspected of meeting together at the library, former seminary, and Catholic chapel on Eilean Bàn in Loch Morar on 8 June 1746. According to a later report for the
Duke of Newcastle, "Upon their arrival at the lake, they immediately spread themselves opposite to the Isle, and in full view of the rebels thereon; who, concluding themselves quite free from danger, fired on our people, at the same time calling them by insulting and opprobrious names, being near enough to be heard. This exultation, however, was quickly at an end; for the King's ships having sailed round to that part of the coast where their boats had little more than a mile to be carried overland to the lake... the rebels immediately lost all courage..." Although the Bishop and the Jacobite leaders managed to quickly row from Eilean Bàn to the loch shore and "escaped into the mountains", according the same report for the
Duke of Newcastle, when the government soldiers and sailors arrived upon Eilean Bàn, "They found the before-named Popish bishop's house and chapel; which the sailors quickly gutted and
demolished, merrily adorning themselves with the spoils of the chapel. In the scramble, a great many books and papers were tossed about and destroyed." Some of the chapel and seminary foundation stones are still visibly upon Eilean Bàn. Watts has termed the 8 June 1746
book burning and the destruction of most of Bishop MacDonald personal papers, "an irreplaceable loss both for the eighteenth-century
Church and the scholar of today." . At least some items, though, are believed to have been removed from Eilean Bàn in time. In 1917, Dom Odo Blundell of
Fort Augustus Abbey wrote, "At Morar chapel-house is preserved a set of green vestments, with red and white intermingled, bearing the date 1745. It still has its original lining; there is also an altar front to match it. These were probably brought over from France by the adherents of
Prince Charlie, and must have been part of the furnishings of the chapel on the island, though it is not known how they were saved when the building was ransacked and burned in 1746. The same remarks apply to the old chalice, which bears the inscription,
Ad usum Pr Fr Vincenti Mariani, Missri Scot. Ord. Praedic. Anno 1658. This chalice, which is of silver, is very small indeed; it has its paten to match. Unfortunately, we have no further information regarding this early missioner. In the list of priests for 1668 it is stated that there were three
Dominicans on this mission. Father Vincent was apparently one of these; the others being Father George Fanning - long in the Isle of
Barra and
Father Primrose - who died in prison in 1671." Following the action, however, Capt. John Fergussone suspected "that
Lord Lovat's lameness must have rendered it utterly impracticable for him to travel in so rugged a country", and the crew of HMS
Furnace accordingly continued meticulously searching inside the caves surrounding the Loch, "for three days and nights". They eventually, as Capt. Fergussone had expected, succeeded in capturing Lord Lovat, who was hiding inside a cave in nearby
Glen Meoble. of
Clan Fraser and senior
Jacobite Army leader
Simon Fraser, 11th Lord Lovat, sketched by
William Hogarth after his capture at Loch Morar and shortly before being tried for
high treason before his peers in the
House of Lords and afterwards executed by
beheading on
Tower Hill. In his naval history of the Jacobite rising and its aftermath, historian John S. Gibson commented about the capture of Lord Lovat at Loch Morar, "
London, which, with the events of the past year, had come to abhor highlanders, could scarcely have been more elated had
Charles Edward himself been caught. A small mythology was quick to grow up about the circumstances of his capture, as in the contemporary print of Fergussone and the soldiers of Guise's bursting in on the aged peer disguised as an old woman." Following his escape into the mountains, Bishop MacDonald remained in hiding locally until he managed to escape to France, during the sixth attempt by the
French Royal Navy and French
privateers to find and rescue the Prince and his entourage, and was evacuated from what is now the
Prince's Cairn at
Loch nan Uamh on 19 September 1746. Boats left in 1790, and 1826, carrying people to
Quebec,
Glengarry in
Ontario, and the
Strait of Canso in
Nova Scotia respectively. Swordland Lodge, on the northern shore of the loch, was used as training school
STS 23b by the
Special Operations Executive during the
Second World War. A 750 kW
hydroelectric power station with a
hydraulic head of was built on the River Morar and commissioned in 1948. ==Geology==