Norman, and his group within the clan (other parts of the clan were loyal to the Jacobites, notably from Raasay), supported the Government during the
1745 Jacobite Rising. Historian
James Hunter speculated that his relationship to
Lord President Duncan Forbes of Culloden, who cleared him of charges after the Ship of the People incident, played a key role in his decision to support the Hanoverians. He raised several independent companies for the British government in 1745. In December, Norman was ordered to march his troops and engage
Lord Lewis Gordon. Norman left
Inverness on 10 December, with about 700 men. On the night of 23 December, he was defeated by a superior force commanded by Gordon at the
Battle of Inverurie. About 70 of Norman's men were killed, wounded, or captured. Norman, and his men, did not take part in the
Battle of Culloden. Other Macleods were however Jacobites, fighting at Culloden, smuggling the Prince to safety (see Malcolm and Murdoch MacLeod) as were many MacDonalds (see Flora MacDonald disguising the Prince in women's clothes). On 22 April, following the battle,
William,
Duke of Cumberland ordered
John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun, to march all his men into the Highlands and devastate the lands of the men who supported the rebellion. Loudon then crossed into the mainland with about 500 of his men but was followed by the loyalist Macdonalds and Norman, who together had about 1,200 men between them. Several days later the combined force laid waste to the lands of Grant of Glenmoriston. Norman's men also raided the nearby island of
Raasay, in the aftermath of the Jacobite failure. The island was the home of the MacLeods of Raasay who had supported the Jacobite cause, and who had been present at Culloden. Norman's men destroyed 32 boats, 300 houses, and killed 1,000 cows, sheep, and horses. ==Nickname==