The
Royal-Ecossais initially served under
Saxe and are widely said to have been present at
Fontenoy in May 1745, though this may refer only to elements of the unit. In late November 1745 they were embarked for Scotland. Not all units sent by the French were able to pass through the British blockade; one company (including MacDonnell of Glengarry) was captured with ''L'Esperance'' off the
Dogger Bank, but Drummond and the remainder, under cover of a gale, were able to reach Montrose on 7 December. Most of the regiment was employed at
Stirling in late January; constructing gun emplacements under fire caused regular casualties. In February recruitment began in Perth to raise a second battalion; this was not especially successful but the regiment was around 350 strong by the time of
Culloden. At Culloden the
Royal-Ecossais appear to have been positioned flanking the right of the second line, though one source places them in the centre. After the failure of the Jacobite first line's attack, Lt-Col Lewis Drummond's battalion formed square before surrendering; other elements of the regiment under Maj. Matthew Hale covered the retreat of some of the Jacobite units towards Ruthven, surrendering two days later. The government was initially unsure whether to regard British subjects in the
Royal-Ecossais as rebels or prisoners of war. France responded by demanding the passports of all British people in France and threatening to arrest any found without one; the British government backed down and most from the French regiments were eventually discharged. During 1747 the regiment rebuilt to make up for losses sustained at Culloden and as prisoners of war returned from Britain. Back on the Continent, John Drummond served at the
Siege of Bergen op Zoom in July–September 1747, where he was Brigadier in command of the piquets in the trenches; his regiment however does not seem to have joined him, being first recorded in October as part of the
Armee de Saxe at
Nieuport. Drummond died at Bergen op Zoom towards the end of the siege and Lewis Drummond took over as Colonel, with Lancelot Cuthbert of
Castlehill as Lieutenant-Colonel. The
Royal-Ecossais' colonel from 1757 onwards was
David Wemyss, Lord Elcho, an exiled veteran of the 1745 Rising; Elcho was left embittered by the regiment's disbandment, as well as with his experience of Jacobite and French service in general. Several other prominent Jacobite exiles also continued to serve as officers, amongst them
Ewen MacPherson of Cluny, Donald MacDonnell of Lochgarry and
Archibald Cameron of Lochiel, who was captain of the regiment's grenadier company. It continued service during the
Seven Years' War, often on garrison duties, until disbandment as the war was ending. The
Royal-Ecossais regimental traditions were preserved by the French Army's 87th Infantry Regiment until the latter was disbanded in 1940. ==References==