Flora MacDonald's 10-day adventure with Bonnie Prince Charlie in
June 1746 brought her instant fame and a year of captivity. While in
London, she became a darling of society, sitting for portraitists
Ramsay, Wilson, Hudson, Robertson, Read, Hogarth, and
Highmore. Her popularity was epitomized when Samuel Johnson
and James Boswell went out of their way to meet Flora during their
tour of the Hebrides. In this exciting new book - the most
comprehensive account of this Scottish heroine's history and
heritage - Toffey examines Flora's portrayals in the various media,
paying particular attention to the mingling of fact and myth in the
telling of Flora's story.
In 1774, Flora and some of her family emigrated to North Carolina
just in time to be caught up on the losing side in the American
Revolution. Remaining loyal to the crown, she and her husband
suffered great hardships and long separation before they could return
to their native land. As a result, Flora left a deep impression on
North Carolina.
In the 19th century, Sir Walter Scott and others promoted Flora as
the embodiment of romanticized Scottish Jacobitism to be
incorporated into unified, enlightened Britain. At the end of the 19th
century, within a decade or so of the centennial of her death, Flora's
"canonization" was engineered by her descendants.
Today, she is celebrated in opera and ballad, and she is the principal
character in at least three novels and appears in several others. She is
the subject of plays and a movie. She has been likened to
Pocahontas, Grace Darling, Lady Arabella, Queen Boadicea, and
Joan of Arc. Toffey's book will fascinate anyone interested in
Scottish heritage, historical heroines, legend, biography, or
romance.