Tràigh Eais: 1.5 Miles of Superb
White Shell Sand on Barra,
Near the House Mackenzie Built, and Near Where
he is Buried
|
Sir Edward Montague Compton Mackenzie lived from 17 January 1883 to
30 November 1972. He was an author and novelist whose books such as
"Whisky Galore"
and
"The
Monarch of the Glen",
and their film and TV adaptations, helped put
little known parts of Scotland firmly on the map. The wider picture in Scotland
at the time is set out in our
Historical Timeline.
Mackenzie was born in Hartlepool in North-East England into a
theatrical family with Scottish roots. He was educated at St Paul's School in
London and Magdalen College, Oxford where he studied Modern History. He was an
ardent Scottish Nationalist who went to great lengths to trace his Scottish
ancestry and explore Gaelic culture, leading one biographer to comment:
"Mackenzie wasn't born a Scot, and he didn't sound like a
Scot. But nevertheless his imagination was truly Scottish."
By the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, Mackenzie had
published three novels. During the war he served with British Intelligence in
the Mediterranean, later publishing four books about his experiences.
Between 1920 and 1923 Mackenzie became the tenant of the Channel
Islands, Herm and Jethou. In 1928 he discovered and settled on the
Isle of Barra
in the
Western Isles,
later
building a large house there. It has been suggested that Compton Mackenzie was
the inspiration for D.H. Lawrence's short story
"The Man
Who Loved Islands",
though this is something Lawrence later denied.
The first of Mackenzie's really enduring works,
"Monarch of the Glen"
was published in 1941. The
seven TV series it inspired, between 2000 and 2005 were enormously successful,
if some way removed from the spirit of the original book, which satirised the
Anglicisation of Scottish nobility and had a distinctly Nationalist edge.
Compton Mackenzie's most spectacular early hit, however, was with
"Whisky Galore",
published in 1947 and turned into
a classic film which was made on
Barra
in 1949. This fictionalised real
events that had taken place in 1941 when a cargo vessel bound for the United
States with a cargo including 28,000 cases of Scotch Whisky had run aground on
the island of
Eriskay,
an island
visible from Mackenzie's
Barra
home.
In all, Mackenzie published around 100 books, including his ten
volume autobiography and the six volume novel
"The Four
Winds Of Love",
which one critic declared to be "one of the greatest
works of English literature produced in the Twentieth Century." In 1923,
Mackenzie co-founded the classical music magazine
"The
Gramaphone",
and as a passionate Jacobite, he became the third
Governor-General of the Royal Stuart Society. He was also involved in the
establishment of the Scottish National Party in 1934.
Sir Compton Mackenzie was knighted in 1952. He died in
Edinburgh
in 1972 at the age
of 89, and was buried on
Barra,
in
an ancient graveyard not far from the house he had built.