
Let us begin to peel back the
origins of the Acheson surname by first observing a brief history
of the situation present in the region of this surnames first
definitive appearance.
To the best of this authors knowledge, and in concurrence with
most credible historical and genealogical accounts investigating
any of the descendant branches; the Acheson surname is documented
first in the Scottish lowlands, in the region of Berwickshire.
The earliest documented confirmation of the surname known to this
author is presently in the late-fourteenth century in North Berwick.
Earlier citations are said to exist, but this author has not yet
had an opportunity to research them (mentions of variations of
the Acheson surname have been alluded to as early as the 11th
century).
The Achesons have long been recognized as a distinguished
Sept of the lowland (and later highland) Scottish Clann Gordon.
As a Clann Sept, Achesons are likely interrelated by marriage
and/or blood at one or more points, probably from very early on
in their collective history (when the Clanns were well formed
and had distinctive land holdings). We might surmise therefore,
that as fate and providence guided the early Clann Gordon, so
might have it guided the early Achesons. In the end the
reader must decide if indeed the tides of the Gordon Clann and
Acheson fortunes rose and fell together in any harmony.
We begin our investigation with Clann Gordon, and the first recorded
citation of a Gordon located by this author: An Adam Gordon, presumably
of a family of Norman or Flemish extraction, was granted land
in Long-Gordon in Berwickshire by Malcolm Canmore III (King of
Scotland from about 1040 to 1093 A.D.). Legends pertaining to
the origin of the boars head device on Gordon Coats of Arms state
that the first Gordon (most likely the aforementioned Adam or
one of his ancestors) either saved a Scottish king from an attacking
boar, or killed a boar which was distressing some of the kings
subjects in the Merse (a hilly, marshy area in southernmost Scotland).
Hence the boars head thereafter appears on the family battle
shields. Adam died in battle fighting side by side with King Malcolm
in 1093 (who also died) probably either in combat against King
William of England (second son of William the Conqueror), or possibly
while warring in Norman France (anyone know for certain?). The
Gordons were evidently closely related to their nearby neighbors
the Swintons "of that Ilk", who like them bore three
boars heads on their battle shields (perhaps the Gordons were
even a descendant branch of the early Swintons, or vice versa).

It should be mentioned that it is possible that the Gordon surname was not originally derived from a Norman or Flemish surname, but instead may have been local, translating from the Anglish- Gor Din as "Hill Fort"; though little credence is given to this possibility by most historians. More likely it is from abroad, from the Manor of Guerdon in Normandy, who transplanted some of their family at least as far north as Hampshire, England under the name Gurdon at just about this period in history. Indeed, the early Scottish Gordons surname, when referred to in Norman documents, is often spelled as de Gurdon or de Guerdon.
Baron Richard Gordon a grandson
(or perhaps a great-great-grandson as cited by an alternate source)
of the aforementioned Adam held lands in Berwickshire (along the
Scottish borderlands with England), and gave land to the monks
of St. Mary at Kelso in 1150 and 1160 A.D. The Gordons also held
the nearby lands of Huntly Wood about this time and Huntly village
(which no longer exists). One of Richards "kinsman",
a Bertram de Gordoun killed King Richard I of England (Couer de
Lion) at Chalus, France in 1199 (apparently with a random crossbow
bolt shot). Circa 1189 and/or 1199 A.D. an Adam Gordon witnessed
the signing of a charter (he being a likely close relation of
Baron Richard Gordons). The name Adam has from ancient times
been a peculiarly favored name among the Gordons.
Alexander Gordon (Richards son and heir) earned the gratitude
of King Alexander I of Scotland by killing or capturing a group
of traitors who had tried to murder the King. For this Alexander
received the lands of Stitchel in the Merse (southern most Scotland).

Thomas Gordon (another of Richards sons) is said to have
confirmed his fathers grant of lands to the monks at Kelso (where
King James Stewart III was later crowned at 9 years of age).
At least two of Alexanders sons participated in the Eighth
Crusade in 1270 in Palestine as members of the 1000 Scottish auxiliaries
sent by King Alexander III under the leadership of King Louis
IX (or XI) of France. William Gordon, the eldest son, actually
led the Scots contingent in the crusade, but was apparently killed
in the holy land. His younger brother Adam, Alexanders second
son, survived the eighth Crusade. This Adam Gordon later inherited
the chieftainship and his fathers estates (of Gordon and
Stitchel), and may have married a cousin Alicia IV (she described
as a Gordon heiress). The family crest and motto are thought to
have resulted from these participations in the Crusades.
Adam Gordon (of the eighth Crusade) also had a son named Adam
to whom he passed his lands and titles. This Adam won fame during
the wars with Henry III of England by facing Prince Edward (later
King Edward I- AKA "Longshanks" & "Hammer of
the Scots") in chivalrous personal combat in 1266 A.D., and
fought him to a draw (Adam at least was wounded).
His son, Adam, (fourth generation since Baron Richard, and then
reigning chief) has been said to be the ancestor of all the Gordons
living today. His wifes name was Marjorie, and she may have
been a McDuff.
This Sir Adam aided William Wallace in recapturing the Castle
of Wigton in 1297 (of which he was later made Governor). He had
been a close supporter of the Lord of Badenoch, "the Red
Cummin" whom Robert the Bruce killed outside of Dumfries
kirk. At first Sir Adam tried to avenge his friend the Comyns
death, and supported the Balliol claim to the Scottish throne.
As such he served under the English King Edward I (with whom his
father had dueled) as Judiciary of Lothian in 1305. Sir Adam also
apparently held a seat in the English council at Westminister.
In 1309 "Sir Adam de Gordon" had leave to possess a
private chapel from the monks at Kelso Abbey (to whom his ancestor
Richard had granted lands).

After the death of King Edward
I, an unwise English commander so harried the Gordon lands along
the border (and even imprisoned Chief Adam himself at some point),
that in 1313 Sir Adam sided with Robert the Bruce, and supported
him loyally thereafter. He later led his Clann at the battles
of Slioch, and Bannockburn (June 24, 1314).
For their services, the future King Robert the Bruce awarded Sir
Adam large tracts of McDuff lands in the highlands; forfeited
by the Earl of Atholl. These lands consisted mainly of the lordship
of Strathbogie, and the Cairngorm territories in the northeastern
highlands; located principally in the shires of Banff and Aberdeen.

In 1320 Sir Adam was one of the Scots ambassadors (along with
Sir Edward Mabuisson) who laid the Declaration of Independence
sealed at Arbroath before the Pope to help gain papal recognition
of Scotland as a sovereign state. He also fought to have the Bruces
excommunication removed- for the Bruces having killed Comyn
on church grounds. Thereafter (ca 1390), though still holding
the family lands in Berwickshire and the Merse, the Chief of the
Gordon Clann kept his seat of power at Strathbogie, whose capital
was renamed Huntly by the new owners, to commemorate their Berwickshire
lands. Sir Adam was eventually killed at the battle of Halidon
Hill in 1333.
Sir Adam left at least three sons: John (the eldest) who was ancestor
of the Gordons of Buchan; who had at least two sons Jock and Tam
(who were the forefathers of the Gordon Earls and Marquesss
of Aberdeen).
Sir Adams second son was Baron Adam who is said to have
survived the slaughter of Halidon Hill, and apparently inherited
the Huntly estate in Strathbogie, the Berwickshire lands, and
the cheiftainship. He married Margaret Fraser, who for her husbands
gallantry during the War of independence, gave to him Aboyne as
a gift (and so the Gordons soon became a mighty power in Deeside).
Margaret was the daughter of the Marischal of Scotland, and Fraser
heiress of Aboyne. Her grandmother was a sister of the Bruce.
Sir John de Gordon, grandson of Adam who died at Halidon Hill,
obtained a confirmation of his lands from King David II (perhaps
he was the Adam above's son, or else by one of his brothers).
He or his successor obtained another confirmation of the lands
in 1376 from King Robert II. As the families primary interests
still lay on the border at this time, John was eventually killed
on a moonlit night in 1388 at Otterburn when the English retaliated
for his burning of the village of Roxburgh.
Then next in succession was
Adam Gordon who died at Homildon Hill after being Knighted by
fellow Baron Sir John Swinton, where both fell gallantly charging
the English host in 1402.
A third son of Sir Adam (who died at Halidon Hill 1333) was William
(a younger son), who inherited the lands of Stitchel in the Merse,
and who was ancestor to the Viscounts of Kenmure (a castle built
on the west bank of the Dee River in Galloway).
Upon the death of Adam, (who died at Hamildon Hill), the legitimate
Gordon line appears to have passed on to his sister Elizabeth's
husband for some reason (rather than reverting back up a few generations).
She had married Alexander Seton, the second son of Sir William
Seton of Seton in 1408. Sir Alexander was made Lord Gordon in
1429 in the first known list of the Lords of the Scottish Parliament.
Their son Alexander was made Earl of Huntly and assumed the Gordon
name.


The legitimate descent of the old Gordon surname was continued by the Gordons of Lochinvar of Galloway, later Viscounts of Kenmuir, and the Earls and Marquesss of Aberdeen.
In 1445 George Gordon (2nd son
of Alexander Seton "Gordon") became the 2nd Earl of
Huntly. As a result of his father Alexander having been sent to
England as one of the hostages in 1424 held for the ransom of
James I, George was married to the Princess Joanna Stewart (daughter
of King James I).
In 1451 Sir George received the former Cumming lands of Badenoch
from his brother in lawJames II (King of Scotland), as well as
grants of land in Moray and Inverness shire. During this period
the Scottish Crown was weak, and James Stuart II began trying
to undermine the powerful Douglas Clann. As a result, the Gordons
held virtual autocratic sway over northeastern Scotland, much
as the Campbell Clann did in the west. King James II murdered
the chief of Clann Douglas at Stirling Castle, which in turn provoked
a rebellion headed by the Earls of Crawford and March.
While the Gordons were away from their lands to the north helping
the King with his troubles in the south, their landholdings in
Strathbogie were raised (raided) by the enemy, and Huntly Castle
was burned. By 1452 Huntly earned the Kings gratitude by
defeating the rebels at Brechin, though two of Huntly's brothers
were killed there. King James II was so grateful that he gave
his sister Lady Annabella, in marriage to Huntlys son, who
would inherit the Earldom in 1470. Gordon power grew unchallenged
at this time, and Huntly Castle was soon rebuilt.
In 1462 the burghers of Aberdeen entered into a "bond of
manrent" with the 1st Earl of Huntly. By this agreement,
the Earl was to protect the city in return for hospitality whenever
he would visit, and for contributions to the Gordons army
when necessary.
As it should happen the level plains of Aberdeen allowed the Gordons
to breed horses, thereby allowing the Clann to have mounted cavalry,
which was almost unheard of among highland Clanns. Use of the
port of Aberdeen would also prove beneficial in years to come,
as a passageway to continental Europe (particularly during the
Reformation, when Gordon Catholicism alienated them from most
of Scotland).
The 2nd (by numbering 3rd?) Earl of Huntly, Sir George Gordon,
was Chancellor of Scotland from 1498 to 1500. It was said to have
married Annabella Stuart before March 10, 1459, though divorced
her in 1476. Sir George may have died in 1501, while his son Alexander
appears to have inherited the lands and title in 1502.
The 3rd Earl of Huntly, Sir Alexander Gordon, commanded one wing
of the Scots army at Flodden on Sept. 9, 1513, and managed to
survive the battle (in which King James IV was killed along with
many distinguished members of the Scottish Peerage). A younger
son of the 2nd Earl George named Adam was wed to Elizabeth the
heiress to the Earldom of Sutherland, and so eventually the Gordons
held that Earldom as well. A daughter of the 2nd Earl, Lady Catherine
Gordon, married Perkin Warbeck, a pretender to the English throne
in 1496. After Warbecks hanging at Tyburn in 1499, Lady
Catherine went on to marry three more times.
When Alexander the 3rd Earl of Huntly died in 1523, he was apparently
succeeded by his grandson George (he perhaps the son of a daughter?,
or a deceased son?). [Note: There is some confusion of facts during
this time period as alternatively the Lord of Huntly was also
listed as a Lord John Gordon who died in 1517 (not 1523), but
apparently without heir. The aforementioned Lord John, "Master
of Huntly" was married to Margaret Stuart (an illegitimate
daughter of King James IV; this is believable especially since
Earl Alexander had fought w/ James IV at Flodden), though John
and Margaret had no offspring.]
However his parentage, George the 4th Earl of Huntly was made
Lieutenant of the North, and became Chancellor in 1546 or 47,
gaining a grant to the Earldom of Moray in 1548. Once when the
Queen Regent, Mary of Guise (Mary Queen of Scots mother), was
visiting her friend Earl George at Huntly Castle in Strathbogie,
she called him "Cock of the North", a term which all
of the Gordon Chiefs adopted thereafter. He was general of the
forces on the borders to oppose those of Henry VIII under Norfolk,
against whom he had many victorious encounters.
During the Reformation the Scottish Clergy were wealthy, and so
unpopular that Protestantism spread very rapidly among the common
people. Many of the nobles also turned Protestant in the hope
of seizing church lands. The Scottish King attempted to stop this,
but ultimately failed. He asked for French soldiers to help crush
the Scottish revolt, but Queen Elizabeth of England stepped in
and helped the Protestant Scottish nobles win a decisive victory
in 1560. A year later, the beautiful Mary Queen of Scots returned
from France to find Protestantism well established. For a few
years there was relative peace, until Queen Marys conduct
eventually provoked a revolt, upon which she fled to England,
to Queen Elizabeth (who shortly threw Queen Mary in prison for
nineteen years!)
Sir George Gordon, the 4th Earl of Huntly fought against the new
religious changes that were in vogue in Scotland and abroad, and
soon became known as a leader of the Catholic party. One would
think that this might have won him favor with Mary Queen of Scots
(and indeed the 4th Earl George even tried to marry a son to Mary),
but Marys brother Lord James Stewart turned her against
him, and persuaded her to deprive the Earl of Huntly of the Earldom
of Moray (which James Stewart then took for himself).
As a consequence, soon afterward a dispute began between one of
George Gordons sons and the Ogilvy Clann, which resulted
in further estranging the Gordons from Queen Mary. Huntlys
followers in Moray refused to surrender their castles at Inverness
and Findlater to Mary, and so the Gordons were made outlaws. In
1562 the Earl of Huntly rose in rebellion and on October 28, rode
with 500 of his men to Corrichie, where they were defeated by
2000 Royalist troops. Though he was taken alive, the Huntly Earl
soon died of apoplexy (a ruptured blood vessel in he brain) on
the battlefield. His embalmed corpse was taken to Edinburgh several
months later and was subjected to public humiliation.

The 5th Earl of Huntly (name
unknown), was successful in making peace with the Queen and became
High Chancellor in 1565. His eldest aunt, Lady Margaret Gordon
(a Catholic), married the 8th Lord Forbes. Lord Forbes later disowned
his wife due in part to their religious differences (he being
a Protestant). The Gordons and Forbes eventually came to blows
in a battle in 1572 in Clatt, Aberdeenshire, where the Gordons
won the day, and where a brother of Lord Forbes was killed. Although
Protestanism had prevailed in Scotland, the 5th Earl of Huntly
succeeded in maintaining his inheritance; and soon after died
while playing football in 1576.
The 6th Huntly Earl (name also unknown) managed to anger the Mackintosh
Clann by building a castle at Ruthven in Badenoch, and simultaneously
quarrelled with Clann Grant of Ballindalloch. These two Clanns
united against the Gordons, and gained additional support from
the Earl of Moray (son-in-law of the 4th Huntly Earls enemy
James Stewart).
Huntly murdered the Earl of Moray in 1592, evoking public outrage.
He was then accused of involvement in a Jesuit plot and as a result
the Earl of Argyll (a Campbell) gathered 10,000 men and marched
against Huntly (and his ally the Earl of Errol), whose combined
forces numbered less than 4000. On the 4th of October, 1594 the
Huntly and Errol Earls met and destroyed Argylls army at
Glenlivet. In the battle Argyll lost over 500 men (including two
cousins, and Macneill of Barra), while Huntly lost only 14 men.
As a result of this Counter-Reformation Rising, Huntly Castle
was burned for the second time in 1595.
In spite of his victories, George the 5th Earl of Huntly surrendered
to James VI (who was a Catholic), and was pardoned soon afterward.
By 1599 the Lord of Huntly was created Marquis of Huntly, and
Lieutenant of the North. Huntly Castle in Strathbogie was rebuilt
in 1602 and a large home on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh was later
owned by George by/before 1630. This building (after some restoration)
still stands today by Canongate, and is called the Huntly House.

The 6th Earl and 1st Marquis Georges son, also named George,
became the 2nd Marquess in 1636. He was Captain of the Scottish
guard under Louis XIII, and he and his Clann followed Charles
I during the wars of the Covenant which began in August of 1642
after the Puritan Parliament wrestled control of the nation away
from the Episcopalian King Charles I. The Covenant Wars were a
series of religiously motivated battles generally pitting Protestants
against Episcopalians and Catholics.
The Gordon Cavalry (known as the Gordon Horse) played a decisive
role in Montroses bedraggled highland army during the Covenant
Wars. As highlanders have always been known for their sturdy infantry,
the Gordon cavalry was a rare exception to this rule from amongst
the Highland Clanns. The Gordon Horse distinguished themselves
at the battles of Auldearn, and Alford, where unfortunately the
Gordon heir fell.
It has been said however, that had not Sir George Gordons
self-importance (for he was indeed powerful) impeded co-operation
between he and Montrose, that the war for Scottish Independence
might have ended differently. As a result of his support of the
troubled line of Catholic and Episcopalian Stuarts, at the end
of the war the Scottish Parlaiment seized Huntlys properties
in 1645. A short time later Charles I was executed, and the Marquis
of Huntly was captured in 1647. He too was beheaded two years
later in Edinburgh. Scottish emigrants or "planters"
(as they were called) including many of the Gordon Clann voluntarily
removed, or were forced to emigrate to Ireland or other parts
of the world during this period.
During Cromwell's Protectorate, while the legitimate Stuart line
of Scottish Kings found refuge in France, their loyal supporters
back home in Scotland became known as Jacobites (From the Latin
"Jacobus" for followers of James- "the king over
the water" as he was joking called).

With the Restoration of the
monarchy after Cromwells Protectorate, there came something
of a revival of Gordon fortunes. Lord Charles Gordon, a younger
son of the executed Marquis, was made Earl of Aboyne in 1660,
and the present line of Marquis are descended from him.
Sir George Gordon of Methlie and Haddo (northward of Aberdeen
on the northwest coast) was made Earl of Aberdeen in 1682 (he
being descended from Patrick Gordon of Methlie (cousin of the
Earl of Huntly) who fell at Arbroath in 1445), and in 1684 George
was made the 4th Marquis of Huntly. He was eventually created
Duke of Gordon. During the revolution George held Edinburgh Castle
against the Williamites for a year before being starved out. His
defense of the castle was a stirring event in Scottish history.

During the Second Jacobite uprising of 1715 the Gordons again cast their fortunes with the now "Pretender" Stuart Kings. The 2nd Duke of Gordon followed the "Old Pretender" at Sherriffmuir, and was taken prisoner by the government. His son, Lord Huntly, along with Gordon of Glenbucket, and General Gordon of Auchintoul, gathered 500 cavalry, and 2500 infantry for the Jacobite army. Viscount William of Kenmure, head of the border family of Gordon, was the Jacobite commander in southern Scotland until his defeat at Preston, and subsequent execution on Tower Hill. Most of the Highland Gordons, and Clann Gordon in general backed the Stuart claim to the Scottish throne, and fought bravely on their behalf.

At least one branch of the Gordon
Clann in southwestern Scotland (those of Earlstoun, Gordonstoun,
and Kenmuir) allied with the Hanovarian usurpers during some of
the Covenant Wars; though perhaps in part because they were not
as well protected in the lowlands, and partly because many had
converted to Protestantism.
Most of the Gordons remained staunch Jacobites, though the 3rd
Duke was the first to be Protestant, and did not rally during
the final 1745 Jacobite uprising (he may have even fought for
the Hanoverian King).
The 3rd Dukes uncle Lord Lewis Gordon, along with Gordon
of Glenbucket, and Gordon of Park, led the Gordon Clann for Bonnie
Prince Charles Edward Stuart with two battalions. They defeated
a force at Inverurie in December of 1745, and fought at fateful
Culloden. Though weighty participants in the uprising, the Gordons
in general suffered relatively mild reprisals upon the uprisings
failure. Lord Lewis (also Louis) fled and died in France in 1754
(he likely left with the exiled Prince Charles Edward Stuart).

During the sad years of the highland clearances that followed,
most of the highland clanns were eventually forced to leave Scotland
for other parts of the world, as the old clann system was outlawed
and dismembered. Many highland Scots did not survive these difficult
years, and the long ocean voyages. Most Scots who had loyally
supported the Stuarts were dispossed of their lands, homes, worldly
possessions, and often of their lives. A great many Gordon Clannsmen
were similarly subjected to this fate.
Some Gordons yet clung to bits of their former power, or were
able to revive their fortunes. In 1777 a unit called the 81st
Gordon Highlanders were first raised by Col. William Gordon (son
of the Earl of Aberdeen), but were disbanded in 1783.
In the year 1794, the 4th Duke of Gordon raised the 92nd Gordon
Highlanders, selecting as their tartan that of the Black Watch,
adding a yellow stripe for the "Gey" Gordons (Gey meaning
overwhelming or self-important). The 92nd eventually gained a
measure of immortality by their famous charge at Waterloo, while
hanging onto the stirrups of Scots Greys for greater impetus.
Other notable Gordons include
the mother of the famous poet Lord Byron, who was Catherine Gordon
of Gight (northeastern Scotland near Haddo Castle north of the
port of Aberdeen). Lady Catharine inherited the castle and its
lands, only to have to sell them off in 1787 to pay off her husbands
gambling debts.
The Gordon Dukedom eventually became extinct in 1836 after the
5th Duke, but the Huntly Marquisite passed to the Earls of Aboyne
(lineally descended from George, fourth son of George the 2nd
Marquess, who was raised to the peerage by Charles II for his
many loyal services), and he also assumed the Clann chieftainship.
A new Duke of Gordon was created of the Duke of Richmond in 1876.
Additionally at least ten gentlemen of this Clann were made baronets:
Gordon of Gordonstoun, Gordon of Cluny, Gordon of Linsmore in
1625, Gordon of Lochinvar in 1626, Gordon of Park in 1686, Gordon
of Dalpholly in 1704, Gordon of Earlstoun in 1706, Gordon of Embo
in 1631, Gordon of Halkin (by succession) in 1813, Gordon of Niton
in 1818.
During the period of the British Expansionist Empire in the North African Sudan, one of Britains most popular military heroes was Charles George Gordon. His ancestors had fought for Prince Charlie in the "45", and later for King George before Quebec. He himself had participated in the Crimean War where he earned the nickname of "Chinese Gordon" for his work as commander of the miscellaneous defenders of Shanghai during a rebellion. For his last command, Charles was sent to Khartoum, the Sudanese capital, to oversee a British troop withdrawal (though he was temperamentally unsuited to the task). Instead of organizing the withdrawal he attempted to defend the city, and did so dramatically, enduring about nine months of seige, until the city finally fell just two days shy of reinforcement in late January of 1884. By this time Charles Gordon had been put to death by the opposing force, and the Sudan was thereafter lost to Britain.
An elderly Lady Duff Gordon and her husband Sir Cosmo Duff Gordon were aboard the ill fated HMS Titanic, where Lady Gordon gained infamy for her unintentionally callous comments made while witnessing the scene from a lifeboat (she vocally lamented the loss of her dog, while people were dying around her). She survived, though I am uncertain if he did.
In the modern day; Gary I. Gordon, descended from the Clann Gordon (though born in Lincoln, Maine, USA) was posthumously awarded the United States Congressional Medal of Honor for service above and beyond the call of duty in Mogadishu, Somalia on Oct. 3, 1993. A Master Sergeant in the U.S. Army, and while serving as Sniper Team Leader, Gary and a fellow team member voluntarily sacrificed their lives in a valiant attempt to save 4 downed comrades, one of whom survived to tell the tale. See link for more details about this truly heroic Clannsman.
One final item of interest pertaining to the Gordon Clann is the existence of a purebred line of bird hunting dog dating from the early 1700's called the Gordon Setter, which arguably has "the best nose in the business". Its medium stature is similar to an Irish setter, though mostly black since it was crossed with a bloodhound. Gordon Setters were typically a dog for the aristocracy, and is a rare breed today. The Chief Herald's father possesses one, and I shall attempt to scan in an image of "Lettie" at a later date for those curious.