AD 1800 - Crossing the Atlantic
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In the 18th and 19th centuries, hundreds of thousands of people crossed the Atlantic to a New World in America. Why? The Flora MacDonald Project, of the University of Sheffield is following the fortunes of a group who crossed from the Hebrides to Nova Scotia, or New Scotland, in what is now Canada.

Flora MacDonald is a well-known figure of British folk-lore, as she was the young lady who took Bonnie Prince Charlie, the 'Young Pretender' to the British throne 'over the sea to Skye' when he fled after his defeat at the battle of Culloden in 1745.
The song in which she is commemorated
"Speed Bonnie Boat like a bird on the wing,
Over the sea to Skye"
was in fact written by song writer Sir Harold Boulton in the early part of the 20th century.
However she was a real figure who lived in the township of Milton. The photo left shows the memorial that was raised to her by the Clan Donald society of Edinburgh.

The 18th and 19th centuries saw a huge increase in the population of the Hebrides, which soon increased far beyond the carrying capacity of the land. For a time the increased population was supported by the springing up of the kelp industry, using sea weed to produced an alkali used in the production of soap and glass. However at the end of the Napoleonic wars cheaper substitutes could be imported, so the industry collapsed and many emigrated, mostly to Nova Scotia - New Scotland.

The township of Milton is situated on the machair, the fertile shell-sand, interspersed with numerous lakes.
Here the Sheffield team. led by James Symonds, is excavating one of the deserted longhouses, where men lived at one end, cattle at the other.
However the bulk of the finds were dated to between 1790 to 1820, which was rather too late for Flora Macdonald, who was born in 1722. However this was the period when the population was expanding rapidly, and an over-population crisis was looming.











