In Profile : Blair Atholl


blair atholl

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The UK’s only private army : Blair Atholl and the corporations
So many questions are thrown up by the idea of a ‘Legal’ private army. We have to consider the fact giant corporations such as Serco, Interserve, G4s, and Capita are moving to a position of authority within Great Britain, with the appearance that the network operating this takeover is Freemasonry.

For such a reality the corporations must be acting under a royal charter of some description, was it not so then the highest office in these lands would forbid this. The Dukes of Atholl run the Isle of Mann on behalf of the Crown.

The Templar Scottish Rite Freemasonry has to be prime inter-connector, because the Lords involved have links to the Order of the Thistle, Scotland’s version of the English Chivalric Order of the Garter. For the incorporation of Great Britain to take place all that is has to be not only allowed, but encouraged from the highest levels as the corporations usurp the constitutional realm.

In that sense one has to ask is this entity lawful? Because the corporations take all the rights away from the realm and the people, and give the arbitration to another branch of the corporate empire, the Judiciary, who in all cases rule on behalf of the corporations.

The following insight, I suggest, could be that authority by which ‘apparent civilian’s’ have taken it upon themselves to act as a guard dog for the remaining population, welcome to the private army that is Blair Atholl :

Atholl Highlanders
From Wikipedia,
The Atholl Highlanders is a Scottish infantry regiment. Based in Blair Atholl, the regiment is not part of the British Army. Instead, the regiment is in the private employ of the Duke of Atholl, making it the United Kingdom’s, and indeed Europe’s, only legal private army.

77th Foot
The name Atholl Highlanders dates to the formation of the 77th Regiment of Foot by the 4th Duke in 1777. The regiment was formed as a relief for other regiments serving in North America, and spent most of its existence in Ireland. The terms upon which the regiment was raised stated that the men were to be employed for either three years or the duration of the war in America. In 1781, the original three-year term ended, and the men expected the regiment to be disbanded. However, the regiment was transported to England and marched to Portsmouth to be embarked for service in the East Indies. Upon learning of this, the men mutinied, and the embarkation orders were countermanded. The regiment was marched to Berwick, where it disbanded in 1783.

Atholl Highlanders
More than 50 years later, in 1839, the 6th Duke, as Lord Glenlyon, resurrected the regiment as a bodyguard which he took to the Eglinton Tournament at Eglinton Castle, Ayrshire. Three years later, in 1842, the regiment escorted Queen Victoria during her tour of Perthshire. In 1844, when the Queen stayed as a guest of the Duke at Blair Castle, the regiment mounted the guard for the entire duration of her stay. In recognition of the service that the regiment provided during her two visits, the Queen announced that she would present the Atholl Highlanders with colours, thus giving the regiment official status. The regiment’s first stand of colours was presented by Lady Glenlyon on behalf of the Queen in 1845. It received new colours in 1979 from Mrs David Butter, the wife of the Lord Lieutenant of Perth and Kinross. A third stand of colours was presented in 2006 by the Duchess of Atholl.

Under the 7th Duke, the regiment regularly provided guards for royal visitors to Blair Castle (which was a convenient stopping point on the journey to Balmoral). The regiment also attended the Braemar Gathering, while an annual gathering was held in the first week in September in which the regiment paraded, then participated in various trials of strength and stamina. Following the First World War, parades of the regiment became fewer, although it did provide guards when the Crown Prince of Japan and King Faisal of Iraq visited Blair Castle in 1921 and 1933 respectively.[1] After 1933, there was little activity, and it seemed the regiment would disappear into obscurity until, in 1966, it was reformed by the 10th Duke, who made the decision to revive the regiment’s annual parade. It was feared that the regiment would be disbanded following his death in 1996, until his successor wrote to the estate trustees insisting that he would continue his traditional role.[2][3]

Although the regiment has never seen active service, many of its number served with The Scottish Horse, the local yeomanry regiment of Perthshire in the First and Second World Wars.
The full dress of the Atholl Highlanders

Today, the Atholl Highlanders is a purely ceremonial regiment, of approximately 100 men, including pipes and drums. This regiment has no connection, except the name, with the 77th Foot of 1777. The regiment wears the tartan of the Clan Murray of Atholl and has as its cap badge the clan crest approved by the Duke, which it wears along with a sprig of juniper, which is the clan’s plant, and is presented by the Duke on his annual inspection. The regiment is responsible for the defence of Blair Castle, the surrounding estate and its inhabitants, but in practice usually only parades twice a year at the regiment’s annual inspection when the present Duke comes from his home in South Africa to inspect his men,[2] and the Atholl Gathering Highland Games, which is hosted by the Duke, on the last weekend in May.

However, there are certain other occasions when the Duke permits the regiment to parade, such as royal visits to Blair Castle (when the regiment would serve as the guard), or on tours overseas. A notable instance occurred during the Year of Homecoming in 2009, when all of Scotland’s clans took part in a parade in Edinburgh. This was the first time that the regiment had paraded in the Scottish capital in nearly 30 years.[4] The regiment is usually stood down between January and May of each year, depending on whether new recruits are invited to join. Normally, the regiment’s training starts at the beginning of May, in preparation for the Atholl Gathering at the end of the month; however, if new recruits join, they must gain a standard of foot and arms drill before being permitted to parade with the rest of the regiment, which they practise between January and March.[5]

The regiment’s officers are usually lairds from the areas around Blair Atholl, while other ranks are men with connections either to the local area or to the Duke’s estate. Membership of the regiment is by the personal invitation of the Duke. Both the present Duke and his heir apparent, the Marquess of Tullibardine, were commissioned by the 11th Duke into the regiment.[6]

The regiment carries Lee-Metford rifles on parade.
Atholl Highlanders Pipes and Drums USA

The Atholl Highlanders Pipes and Drums USA is a pipe band resident in Stone Mountain, Georgia. This was formed in 1981, and was granted permission by the 10th Duke to wear the Murray of Atholl tartan and to be his Unit in the Colonies. The band has no official connection beyond this to the Atholl Highlanders. The Atholl Highlanders USA has the distinction of being the first pipe band to play at the Super Bowl, when it appeared at Super Bowl XXXIV.

Alliances
South Africa The Transvaal Scottish
United Kingdom The Fife and Forfar Yeomanry/Scottish Horse
Structure of the British Army
Military of Scotland
Lonach Highlanders
Clan Murray

References
[1] Atholl Estates Newsletter, Summer 2006
[2] The Duke of Atholl. The Daily Telegraph. May 17, 2012. Retrieved May 20,2012.
[3] Daily Mirror, March 20, 1996
[4] Atholl Highlanders make long-awaited return for The Gathering STV, 23/07/09
[5] Atholl Estates Newsletter, Winter 2006
[6] Three Generations of the Atholl family to be on parade at Blair Castle  VisitScotland : Perthshire

External links
The Atholl Highlanders USA Pipes and Drums

Further Study
Securicor Plc
Serco Group Plc, We Deal in Humans and
RCA-Serco and its Intelligence beginnings
BAE Systems plc
Wackenhut Corporation
G4s : Global Private Domestic Security
The Centre for European Reform and Hakluyt
Frank Lowy and the Westfield Company