McIntire Genealogy Pages

In Gaelic, 
known as  Mac an t-Saoir 
(son of the carpenter)
 

LEGEND OF THE WHITE CALF

The following is taken from an accounting by Eddis Earl McIntire of New Martinsville:

   Naturally there is a fairy story or folklore tale connected with the history of each Clan, so this story, be it as it may, is that a member of the clan MacDonald of Sloat, discovered a leek in the galley ship of the Clan's Chieftain and he immediately thrust in his thumb into the hole and then cut if off with his sword in order to stop the leak and plug the hole and was thereby credited with saving the ship and its crew, who managed to sail the ship to safety and earned for himself the name of SAOR-NA-H-ORDAIG (spelling in question) meaning the Thumb Carpenter.

(My note: He was henceforth known as "An t-saoir" and his descendants Mac an t-saoir. Regardless, the family seems in all stories to have been established in Glenoe, Argyllshire were connected the Campbells of Glenorchy.)

    Now in due time, this man became the father of a son who grew to manhood, and like the heroes of sold, set out to earn or seek his own fortune, and he sailed from Sloat in his galley, taking with him a snow- white cow, resolving that when he reached shore the cow would be left to wander as she pleased, and where the cow lay down to rest there would he make his home.  Now the story says she lay down at Glenmore, Scotland, and the site is still called "LARACK-NA-BO-FIONN" (spelling in questions) which means the place of the white cow.
    Now between the years 1100 and 1700, the family is known to have lived on this land, holding it from the Campbell's of Glenorchy and to whom they delivered each year in the summertime a snow ball and a white calf.  Now the white crags of Glenoe could yield a snow ball even in summer, and the McIntires remembering the cow of "Mac-an-t-saoir" always bred white cows in their herds so that the little white calf would be in readiness for the rent.


    Now all the Clans had their coat of arms and the McIntires were no exception to the rule.  The Clan's tartan is one of the most beautiful of all Scottish plaids, being woodland green and soft blue with a little orange red and some slim white lines that may have been reminiscent of the snow-white cow that had been to Glenoe. 

  Links About the Area

The Argyllshire Gathering


Calves picture by dirtyboots.com

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