Alexander Mackenzie (25 December 1838 â 22 January 1898) was a Scottish historian, author, magazine editor and politician.
Mackenzie was born on 25 December 1838 in Park House, a croft in Gairloch, Wester Ross, Scotland, to Hector (1810âÂÂ1908) and Catherine Mackenzie ( Campbell; 1812âÂÂ1882). He had little opportunity for education and initially earned his living as a labourer and ploughman. In 1861, he became apprenticed in the clothes trade selling Scottish cloth in Colchester, England.
In 1869 he settled in Inverness, where he and his brother William set up a clothes shop in Clach na Cudainn House. From his business premises, he derived his nickname 'Clach na Cudainn' or, simply, 'Clach'.
By 1876, he was contributing reports to the Daily Free Press. He later became an editor and publisher of the Celtic Magazine and the Scottish Highlander.
Mackenzie wrote numerous clan histories. He was a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. A founder member of the Gaelic Society of Inverness, Mackenzie was elected Honorary Chieftain in 1894.
In the 1880s, Mackenzie became actively involved in the Highland land issue and campaigned for security of tenure for crofters. In Nuair Chaidh na Ceithir ÃÂr Oirre, Màiri Mhòr nan ÃÂran describes going with him, Charles Fraser-Mackintosh and others to elicit the support of Mrs. MacRae of Stromeferry for their cause and affectionately tells how "the Clach" discouraged 17-stone Màiri from getting into a rowing boat with the others. First published in 1883, MacKenzie's History of the Highland Clearances has remained in print to the present times. John Prebble wrote "...it has been and will remain a book to be read, an essential part of any study of the clearances".
He married on 3 August 1865 Emma Sarah Rose, author of Tales of the Heather, with whom he had nine issue:
Mackenzie died on 22 January 1898, aged 59.