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Clan Rutherford

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Clan Rutherford

Clan Rutherford or Rutherfurd/Rutherfurd is a Lowland Scottish clan of the Scottish Borders. The clan is officially recognized by the Lord Lyon King of Arms; however, as it does not currently have a clan chief that is recognized by the Lord Lyon King of Arms, it is considered an armigerous clan.

The lands of Rutherford are near to Maxton, Roxburghshire. There are two traditional origins of the clan. The first states that a man who was named Ruther guided an ancient king of Scots over a ford in the River Tweed which gave the king a victory over the Northumbrians. Ruther was rewarded with a grant of land and was thereafter named after the "ford" which had brought him good fortune. The other tradition states that an English army foolishly abandoned a strong position on the heights above the River Tweed, attacking a Scottish force on the opposite side. The English, attempting to force a crossing, were soundly defeated, and the Scots named the place Rue the Ford in commemoration. Whether this story was true or not, the English certainly came to rue the Rutherfords, who were fierce in their defence of their lands and eager to plunder the rich pickings of the Northumbrians.

In around 1140 Robertus Dominus de Rodyrforde, witnessed a charter by David I of Scotland. Between 1161 and 1272, Nichol de Rutherford is also mentioned in several charters. In 1390 Sir Richard Rutherford witnessed a charter in favour of William, steward of Minto, Scottish Borders. Sir Richard Rutherford was also a favourite of Robert III of Scotland. In 1398 he was an ambassador to England and his sons were wardens of the Marches. A younger son of Richard obtained the lands of Chatto and Hunthill. The main line failed, and the Ruthford lands passed to the Tranquair family.

The Rutherford/Rutherfurd name continued to be feared in the Scottish Borders. Thomas Rutherfurd the Black Laird of Edgerston was famous for his daring attacks against the English. The most notable of his exploits was the Battle of the Red Swire which took place in July 1575. The battle came about when both the English and Scottish wardens of the Marches agreed to meet to hear their mutual grievances and to give redress for complaints. The Scots demanded that a notorious English brigand named Farnstein surrender. However the English warden, Sir John Forster, claimed that Farnstein could not be found. The Scottish warden, Sir John Carmichael, doubted this claim. The English warden then insulted Carmichael's family and the English bowmen discharged a flight of arrows at the Scots. The Scots were taken by surprise, driven back and Carmichael was captured. However the Clan Rutherford soon arrived on the scene, putting the English to flight, freeing Carmichael and instead taking prisoner the English warden and several of his lieutenants.

The Rutherford Lairds of Edgerston distinguished themselves fighting for their king, Charles I of Scotland during the Civil War. Rutherford, at his own expense, raised a troop of horse and fought in England until 1646 when the king surrendered. He took up the royalist cause again but was severely wounded and his whole troop was wiped out at the Battle of Dunbar (1650). Lieutenant General Andrew Rutherford of the Rutherford of Chatto and Hunthill branch of the clan was made Lord Rutherford in the peerage in 1661. In 1663 he was appointed Governor of Tangier in Morocco, however he was killed in battle with Moroccan forces in 1664. He had been advanced to the earldom of Teviot but as he died without issue this title became extinct although the Lord Rutherford title went to a cousin.

The Lord Rutherford title is also now extinct. From 1839 to 1851 Andrew Rutherford was MP for Leith. He had also held the office of Lord Advocate and had been elevated to the Bench with the judicial title of Lord Rutherford. Ernest Rutherford discovered the alpha particle and also developed the nuclear theory of atomic structure. He laid the groundwork for nuclear physics in the twentieth century. In 1914, he was knighted and in 1925 he was appointed to the Order of Merit.

Side note: the Rutherford family was engaged in a feud with Stuyvesant family when they both resided in Hackettstown, New Jersey. A notable event was of a son and daughter from the opposing families falling in love and marrying, a Romeo and Juliet situation, but without the bloodshed. The families built a church for the marriage, now located at 40 Puffer Road, Hackettstown, New Jersey. This collaborative effort is now seemingly abandoned, but more research is needed to certify this status.

Present day, the Stuyvesant mansion has been burned and is largely cleared, with its grounds encompassed in the western side Allamuchy State Park. The Rutherford house has been transformed into part of Mountain Villa School, located at 1686 CR-517, Allamuchy, New Jersey.

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