_John MACLEOD _______
_Alexander MACLEOD _|_Catherine CAMPBELL _
_Norman Mor MACLEOD _|
| | _____________________
| |_Margaret MACLEOD __|_____________________
_Donald MACLEOD __|
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| | ____________________|_____________________
| |_Miss M. MACKENZIE __|
| | _____________________
| |____________________|_____________________
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|--Norman MACLEOD
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| _____________________
| ____________________|_____________________
| _____________________|
| | | _____________________
| | |____________________|_____________________
|_Catherine MUNRO _|
| _____________________
| ____________________|_____________________
|_____________________|
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|____________________|_____________________
!SOURCE: Rev. Dr. Donald MacKinnon, THE MACLEODS: THE GENEALOGY OF A CLAN, Section III, "Cadet Families", Edinburgh, The Clan MacLeod Society, 1970, pp. 143, 156. When John Norman MacLeod of MacLeod sold the Glenelg portion of his estates in 1811 to a London merchant of the name of Bruce, Norman MacLeod of Drynoch, foreseeing that great economic changes were bound to take place, advised the Glenelg tenants to emigrate in a body to Canada, and he himself decided to go with them. Many of the people of Glenelg took his advice, and sailed for Canada, but his friends persuaded him to remain at home. Although he did not cross the Atlantic Ocean, he did not stay on in Glenelg, but returned to Skye, where he took over the tack of Knock in Sleat, where he died in 1828. He was buried in Glenelg. Norman married Alexandrina, eldest daughter of Donald MacLeod of Berneray (the 'Old Trojan'), by his third wife, Margaret, daughter of the Rev. Donald MacLeod, 3rd of the MacLeods of Greshornish, minister of Duirinish, Skye, with issue. Norman MacLeod, the father of ...fifteen children, died, in 1828, at Knock, Sleat, and was succeeded in the representation of the family of Drynoch by his grandson.