This is very much an ongoing piece that I have assembled not least to assist me in my researches.
As such, it is inevitable that many details are lacking so it is meant more as an aide-memoire that others might find useful and/or interesting.
1266 – Western Isles formally ceded from Norway to Scotland – Lordship of the Isles formed
1494 – James IV of Scotland defeats last Lord of the Isles but fails to control the islands
1544 – Taransay battle between invading Morrisons of Ness, Lewis and Macleods
1528 – Alasdair Macleod (Crotach – hunch-back) of Harris and Dunvegan builds St Clement’s church at Rodel
1547 – Alasdair Crotach buried at St Clement’s
1700
1730 – Luskentyre, previously part of Tack of Berneray of William Macleod , becomes his home
1746 – Battle of Culloden
1755 – Population is ‘1969 souls’ (NSAS)
17?? – William’s grandaughter, Isabella, inherits and her husband, William Macleod, rules Luskentyre
1779 – Harris sold to Captain Alexander Macleod of Berneray
1782 – Rev John Lanne Buchanan begins travels, describes Macleod’s introducing certain craftsmen to Harris
1784 – St Clement’s church restored by Captain Macleod, burns down and is rebuilt
1786 – Rodel House, Harbour and fishing facilities established by Captain Macleod
1787 – ‘Piscator’ visits Rodel – his account is later published in ‘The Bee’
1790 – Alexander Hume Macleod, Captain Alexander’s Son, inherits Harris
1792 – Rev John Macleod writes Harris entry for Statistical Accounts of Scotland
1792 – Population ‘2536’ (NSAS quoting SAS)
1792 – Sea-ware and Feannagan cultivation
1794 – Sound of Harris description
1794 – ‘A Defence of the Scots Highlanders’
1794 – Taransay home to 140 people
1794 – Sound of Harris described
1797 – Robert Heron’s and the Board of Agriculture and Internal Improvement
1800
1800s – Taransay has crofters in Raa but Paible and Uidh are now only farms
1804 – Bald’s Map of Harris
1808 – A warning regarding The Disease of The Curl that affects Potatoes
1810 – Horgabost cleared
1811 – Alexander Norman Macleod inherits Harris from his father, Alexander Hume Macleod
181? – Donald Stewart, Sheep Farmer, becomes Factor
181? – Seilibost divided into Crofts – to maximise population and rents
1815 – Kelp Market plummets following end of French Wars
1818 – Rodel Cleared whilst Alexander Norman Macleod was residing at Rodel House
1824 – Present Eilean Glas Lighthouse built
1827 – An account of Baptist Preaching on Harris
1828 – Scarista cleared
1828 – Presence of Asbestos on Harris described
1829 – Seilibost partially cleared
1830s – Farm of Strond broken into crofts
1830s – Direcleit and Ceann Dibig, parts of Luskentyre Farm, broken into crofts
1831 – Population 3810
1832 – Donald Stewart refuses to replace slates on Church on Berneray
1834 – 5th March, George Murray, 5th Earl of Dunmore buys Harris for £60,000
1834 – Duncan Shaw becomes Factor
1836 – Alexander Murray, 6th Earl of Dunmore, inherits Harris
1836 – Poor harvest, particularly of Potatoes – earliest claimed date for Countess of Dunmore marketing tweeds
1837 – Poor harvest, particularly of Potatoes
1838 – Seilibost cleared
1839 – Big Borve, Middle Borve and Little Borve cleared
184? – Raa on Tarasaigh Cleared for John Macdonald, tacksman
1841 – Rev John MacIver writes for New Statistical Account of Scotland (NSAS)
1841 – Population ‘upwards of 4000’
1841 – 6th Earl of Dunmore at his London home
1841 – Estate Officer residing at Rodel is John Lindsay
1843 – Church of Scotland fragments in Disruption – islanders join Free Church of Scotland
1843 – 6th Earl of dunmore considering building a harbour at W Loch Tarbert, with a link to the E Loch
1844 – Catherine Murray, Countess of Dunmore, is said to Start the Harris Tweed Industry
1845 – Alexander, 6th Earl, dies and Catherine, his wife, is ‘Tutor’ for her son, 4 yr old Charles Adolphus, 7th Earl of Dunmore
1846 – Potato Famines begin
1847 – Borve, Harris resettled by new Factor. Kenneth Macdonald was Assistant Factor
1848 – Sunday Postal Deliveries Cease
1849 – Countess of Dunmore establishes the Embroidery School at An-t-Ob
1850s – House at An-t-Ob built for the Gardener and his wife, the Embroidery Teacher
1850s – Tarbert gets its first church
1851 – Marion and Chirsty Macleod, the ‘Paisley sisters’ living at Port Esgein, Farm of Strond, the tenant of the tack of Strong and Killegray being a by Mrs Campbell.
1851 – John Robson Macdonald, Land Factor and Justice of the Peace, who succeeded Donald Stewart, living at Rodel House
1851 – Master of the Harris Mailboat, John Morrison, residing at Port Esgein
1851 – Crofts at Direcleit and Ceann Dibig bisected to provide homes for people cleared from Borve on Berneray
1851 – Inn at An-t-Ob first found
1851 – Potatoes Famines end – latest date for Countess of Dunmore’s marketing of tweeds
1852 – Highland and Islands Emigration Society(HIES) formed – 742 leave Harris for Australia
1853 – Borve, Harris cleared again
1853 – Manish Free Church built
1854 – Glasgow Herald article on Gaelic School Exhibition and Sale
1854 – Road from Stornoway to Tarbert completed
1857 – 24th March – 6th Earl of Dunmore’s 16th Birthday
1857 – Lady Dunmore and Mrs Thomas, wife of a Government Surveyor, start Stocking-Knitting(socks and knickerbocker stockings) industry
1857 – Admiral Otter’s Chart of the Sound of Harris
1858 – ‘In 1858Lady Dunmore was a mother to her people in Harris.’ – Duchess of Sutherland writing of ‘The Revival of Home Industries’ in ‘The Land Magazine’, Vol 3, 1899.
1860s – Direcleit and Ceann Dibig cleared
1862 – 24th March – 6th Earl of Dunmore’s 21st Birthday
1863 – Ardvourlie Castle built as Hunting Lodge for North Harris Estate
1865 – Harris Hotel built by Earl of Dunmore and originally called Tarbert Hotel
1867 – Abhainnsuidhe Castle built by Earl of Dunmore
1867 – North Harris Estate sold to Sir Ernest Scott for £155,000 (over two-and-a-half times what the 5th Earl of Dunmore had paid for the whole of Harris 33 years earlier!)
1871 – Stocking Knitters of Strond, and elsewhere too, appear in abundance in the Census
1872 – Telegraph Cable from Stornoway to Scotland laid
1873 – Dunmore’s restore St Clement’s church
1879 – 4th March – Ardvourlie castle burnt down
1879 – The Wreck of the Yacht Astarte
1881 – SS Dunara Castle appears in Harris on this and the following 2 censuses
1881 – Angus Kerr, Farm Manager, at Rodel
1882 – Nov/Dec – Thomas Brydone becomes Lord Dunmore’s Factor (Napier Commission Evidence)
1883 – Thursday, 31st May, Obbe – Napier Commission
1884 – Direcleit and Ceann Dibig recrofted
1886 – Countess of Dunmore dies in February
1886 – Crofters’ Act passed 25th June
1886 – Telegraph Cable from Port Esgein, Harris to North Uist laid
1888 – Assisted emigration to Canada established
1888 – ‘Women’s Work in Harris (Hebrides),’ in The British Friend, by Edward Grub – Mrs FWL Thomas
1890 – ‘Spanker’ wrecked in a storm in the Sound of Harris
1895 – Crofters Commission Report allows 1 horse, 4, cows and 20 sheep per croft in Strond
1897 – Golden Road linking Tarbert and Rodel through the Bays is completed
1897 – Manish Victoria Cottage Hospital built & endowed by Mrs Frances Thomas
1900 – Carding Mill built at Lon na Feille, the old Market Stance, in Direcleit by Sir Samuel Scott, owner of the North Harris Estate
1902 – Death of Mrs Frances Thomas
1919 – Lord Leverhulme buys South Harris for £20,000 and North Harris for £36,000
1920s – Geocrab Carding Mill built by Lord Lever – the locals refuse to use it
1924 – Leverburgh prospers
1925 – Lord Leverhulme dies, South Harris sold for £900 in an Auction
1925 – Finlay J Macdonald born
1944 – North Harris Estate bought by Sir T. O. M. Sopwith
1974 – Taransay’s last residents leave