I didn't know enough to call ahead when I visited Moy Hall during the summer of 1995. I just thought I'd show up and look around the area on my own. I knocked on the door, and Malcolm's wife came out to see us. Malcolm was quite ill, but came out to see my friend and me, give us a tour of the small clan museum and chat with us. He died shortly after our visit. I'll post a photo of the clan crest cut in stone, that lies at the entrance to the estate's drive as soon as I find it.

My great grandfather's grave site, is located in the kirk cemetary, at Culsalmond, close to Kemnay, where my grandfather was born, just north west of Ellon, north of Aberdeen in Aberdeenshire.

My Glennie roots, actually go back to Braemar and King Duncan of MacBeth fame.

"Origin: Gaelic 'Toiseach' - leader, chief or captain. According to clan historians, the first chief of the clan was Shaw, second son of Duncan MacDuff, Earl of Fife, Royal house of Dalriada. The name therefore has been thought to mean 'son of the chief'."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clan_MacKintosh

"Probably the earliest authentic history of Mackintosh is traceable to Shaw or Seach MACDUFF, a Cadet son of the third Earl of Fife. The son of MACDUFF, for his support of Malcolm IV, was awarded the lands of Petty and Breachley in Invernesshire and was appointed Constable of the Castle thereto. Assuming the name "Mac-an-Toisch", which means "Son of the Thane or Chief", he began his own Clan. The Clan support of James I in 1429 resulted in large tracts of land being settled on the Mackintoshes. Clan Mackintosh was involved in the "Battle of the Thirty", a mass trial by combat, which was held under the judicial control of the King in 1396 on the North Inch of Perth, in which Clan Mackintosh regained all lands taken from the Shaws."
http://www.clanmackintoshna.org/