The following page is sourced from the Sutherland Estate Papers in the National Library of Scotland, item "Missives of Tacks and rental agreements, 1813-1815", (REF: DEP.313.2514).
The village of Armadale was originally part of the Strathy Estate. However, in 1813 William Honeyman, Lord Armadale sold the Strathy Estate to the Sutherland Estate. The document from 1813 was written by William Young who from 1811 to 1816 was the Factor (manager) of the Sutherland Estate in partnership with Patrick Sellar. William Young organised the establishment of a number of sheep farms during the Highland Clearances in Sutherland, where the tenants were evicted by force to make way for more profitable sheep farming. He also dealt with, but mostly unsuccessfully from the point of view of the Sutherland Estate owners, the protest movements between 1813 and 1816. William Young was eventually dismissed by James Loch who was the Commissioner of the Sutherland Estate, in effect chief executive of Sutherland Estate developments from 1816 onwards and who planned the mass evictions of 1819-1820. Loch replaced William Young with Francis Suther. (Source: Set Adrift Upon the World - The Sutherland Clearances, by James Hunter, published in 2015, pages xix and xvi).
The document from 1813 that was written by William Young lists heads of house-holds throughout the Strathy Estate. However, here I have only included the segment for the village of Armadale, which includes my ancestor Alex Munro and his eldest son James: