Tour Scotland Photograph Video Barge Forth and Clyde Canal North Lanarkshire




Tour Scotland video of a Barge cruising on the Forth and Clyde Canal in North Lanarkshire, Scotland. This Scottish canal opened in 1790, crossing central Scotland; it provided a route for the seagoing vessels of the day between the Firth of Forth and the Firth of Clyde at the narrowest part of the Scottish Lowlands. It is 35 miles long and it runs from the River Forth near Grangemouth to the River Clyde at Bowling, and had an important basin at Port Dundas in Glasgow. Successful in its day, it suffered as the seagoing vessels were built larger and could no longer pass through. The railway age further impaired the success of the canal.

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Tour Scotland Video Jean Cochrane Mausoleum Kilsyth



Tour Scotland video of the Jean Cochrane Mausoleum in Kilsyth, located halfway between Glasgow and Stirling, in North Lanarkshire, Scotland. This vault contains the earthly remains of one, Jean Cochrane and her son who died tragically in 1695. The following is inscribed on an external wall of the vault, Jean Cochrane, wife, and son of William Livingstone of Kilsyth. Deaths caused by falling in of roof, composed turf of a house in Holland. Mr Livingstone was with difficulty extracted. Lady, child, and nurse were killed , October 1695.

In 1795, vault over which the church at that time stood, having been accidentally opened bodies of Lady Dundee and her son which had been embalmed and sent from Holland were found in a remarkable state of preservation and after being for sometime exposed to view, the vault was closed. This lady was the daughter of William, Lord Cochrane who predeceased his father, William, 1st Earl of Dundonald. She married firstly John Graham of Claverhouse, Viscount of Dundee killed at the Battle of Killiecrankie, 1689 and secondly the Honorable William Livingstone who succeeded his father, James as the third Viscount of Kilsyth 1706. Lord Kilsyth married secondly Barbara, daughter of MacDougall of Makerstoun but dying under attainder at Rome, 1733.



Tour Scotland video of the cemetery in Kilsyth, North Lanarkshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Video Burns and Old Parish Church Kilsyth


Tour Scotland travel video of Burns and Old Parish Church on ancestry visit to Kilsyth, located halfway between Glasgow and Stirling in North Lanarkshire, Scotland. Gothic style stone-built church with battlemented tower built in 1816 and refurbished in 1932, architect Mr Shepherd. The tower, clock and bell were gifted by Sir Charles Edmonstone of Duntreath, born 10 October 1764, died 1 April 1821. He was the third son of Sir Archibald Edmonstone, 1st Baronet. He was educated at Eton College and subsequently at Christ Church, Oxford, England. Having been called to the Bar, he was one of the six clerks in Chancery until the time of his father's death. In 1806 he was elected Member for Dumbartonshire, but he lost his seat in the general election of the following year. In 1812 he became Member for Stirlingshire and held the seat until his death. A Tory like his father, he supported Lord Liverpool's government during the later part of the Napoleonic Wars. He married firstly, Emma, daughter of Richard Wilbraham Bootle of Rode Hall, Cheshire, by whom he had a son and a daughter. He married secondly on 5 December 1804 Louisa Hotham, daughter of the 2nd Baron Hotham, by whom he had four sons and two daughters. He died at Brighton in 1821, apparently from a stroke, aged fifty eight, and was succeeded by his eldest son.


Tour Scotland video of Burns and Old Parish Church in Kilsyth, North Lanarkshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Crombie Memorial Window St Machar’s Cathedral Aberdeen

Tour Scotland photograph of the John Eugene Crombie memorial stained glass window in St Machar’s Cathedral, Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. Born 30th April 1896, died 23rd April 1917. He was born at 91 Onslow Square, London, the only son of John William Crombie, Liberal M.P for Kincardineshire. Eugene as he was always known was a Captain in the Gordon Highlanders who was Killed in Action, St. George's Day, 1917. He was also a War Poet and here is one of his poems. Easter Day, 1917, The Eve of the Battle. I rose and watched the eternal giant of fire, Renew his struggle with the grey monk Dawn, Slowly supreme, though broadening streaks of blood, Besmirch the threadbare cloak, and pour his flood. Of life and strength on our yet sleeping choir. As I went out to church on Easter morn. Returning with the song of birds and men. Acclaiming victory of throbbing life, I saw the fairies of the morning shower, Giving to drink each waking blade and flower, I saw the new world take Communion then, and now 'tis night and we return to strife.
Huts, France, April, 1917. Eugene is buried in Duisans British Cemetery Etrun, Pas De Calais, France.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Trail Memorial Window St Machar’s Cathedral Aberdeen

Tour Scotland photograph of the James William Helenus Trail memorial stained glass window in St Machar’s Cathedral, Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. James was born on Birsay, Orkney. Educated in Aberdeen, he followed the classical curriculum, completing an arts degree in 1870. Trail was then permitted to study medicine, which allowed him to pursue his lifelong interest in natural history. During this time he was appointed as botanist on the Amazon Steam Navigation Company's explorations of Brazil, spending two years in the Amazon. Trail went on to complete his study of medicine graduating in 1876. He was appointed Regius Professor of Botany at Aberdeen University In 1877, and established the University Herbarium with his own plant collections and those bequeathed to him. Professor Trail died on 18th September 1919.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Mitchel Memorial Window St Machar’s Cathedral Aberdeen

Tour Scotland photograph of the David Mitchel Memorial stained glass window in St Machar’s Cathedral, Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. David Mitchel, born 1591, died 1663, was a Scottish clergyman. Born in the Mearns, he became a minister in Edinburgh. He held the position until he was deposed by the General Assembly in 1638, after which he moved to England. While there he obtained a benefice, and in 1661, after the Restoration, he obtained a doctorate from the University of Oxford. In this period he became a prebendary of Westminster. Upon the restoration of Episcopacy in Scotland, he was made Bishop of Aberdeen, receiving consecration on 1 June 1662. He held this position for little over half a year, contracting a mortal fever. He died at Aberdeen in late January 1663, and was buried in the cathedral.



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Old Photographs Silverburn Scotland

Old photograph of flax mill workers cottages in Silverburn, Leven, Fife, Scotland. The Silverburn area was originally part of the Barony of Durie and was leased to Mr David Russell by Charles Maitland Christie of Durie in 1854. He established a flax mill and retting business. The flax mill was run on steam power and was one of the first buildings to be roofed with a “ new material ” called corrugated iron.



Old photograph of cottages in Silverburn, Leven, Fife, Scotland.

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Old Photograph Victoria Road Glasgow Scotland

Old photograph of Victoria Road, Glasgow, Scotland.



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Old Photographs Renfrew Scotland

Old photograph of Renfrew located six miles West of Glasgow, Scotland. This Scottish town is known as the Cradle of the Royal Stewarts as a result of its early link with the Royal house of Scotland and Great Britain.



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Old Photographs Sanquhar Scotland

Old photograph of shops, houses and people in Sanquhar located North of Thornhill which is located north of Dumfries, Scotland. Sanquhar is notable for its tiny post office, established in 1712, claimed to be the oldest working post office in the world. It was also the place where the Covenanters, who opposed episcopalisation of the church, signed the Sanquhar Declaration renouncing their allegiance to the King, an event commemorated by a monument in the main street. The church of St. Brides contains a memorial to James Crichton, a 16th century polymath. The ruins of Sanquhar Castle stand nearby.



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Old Photographs Abercorn Church Scotland

Old photograph of the church and cemetery in Abercorn in West Lothian, Scotland. Abercorn Church is believed to be built on the site of a monastery. The church dates to the late 11th or 12th century, although it is much altered from its original layout.




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Old Photographs Saltburn Scotland

Old photograph of cottages in Saltburn, Ross and Cromarty, Scotland. A Scottish coastal village, which is situated on the northern shore of the Cromarty Firth.



Old photograph of cottages in Saltburn, Ross and Cromarty, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Ferry Passing Isle Of Jura

Tour Scotland photograph of the Ferry to Islay passing the Isle of Jura, Scotland. The Viking occupation of the Hebrides began in the ninth century, and was formalised when sovereignty was secured in 1098. From this point, Norse rule continued until 1266, when the Hebrides, together with Kintyre and the Isle of Man, were ceded to Scotland in the Treaty of Perth. A key figure during the Norse period was the warlord Somerled, whose descendants, for around 150 years from the mid-fourteenth century, styled themselves Lords of the Isles. The Lordship of the Isles was dominated by Clan Donald, whose seat was at Finlaggan on Islay. The Lordship came to an end in 1493, but Clan Donald continued to rule the southern part of Jura, through the MacDonalds of Dunnyveg. The north of the island, however, was owned by this time by Clan Maclean, whose seat was at Aros Castle in Glengarrisdale. In 1647, this was to be the site of a notable battle between the Macleans and the Campbells of Craignish. From the mid-eighteenth century, long before the notorious Highland Clearances of the nineteenth century, there were a number of waves of emigration from Jura. In 1767, fifty people left Jura for Canada, and from that point the population gradually shrank.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Bridge Isle Of Jura

Tour Scotland photograph of a bridge on the Isle of Jura, Scotland. The island is dominated by three steep-sided conical quartzite mountains on its western side, known as the Paps of Jura.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Sunset Isle Of Jura

Tour Scotland photograph of sunset on the Isle of Jura, Scotland. Towards the north end of Jura, some miles beyond the end of the metalled road, is Barnhill, a remote house where the novelist George Orwell spent much of the last three years of his life. Orwell was known to the residents of Jura by his real name, Eric Blair. It was at Barnhill that Orwell finished Nineteen Eighty-Four, during 1947 and 1948 while critically ill with tuberculosis.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Mountain Cairn Isle Of Jura

Tour Scotland photograph of a mountain Cairn on the Isle of Jura, Scotland. It is a Scottish tradition to carry a stone up from the bottom of a hill to place on a cairn at its top. In such a fashion, cairns would grow ever larger. An old Scottish Gaelic blessing is Cuiridh mi clach air do chàrn, " I'll put a stone on your cairn ". In Highland folklore it is believed that the Highland Clans, before they fought in a battle, each man would place a stone in a pile. Those who survived the battle returned and removed a stone from the pile. The stones that remained were built into a cairn to honour the dead.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Mountain Cairn Isle Of Arran

Tour Scotland photograph of a mountain Cairn on the Island of Arran, Scotland. It is a Scottish tradition to carry a stone up from the bottom of a hill to place on a cairn at its top. In such a fashion, cairns would grow ever larger. An old Scottish Gaelic blessing is Cuiridh mi clach air do chàrn, " I'll put a stone on your cairn ". In Highland folklore it is believed that the Highland Clans, before they fought in a battle, each man would place a stone in a pile. Those who survived the battle returned and removed a stone from the pile. The stones that remained were built into a cairn to honour the dead.



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Tour Scotland Photographs Lairig Ghru Mountain Pass

Tour Scotland photograph of Lairig Ghru mountain pass in the Cairngorms of Scotland. Historically the Lairig Ghru has been used as a route between Deeside and Strathspey. It was used as a cattle droving route as late as 1873.

Tour Scotland photograph of Lairig Ghru mountain pass in the Cairngorms of Scotland.

Tour Scotland photograph of Lairig Ghru mountain pass in the Cairngorms of Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Stob a' Choire Odhair Scottish Highlands

Tour Scotland photograph of Stob a' Choire Odhair mountain north west of Bridge of Orchy, Scotland. This is the highest point in the former county of Argyll. The lower eastern slopes of Stob a' Choire Odhair carries two old roads which were important historical links to the north of Scotland. An old military road built by Major William Caulfeild was constructed in the early 1750s as part of the pacification of the Highlands after the 1745 Jacobite rising . Slightly further east is the line of an ancient drovers' road used to herd cattle to market, this road was improved by Thomas Telford in 1803 and carried the main road down Glen Coe to Fort William until 1933 when the present road was built further east. Telford’s road now carries the route of the West Highland Long Distance Walking Way.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Bidean nam Bian Glencoe Scottish Highlands

Tour Scotland photograph of Bidean nam Bian mountain South of Glencoe, Scotland. This is the highest point in the former county of Argyll.

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Old Photographs Cowdenknowes Scotland

Old photograph of Cowdenknowes, Scotland. Cowdenknowes House is a mansion located on the east bank of the leader water south of Earlston in Berwickshire. The present house stands on the site of a Douglas stronghold and has been substantially added to and remodelled in the late 18th century, and again in 1820 and the 1880s. Mary Queen of Scots spent several days at Cowdenknowes at Earlston in October 1566, while en route to Jedburgh. Two years after the visit she was imprisoned for 18 years until her execution in 1587.




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Old Photographs Gifford Scotland

Old photograph of Gifford, East Lothian, Scotland. The village takes its name from Sir Hugo de Giffard of Yester, whose ancient Scoto-Norman family possessed the baronies of Yester, Morham, and Duncanlaw in Haddingtonshire, and Tayling and Poldame in the counties of Perthshire and Forfar. The Mercat Cross was built in 1780 and is still standing in the centre of the village. The present church building was built in 1710.



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Old Photograph Bridge Of Allan Scotland

Old photograph of Bridge Of Allan near Stirling, Scotland. Frederick Pullar was born in Bridge of Allan near Stirling on 20 January 1875 the son of the industrialist Laurence Pullar and his wife, Ellen Ferguson Pattison. He was educated at Stanley House School at Bridge of Allan then at the High School in Stirling. He then attended the West of Scotland Technical College in Glasgow. Around 1893 he entered the family firm of Pullars of Perth founded by his grandfather, John Pullar, in the 1820s. In 1897 Frederick's father Laurence Pullar commissioned his friend, Sir John Murray to undertake an entire survey of all Scottisgh fresh water lochs. This was on condition that Sir John employed his then 22 year old son Frederick to assist in the task. However, Frederick, although having no formal university training, proved more than competent in this role. Frederick and Sir John spent over three years together, surveying 15 lochs beginning with Loch Lubnaig. In this they utilised a device known as Pullar's Sounding Machine. The sounding machine appears to have been named after the father, rather than Frederick, the father having undertaken his own highly competent bathymetrical surveys from at least 1885. In 1901 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir John Murray, Alexander Buchan, Robert Munro and John Horne. On 15 February 1901 he was skating with several hundred people on Airthrey Loch in front of Airthrey Castle, when the ice gave way. Accounts related that Pullar rescued three people and returned to rescue a young lady. Sadly both he and the lady then drowned. He is buried in Logie Churchyard, just east of Stirling. The beautiful memorial stands east of the church and was commissioned by his parents from the sculptor George Frampton. They were later buried beside him.



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Old Photograph Cottages Holywood Scotland

Old photograph of cottages in Holywood village near Dumfries, Scotland. Nineteenth century records indicate that the main population centre for the parish of this area was a triangular collection of houses beside the turnpike road, not the present Holywood Village, but a site named Druidville.



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Old Photographs Stronsay Scotland

Old photograph of Stronsay, Orkney Islands, Scotland. The island of Stronsay is now agricultural, but during the 18th and 19th centuries, kelp collection and herring curing employed up to five thousand people. The population, which is high for a Scottish island, was over a thousand for the entire 19th century through the mid 20th century, with the 1891 census recording a population of 1275 people, excluding seasonal itinerants involved in the herring industry.

Old photograph of Stronsay, Orkney Islands, Scotland.

Old photograph of Stronsay, Orkney Islands, Scotland.

Old photograph of Stronsay, Orkney Islands, Scotland.

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Old Photograph Crofters Unst Shetland Scotland

Old photograph of crofters and Shetland ponies on the Island of Unst, Shetland Islands, Scotland. Thomas Barclay was born in Unst on June 1792, of which parish his father, the Reverend James Barclay, was minister. Thomas enrolled at King's College, Aberdeen, in 1808. Graduating M.A., he relocated to London, England, to work as a journalist. He later returned to Scotland to become a minister in the Church of Scotland. He was appointed Principal of the University of Glasgow in 1858, and worked to raise funds to build the University's new campus in Gilmorehill. He is said to have been popular amongst the students due to his resemblance to Scottish Protestant reformer John Knox. He died in office in 1873.



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Tour Scotland Winter Photograph Sunset Glencoe Scottish Highlands

Tour Scotland Winter photograph shot at sunset in mountains of Glencoe, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Winter Photograph Dusk Glencoe Scottish Highlands

Tour Scotland Winter photograph shot at dusk in mountains of Glencoe, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Winter Photographs Glencoe Scottish Highlands

Tour Scotland Winter photograph shot in mountains of Glencoe, Scotland.

Tour Scotland Winter photograph shot in mountains of Glencoe, Scotland.

Tour Scotland Winter photograph shot in mountains of Glencoe, Scotland.

Tour Scotland Winter photograph shot in mountains of Glencoe, Scotland.

Tour Scotland Winter photograph shot in mountains of Glencoe, Scotland.

Tour Scotland Winter photograph shot in mountains of Glencoe, Scotland.

Tour Scotland Winter photograph shot in mountains of Glencoe, Scotland.

Tour Scotland Winter photograph shot in mountains of Glencoe, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Photographs Lochnagar Scottish Highlands

Tour Scotland photograph of Lochnagar mountain near Balmoral Castle, Scotland. Technically, the English name is a misunderstanding, being named after Lochan na Gaire, the " little loch of the noisy sound " a loch to be found in the mountain's northeast corrie. Today the lochan is popularly called Lochnagar as well. This Scottish mountain is located about five miles south of the River Dee near Balmoral.


Tour Scotland photograph of Lochnagar mountain near Balmoral Castle, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Queen's Well Glen Mark Scotland

Tour Scotland photograph of Queen's Well in Glen Mark, Angus, Scotland. Queen Victoria and her consort Prince Albert purchased Balmoral Castle and delighted in travelling the mountain routes around. In 1861 they rode the 15 miles from Balmoral to Glen Mark and met with Lord Dalhousie beside an artesian well. Here they were refreshed by the spring water before continuing to Invermark Lodge where they stayed overnight. To commemorate the visit, Lord Dalhousie erected a monument in the shape of a royal crown over the well. An inscription on the monument reads: " Her Majesty, Queen Victoria, and his Royal Highness the Prince Consort, visited this well and drank of its refreshing waters, on the 20th September, 1861, the year of Her Majesty's great sorrow. "



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Old Photograph Fintry Scotland

Old photograph of cottages and car in Fintry, Scotland. A Scottish village nestled in the strath of the Endrick Water between the Campsie Fells and the Fintry Hills, some 19 miles north of Glasgow.



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Old Photograph Rosyth Scotland

Old photograph of Rosyth, Fife, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Fogla Skerry Shetland Scotland

Old photograph of Fogla Skerry, Shetland Islands, Scotland. Fogla Skerry, is a small island situated off the west coast of Papa Stour. It is riddled with some of the most spectacular sea caves in Shetland. Papa Stour is the eighth largest island in Shetland. Erosion of the soft volcanic rocks by the sea has created an extraordinary variety of caves, stacks, arches, blowholes, and cliffs. The island and its surrounding seas harbour diverse populations of wildlife. Numerous shipwrecks have occurred around the coast, and the celebrated poem Da Sang o da Papa Men by Vagaland recalls the drama of the days when Papa Stour was a centre for deep sea fishing.



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Old Photographs Deanston Scotland

Old photograph of Deanston near Doune, Stirlingshire, Scotland. The name comes from Walter Drummond, Dean of Dunblane in 1500, originally called Deans Town. Deanston Cotton Mill was built by the Buchanan brothers of Carston, near Manchester, in 1785, and utilised the River Teith to power the mill. In 1808 James Finlay & Co bought the mill and developed it into the industrial leader of its time, which included the construction of a 1500 yard long Lade. James Smith, a manager of the mill, was a successful entrepreneur and inventor. He built unusually designed accommodation over four levels for his workforce, called the divisions, which was new in its day. At its peak, the mill had over 1000 workers and had the largest waterwheel in Europe, Hercules. The cotton mill closed in 1965. On the site, the Deanston Whisky Distillery opened in 1966.



Old photograph of Deanston near Doune, Stirlingshire, Scotland.

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