Old Photograph Taymount House Stanley Perthshire Scotland

Old photograph of Taymount House by the River Tay in Stanley, Perthshire, Scotland.



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Old Photographs Glenfinnan Viaduct Lochaber Scotland

Old photograph Glenfinnan Viaduct, Lochaber, Scotland. A Scottish railway viaduct on the West Highland Line in Glenfinnan. Glenfinnan Viaduct has been used as a location in several films and television series, including Ring of Bright Water, Charlotte Gray, Monarch of the Glen, Stone of Destiny, and three films of the Harry Potter film series.



Old photograph Glenfinnan Viaduct, Lochaber, Scotland.

Old photograph Glenfinnan Viaduct, Lochaber, Scotland.

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Old Photograph Cargo Ship Perthshire Scotland

Old photograph of the cargo ship named after Perthshire, Scotland. Built in 1893 by Hawthorn, Leslie & Co Ltd at Hebburn yard on Tyneside.



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Old Photograph Curling Stanley Mills Perthshire Scotland

Old photograph of curling on the frozen River Tay at Stanley Mills, Perthshire, Scotland.



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Tour Scotland Video River Tay Stanley Mills



Tour Scotland video of the River Tay at Stanley Mills, Perthshire, Scotland. Much of the economy of the village of Stanley was based on a mill powered by the river Tay. The mill mostly produced cotton but also cigarette ribbon. The Dempster & Co company was established in 1787 by seven men including Richard Arkwright, George Dempster and William Sandeman to build the mill on land feued from the Duke of Atholl to provide employment to Highlanders affected by the clearances. The mill eventually went in decline and finally closed down. in 1989. It is now a museum.

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Tour Scotland Amazing Grace In Gaelic Video



Tour Scotland Amazing Grace video. Karen Matheson from Argyll, Scotland, singing Amazing Grace in Gaelic. One of my favourite hymns, a beautiful song about forgiveness.

O Miorbhail gràis! nach breagh'an ceòl;
'S e lorg mi 's mi air chall,
Air seachdran dorch', gun neart, gun treòir,
'S a dh'fhosgail sùilean dall.

'S e gràs thug eòlas dhomh air in'fheum;
'S e gràs thug saors'is sìth;
'S cha cheannaicheadh òr a' chruinne-chè
Chiad-là bha fios nam chrìdh'.

Tro iomadh cunnart's trioblaid chruaidh
Thug E gu sàbhailt mi.
An gràs a shaor bhon bhàs le buaidh
Chan fhàg's cha trèig gu sìor.

San dachaigh bhuan gun uair gun tìm,
'S deich mìle bliadhn' mar là,
Cha sguir an ceòl's chan fhàs iad sgìth
A'seiinn a chaoidh mun ghràs.

Amazing grace how sweet the sound
That saved a wretch like me.
I once was lost, but now I'm found;
Was blind, but now I see.

'Twas grace that taught my heart to fear
And grace my fear relieved.
How precious did that grace appear
The hour I first believed.

Through many dangers, toils and snares,
We have already come.
'Twas grace that brought us safe thus far,
And grace will lead us home.

When we've been there ten thousand years,
Bright shining as the sun.
We've no less days to sing God's praise
Than when we first begun.

The Lord has promised good to me,
His Word my hope secures.
He will my shield and portion be
As long as life endures.

And when this heart and flesh shall fail
And mortal life shall cease,
I shall possess within the veil
A life of health and peace

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Tour Scotland Black Is The Colour Video



Tour Scotland Black Is The Colour video. Hamish Imlach from Glasgow, taught Christy Moore from County Kildare, Ireland, this beautiful song.

Well black is the colour of my true love's hair
Her lips are like some rose, so fair,
She has the sweetest face she has the gentlest hands,
I love the ground whereon he stands.

I love my love and well she knows,
I love the ground whereon she goes,
And how I wish the day would come
When she and I shall be as one

I go to the Clyde for to mourn and weep,
But satisfied I never can be
Well I write you a letter, just a few short lines,
I'll suffer death a thousand times.

Yes black is the colour of my true love's hair.
Her lips are like some rose, so fair,
She has the sweetest face and the gentlest hands,
I love the ground whereon she stands.

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Old Photographs Juniper Green Scotland

Old photograph of Juniper Green located South West of Edinburgh, Scotland. Juniper Green's earliest mention is in the Kirk records of Colinton in 1707. However it is largely called Curriemuirend up until the end of the 18th century. Traditionally, its major industries were paper and snuff set in the river valley of the Water of Leith. Only with the building of a railway station in 1874 did the village begin to prosper.




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Old Photograph Prestonpans Scotland

Old photograph of a Tram and houses in Prestonpans to the East of Edinburgh, Scotland. When the monks of Newbattle and Holyrood arrived in the district in 1184 there was already a settlement named Aldhammer on the site of what is now Prestonpans. The monks gave the settlement their own name, Prieststown or Prieston. Because of the salt manufacturing carried out by the monks using pans on the sea shore, the town's name would later develop into Salt Prieststown and Salt Preston, and finally Prestonpans.



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Old Photographs Port Seton Scotland

Old photograph of Port Seton, Scotland. This Scottish town is on the coast of the Firth of Forth, four miles north east of Musselburgh. Port Seton harbour was built by George Seton, 11th Lord Seton between 1655 and 1665.



Old photograph of Port Seton, Scotland.

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Old Photograph Ascog Scotland

Old photograph of Ascog, Isle of Bute, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Humbie Scotland

Old photograph of Humbie, 10 miles South West of Haddington, East Lothian, Scotland. Humbie as we know it today was formed as the result of the union between Keith Marischal and Keith Hundeby in 1618. Originally, Humbie formed part of the Barony of Keith, and was anciently known as Keith Hundeby. The lands were held by Simon Fraser of Keith in the reign of David I. A charter signed by Fraser in 1191 is said to be the first mention of the Anglo-Norman Frasers and the Barony in extant records.



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Old Photograph Joppa Scotland

Old photograph of Joppa, Edinburgh, Scotland. Joppa is bounded on the north by the coast of the Firth of Forth, on the west by Portobello. Joppa is now largely residential, but salt was once produced from sea water by evaporation at Joppa Pans.





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Old Photographs Scone Village Perthshire Scotland

Old photograph of the village of Scone by Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.



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Old Photographs Polmont Scotland

Old photograph of Polmont near Falkirk, Scotland. The name Polmont derives from the Scottish Gaelic term Poll-Mhonadh, which translates into English as Pool of the Moor. Old Polmont, situated on a raised beach overlooking the Firth of Forth and the Ochils, which was an important fort on the Roman Antonine Wall. This fort, embankment and water source has been marked out and can be visited in Polmont Woods, close to the M9 motorway. The Union Canal runs adjacent to the village.



Old photograph of Polmont near Falkirk, Scotland.

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Old Photographs Lesmahagow Scotland

Old photograph of Lesmahagow near Lanark, Scotland. The name is possibly a corruption of Church of St Machutus. The saint was born in Wales and may originally have been known as Mahagw prior to emigrating to Brittany where he became known by the Latinised form of the name and also as St Malo.



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Tour Scotland Video Chic Murray Greenock



The Long Nose Story by Chic Murray who was born in Greenock near Glasgow, Scotland. Chic, born 6th of November 1919, died 29th of January 1985, was a famous Scottish comedian and actor. I met him once in a pub Edinburgh he was the same off stage as he was on stage, a very funny Scotsman.

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Tour Scotland Video Photographs Clava Cairns Near Inverness



Tour Scotland video of photographs of Clava Cairns, East of Inverness, Scotland. These cairns are a type of Bronze Age circular chamber tomb cairn and these are just about the best preserved Bronze Age burial sites in Scotland. A cemetery complex of passage graves, ring cairns, kerb cairn and standing stones in a wonderful setting. There are three separate cairns here, two for holding the souls of the dead until they continue on their way in the afterlife, and one for cremating the bodies. They also served as a giant sundial and calendar for the people who lived 3500 years ago. Clava Cairns is a site in the Outlander film and book, which follows the story of Claire Randall, a married English combat nurse from 1945 who, while on her honeymoon in Inverness, is mysteriously swept back in time to the 18th century Scottish Highlands. There she meets Jamie, a chivalrous young warrior, with whom she becomes romantically entwined.

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Tour Scotland Video Photographs Old Church Newburn Fife



Tour Scotland video of photographs of the old Parish Church and graveyard at Newburn near Upper Largo by Lower Largo, East Neuk of Fife, Scotland. This Scottish church was consecrated in 1243. Of the medieval church only the east end remains, although the south door is in the correct position for a pre Reformation church and may also be early. The rest of the building dates to the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.

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Tour Scotland Video Photographs St Kattan's Chapel Perthshire



Tour Scotland video of photographs of St Kattan's Chapel and graveyard at Aberuthven, Perthshire, Scotland. In Aberuthven stands the ruins of St Kattan's Chapel, said to be one of the earliest Ecclesiastical foundations in Scotland. It originally served as a cell of Inchaffray Abbey. The chapel is situated by the roadside amongst a group of trees close to the River Ruthven. Adjacent to the chapel in the surrounding graveyard is the Montrose Aisle, dated 1736. It is a square mausoleum of the Dukes of Montrose.

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Old Photographs Inchnadamph Scotland

Old photograph of Inchnadamph, Sutherland, Scotland.



Old photograph of Inchnadamph, Sutherland, Scotland.

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Old Photographs Gullane Scotland

Old photograph of shops, buildings and people in Gullane, East Lothian, Scotland. Gullane is a town on the southern shore of the Firth of Forth in East Lothian on the east coast of Scotland. There has been a church in the village since the 9th century. The ruins of the Old Church of St. Andrew built in the 12th century can still be seen at the western entrance to the village; the church was abandoned after a series of sandstorms made it unusable, and Dirleton Parish Church took its place. Gullane is part of the John Muir Way, a long distance walking footpath along the coast between Musselburgh and Dunglass. Gullane is the home of Muirfield which has hosted The Open Championship on numerous occasions.



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Old Photograph White Horse Close Edinburgh Scotland

Old photograph of White Horse Close in Edinburgh, Scotland. This was the site of the Royal Mews in the sixteenth century.



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Old Photograph Blyth Bridge Scotland

Old photograph of Blyth Bridge Mill near West Linton, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Weaving Isle Of Lewis Scotland

Old photograph of a Crofter loom weaving on the Island of Lewis, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Yachts River Clyde Glasgow Scotland

Old photograph of yachts in the River Clyde by Glasgow, Scotland.



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Tour Scotland Video Photographs Kilconquhar Church



Tour Scotland video of photographs of Kilconquhar Church, East Neuk of Fife, Scotland. Women accused of being witches used to be thrown in Kilconquhar Loch, and if not drowned, this was seen as proof that they were witches and then they were burned at the stake! The spot where the church stands is thought to have been a Druidical place of worship and a burial ground long before the time of Christianity.

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Tour Scotland Video Photographs Church Of The Holy Rude Stirling



Tour Scotland video of photographs of the Church of the Holy Rude, Stirling, Scotland. This Scottish church is the second oldest building in Stirling, after Stirling Castle. The church was founded in 1129 during the reign of David I (1124 to 1153) as the parish church of Stirling. King James VI was crowned King of Scots on the 29th of July 1567; John Knox performed the ceremony. This makes the Church of the Holy Rude, Gloucester Cathedral and Westminster Abbey the only churches in Britain still in use to this day that have been the sites of coronations.

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Tour Scotland Video Photographs Scottish Vintage Museum



Tour Scotland video of photographs of the Scottish Vintage Museum near Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland. The museum is situated on a 49 acre site at Lathalmond, near Dunfermline and houses about 190 vehicles, most of which are buses. The museum is open every Sunday from the first Sunday in April until the first Sunday in October. The entrance charge includes a guided tour of the site and the storage sheds in a vintage bus, starting and ending at the Exhibition Hall, where visitors can spend as much time as they wish. The Exhibition Hall houses several vehicles and artifacts, and also the museum cafe and shop.

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Tour Scotland Video Photographs Holy Trinity Episcopal Church Pitlochry



Tour Scotland video of photographs of Holy Trinity Episcopal Church in Pitlochry, Perthshire, Scotland. This Scottish church was opened 1858. The architect was C Buckeridge of Oxford. The nave was extended in 1890. Stained glass windows by various artists including E Kempe, Clayton & Bell, A Ballantine & Son, John Hardman & Co and Alexander L Russell. Lychgate built about 1925. A small selection of my personal photographs shot on small group tours of Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Remote Cottage Wester Ross

Tour Scotland photograph of a remote cottage in Wester Ross, Scotland. The 16th century marked the height of the Clan structure in the Highlands, and Wester Ross was occupied by different clans, chiefly the Mackenzies and the Macdonalds. Historically the chiefs of the Clan Donald held the title of Lord of the Isles until 1493 and two of those chiefs also held the title of Earl of Ross until 1476. During this period the area was farmed under the communal run-rig system, with people living in small townships, growing oats, barley, and later potatoes. Cattle rearing was the chief economic activity, with cattle being raised in the glens and then driven to market. This trade expanded during the early 19th Century, due to the demands of the new industrial cities and the British armed forces for cattle for beef.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Cottage Island of Ulva

Tour Scotland photograph of a cottage on the Island of Ulva off the West Coast of Island of Mull, Scotland. Lachlan Macquarie, was born on Ulva on 31st of January 1762. He is sometimes referred to as Father of Australia. He left when he was 14, and was Governor of New South Wales from 1809 to 1821, the longest tenure of any Australian governor. However, after his long sojourn in India, Australia and elsewhere, Lachlan Macquarie returned to his Scottish homeland, his mausoleum may still be seen at Gruline on Loch na Keal, on the Isle of Mull, within sight of his home island. The mausoleum is possibly the only site in Scotland maintained by the National Trust of Australia.



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Old Photographs Tay Railway Bridge Wormit Scotland

Old photograph of the Tay Railway Bridge over the Firth of Tay at Wormit, Scotland. The Tay Bridge is a railway bridge approximately two and a quarter miles long that spans the Firth of Tay in Scotland, between the city of Dundee and the suburb of Wormit in Fife.




Old Photograph of the Tay Railway Bridge over the Firth of Tay at Wormit, Scotland.

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Old Photographs Fearnan Loch Tay Perthshire Scotland

Old photograph of Fearnan village by Loch Tay, Perthshire, Scotland.



Old photograph of Fearnan village by Loch Tay, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Old Photograph Blacksmiths Rosyth Scotland

Old photograph of blacksmiths at the Naval Base in Rosyth, Fife, Scotland. The area was best known for its large dockyard, formerly the Royal Naval Dockyard Rosyth, construction of which began in 1909.



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Old Photograph Post Office Stirling Scotland

Old photograph of the Post Office in Stirling, Scotland.

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Old Photograph Young Scot With Dogs Perth Scotland

Old photograph of a young Scot with his dogs in, Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Frost War Grave Wellshill Cemetery Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland travel video of Flying Officer, Eric Alfred Frost war grave on visit to Wellshill cemetery in, Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. Eric served with the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve and died on the 28th of August, 1945, aged 36. Son of Alfred and Bertha Frost; husband of Doris Evelyn Frost, of Salterbeck, Workington, Cumberland. " Sleep on beloved, rest your scars, for peace and victory to the stars "

Frost, also frosti ,froast or froste, is a surname of Danish, Swedish, Icelandic, Norwegian and German origin, meaning born at the time of frost (winter) or someone with an icy or unbending disposition, and was originally a title of one who was shown to be unflinched in times of battle or confrontation, or to have an " icy " disposition, rather than a surname.

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Tour Scotland Video Wyllie War Grave Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland travel video of Sergeant, David K. Wyllie war grave on visit to the Wellshill cemetery in, Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. David served with the Royal Artillery, 68th Field Regiment, and died on the 20th of December, 1947 aged 21. " Beautiful memories fond and true will ever remain Dear David of you "

Recorded in the spellings of Willey, Wiley, Wyley, Wylie, Wyllie, and Wyly, this is an English surname. It is of locational origin, and derives from the places called Willey in the counties of Cheshire, Herefordshire, Shropshire, Warwickshire, Devonshire and Surrey, England. The first five of these villages share the same meaning. This is from the Old English " wilig ", meaning " willow " and " leah ", either a fenced clearing in a wood, or in some places a " water meadow. "

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Old Photograph Whaling Shetland Scotland

Old photograph of Whaling on the Shetland Islands, Scotland. The most common whale hunted in Shetland in the old days was the Pilot Whale.



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Old Photograph Crofters Cottage Isle Of Lewis Scotland

Old photograph of a Crofters cottage on the Island of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Video Photographs Scottish Highland Games Lochearnhead



Tour Scotland video of photographs of the Scottish Highland Games in Lochearnhead, Scotland. This Gathering is held beside Loch Earn in the lands of Clan MacGregor, MacLaren, MacNab, and Stewart of Strathearn, with Pipers, Highland Dancing, Tossing the Caber and and all the activities you would expect to see at a traditional highland games. Loch Earn was on the frontier between Pictland and Dalriada, the kingdom of the incoming Scots from Ireland, Dundurn at the east end of the loch being a Pictish frontier fort. This lends weight to the argument that the name Earn therefore comes from Eireann, in other words, the loch of the Irish. The siege, by the Scots, of the Pictish Fort of Dundurn in 683 AD is mentioned in the Annals of Ulster. Giric, King of Picts and Scots, is said to have been killed at Dundurn in 889, and is buried on the Island of Iona.

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Tour Scotland Video Brigadier Willam Edmonstone Duncan Gravestone Inverkeilor



Tour Scotland video of Brigadier Willam Edmonstone Duncan gravestone on visit to Inverkeilor, Angus, Scotland. William was born on the 18th of March, 1890, and died on the 20th of December, 1969. He was a Brigadier Royal Horse Artillery, Eastern Command, and in 1943 to 1944 an Inspector of the Royal Artillery, Field Branch, War Office.

The Duncan surname is composed of the elements donn, meaning " brown "; and chadh, meaning " chief " or " noble ". In some cases when the surname originates in, Sligo, Ireland it is an Anglicised form of the Gaelic Ó Duinnchinn, meaning " descendant of Donncheann ". The Gaelic Donncheann is a byname composed of the elements donn, meaning " brown-haired man " or " chieftain "; and ceann, meaning " head ". The surname Duncan is represented in Scottish Gaelic as MacDhonnchaidh.

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Tour Scotland Video Commander John Alexander Duncan Gravestone Inverkeilor



Tour Scotland video of Commander John Alexander Duncan gravestone on visit to Inverkeilor, Angus, Scotland. John, C.B., Royal Navy was born the 22nd of March, 1878 and died on the 13th of August, 1943, after a short illness at Parkhill, Arbroath, he was an officer of the Royal Navy.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Video War Memorial Inverkeilor




Tour Scotland video of the War Memorial on visit to Inverkeilor, Angus, Scotland. This monument stands in the graveyard in front of the church. WWI, Roll of Honour; Anderson G.Highland Light Infantry Private, Brown J. Seaforth Highlanders Private, Burnett W. Royal Engineers Sergeant, Chaplin D. Gordon Highlanders Lance Corporal, Crabb W. Australians Corporal, Donaldson D. Black Watch Private, Garrard E. Gordon Highlanders Lieutenant, Gibb Scots Guards Private, Gibb A. Royal Scots Corporal, Howe D. L. Canadians Private Canadian Mounted Rifles, Kennedy A. Canadians Private, Kennedy D. Black Watch Private, Kydd D. Black Watch Private, Lamb D. Royal Garrison Artillery Gunner, Lawson J. Royal Navy Able Seaman, Lowe W. Royal Scots Private, Macaulay C. Black Watch Private, Macaulay D. Black Watch Private, MacGregor A.J. Black Watch Captain, McGregor A. Highland Light Infantry Private, Orrock G. Black Watch Private, Paula A. Black Watch Private, Ritchie W. Black Watch Lance Corporal, Shepherd R. Highland Light Infantry Private, Shepherd W. Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders Private, Smith C. Black Watch Private, Smith E. Sherwood Foresters Private, Smith G. Black watch Private, Stephen D. Black Watch Lance Corporal, Stephen J. Canadians Private, Stewart D. Cameron Highlanders Private, Stewart J.Canadians Private, Stewart D. Cameron Highlanders Private, Taylor, Artillery Gunner, Taylor G.L. Black Watch Private, Thomson R. Black Watch Private, Thomson R, Black Watch Private, Valentine A.D, Cameron Highlanders Private, Vannetta A. Highland Light Infantry Private, Vannett R. Gordon Highlanders Corporal.

The distance from Inverkeilor to Glasgow and Paisley is 102 miles

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Tour Scotland Video Raits of Anniston Memorial Inverkeilor



Tour Scotland video of the Raits of Anniston memorial gravestone on visit to Inverkeilor, Angus, Scotland. In memory of John Rait Esquire of Anniston born 1748, died at Anniston 1823. And of his wife Elizabeth Guthrie, daughter of James Guthrie Esquire of Craigie who died in 1814 and of their children, William who died at Anniston in 1806, Georgina Henrietta who died in 1812, John who died in 1815, Agnes, wife of George Arbuthnott Esquire of Mavisbank third son of Sir William Arbuthnott, Bart. who died in London in 1842. Alexander who died in 1830 whilst home on sick leave from the Madras Cavalry. Murray who died at Anniston in 1819. JAMES who erected this monument is the only survivor. In loving memory of Walter Garnet Rait son of Arthur Rait of Anniston and of Kathleen Georgina his wife " Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori " And in ever loving memory of Eileen Anna Arbuthnott Rait of Anniston, who died on Thursday the 11th of January 1904, aged 23; only and much beloved daughter of Colonel Rait, C.B. of Anniston, and his wife Kathleen Georgina, youngest daughter of Walter Arbuthnott of Hatton, Montrose. Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God: Matthew. V.VIII. Also Gertrude Jean Rait, daughter of the late James Rait Esquire of Anniston and Lady Clementina Rait his wife and sister of the above Colonel Arthur John Rait C.B. of Anniston who died at Annesley Arbroath on the 9th day of September 1922.

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Tour Scotland Video Major Gardyne Memorial Inverkeilor



Tour Scotland travel video of the Major William Bruce Gardyne of Middleton memorial gravestone on visit to Inverkeilor, Angus, Scotland. William Bruce Gardyne, Esquire, of Middleton, Major 37th regiment, born 1777, died 15th of June 1846. And his wife Catharine Cameron Bruce Gardyne, born 9th of November 1798, died 9th of October 1871. Also their children Anne, born 1826, died 15th of May 1831. James Macpherson, born 1828, died 23rd of April 1828. Agnes Mary, born 1835, died 25th of March 1847. Even Bruce Gardyne, Esquire, late Major 6th Royals, born 15th of April 1833, died 9th of September 1875, laid to rest in Dalhousie, Punjaub, India. Also Catherine his daughter, born 2nd of August 1873, died 6th of August 1874, laid to rest in Sealkote, Punjaub, India.The chiefly family of Garden or Gardyne of that Ilk are a very ancient family, who were proprietors in Angus from a remote period, and are first recorded in the locality of the Kirkdon of Angus in 1008 when they are called De Garthuen. First referred to, as the Gardyne of that Ilk, in the Ragman Roll of 1296 the clan was centred on Gardyne Castle and their lands of Cononsyth, Lawton and Middleton in the county of Angus.

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Old Photograph Ardvreck Castle Scotland

Old photograph of Ardvreck Castle, Sutherland, Scotland. Standing on a rocky promontory jutting out into Loch Assynt in Sutherland, north west Highland, Scotland, Ardvreck Castle is a ruined castle dating from the 16th century.



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Old Photograph Fala Scotland

Old photograph of Fala, Midlothian, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Dudhope Castle Dundee Scotland

Old photograph of Dudhope Castle, Dundee, Scotland. This Scottish castle was originally built in the late 13th century by the Scrymageour family, with the original castle being a smaller tower house. This was replaced around 1460, and then further extended in 1580 to its current L-plan structure with additional circular towers, although these were demolished in the 18th century. On the death in 1668 of John Scrimgeour, first Earl of Dundee, King Charles II ignored the existence of the rightful heir, John Scrimgeour of Kirkton, and made a grant of Dudhope Castle and the office of Constable to Charles Maitland, a younger brother of the Earl of Lauderdale. Later, when in financial difficulty, Maitland sold Dudhope Castle in 1684 to John Graham of Claverhouse, better known to most as Bonnie Dundee. It was from Dudhope Castle that he departed for Killiecrankie in 1689; the victory which resulted in his death. In 1694, the King therefore made a grant of Dudhope Castle to Archibald Douglas. The Douglas family were thus the last family of occupants of the castle as this continued until about 1790. The history of Dudhope and the Constables are therefore inextricably interwoven with the history of Dundee. In fact, the two are inseparable. The office of Constable and occupancy of Dudhope Castle was held by four different families, as above, of which the Scrymgeours held the post for some 370 years. The Douglas family occupied Dudhope Castle from 1694 until circa 1790.



All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Old Photographs John Knox House Edinburgh Scotland

Old photograph of the John Knox house in Edinburgh, Scotland. John Knox House, popularly known as "John Knox's House", is an historic house in Edinburgh, Scotland, reputed to have been owned and lived in by Protestant reformer John Knox during the 16th century. Although his name became associated with the house, he appears to have lived in Warriston Close where a plaque indicates the approximate site of his actual residence.



Old photograph of the John Knox house in Edinburgh, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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