Tour Scotland Video Photographs Scottish Sheep Dog Trial Strathardle Perthshire



Tour Scotland wee video of photographs of a Scottish Sheep Dog Trial on visit to Ashintully Estate, Strathardle, near Kirkmichael, Perthshire, Scotland. This event was held midway between the towns of Blairgowrie and Pitlochry.

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Tour Scotland Video Highland Cow Scottish Bull Glamis Angus



Tour Scotland video of a Highland Cow and a Scottish bull on visit to a field near Glamis Castle, Scotland. Highland cattle, Heilan coo, are a Scottish cattle breed. They have long horns and long wavy coats that are coloured black, brindle, red, yellow, white, silver, looks white but with a black nose, or dun, and they are raised primarily for their meat. They originated in the Highlands and Western Isles of Scotland and were first mentioned in the 6th century AD. The first herd book described two distinct types of Highland cattle but, due to crossbreeding between the two, only one type now exists and is registered. They have since been exported worldwide.

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Tour Scotland Video Trout Pond Willowgate Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland video of a trout pond by the River Tay on visit to Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. Willowgate Trout and Salmon Fishery is situated on the banks of the legendary river Tay just two miles from Perth City Centre. The fishery comprises of a 9 acre fly only trout loch and 4 miles of Salmon fishing on the River Tay. The loch is regularly stocked with grade one fully finned hard fighting Rainbow Trout minimum size 2lb up to 21lb.

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Tour Scotland Video Old Town Cemetery Stirling



Tour Scotland video of the old Town Cemetery below Stirling Castle, Stirling, Scotland. This Scottish cemetery is located between Stirling Castle and the Church of the Holy Rude. The cemetery expanded from the original Holy Rude Kirkyard between 1857 and 1859 into the adjacent Valley and Mars Wark Garden. The site of the Drummond Pleasure Ground was purchased in 1862.

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Tour Scotland Video Polish War Graves Corstorphine Edinburgh



Tour Scotland video of some Polish War graves in Hill Cemetery, Corstorphine, Edinburgh, Scotland. This graveyard contains the second highest number of Polish war graves in Scotland. The earliest war casualty is that of kpl J Czempas who died on the 13th of May 1941 and the last known is that of 2/Lt Zieleniec who died on 14th of August 1948.

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Old Photograph Trysting Tree Argyll Scotland

Old photograph of a Trysting Tree in Argyll, Scotland. A tryst is a time and a place for a meeting, especially of lovers. Robert Burns wrote of a trysting thorn tree at the Mill of Mannoch at Coylton in South Ayrshire. " At length I reached the bonnie glen, Where early life I sported, I pass'd the mill and trysting thorn, Where Nancy aft I courted. "



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Old Photographs Cramond Edinburgh Scotland

Old photograph of Cramond, Edinburgh, Scotland. There has been a small ferry crossing across the River Almond at Cramond since the middle of 1800.

Old photograph of Cramond, Edinburgh, Scotland.

Old photograph of Cramond, Edinburgh, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Loch Katrine Trossachs Scotland

Old photograph of Loch Katrine, Trossachs, Scotland. The loch derives its name from the term cateran from the Gaelic ceathairne, a collective word meaning cattle thief. Historically this referred to a band of fighting men of a clan; hence the term applied to marauders or cattle-lifters, the most notorious of whom was Rob Roy MacGregor who was born at Glengyle House at the northern end of the Loch.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Tollbooth Crail East Neuk Of Fife

Tour Scotland photograph of the tollbooth on ancestry visit to the old fishing village of Crail, East Neuk of Fife, Scotland. Crail tolbooth, with a tower dating from about 1600 is located in the centre of the old fishing village. It has a European style roof, similar to buildings in Holland. A fish makes up part of its weathervane as a reference to an old local delicacy called Crail Capon, which was split, dried haddock.



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Old Photographs Golf Course Pitlochry Perthshire Scotland

Old photograph of the golf course in Pitlochry, Perthshire, Scotland. In the early 20th century, the members of both the Pitlochry Golf Club and the Pitlochry Ladies Golf Club played over a nine-hole course situated on the banks of the River Tummel. The holes weaved their way down from Faskally Woods to the pavilion at the Recreation Ground and back again. The new golf course was constructed during 1908 with Willie Fernie of Troon being commissioned as the initial designer. He saw the natural beauty of the Balnacraig and Drumchorry farms upon which the course now rests and set about using the undulating landscape to its full potential.



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Old Photographs Putting Green St Andrews Fife Scotland

Old photograph of the putting green by the Old Golf Course in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland.



Old photograph of the putting green by the Old Golf Course in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland.

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Old Photographs Gordon Castle Scotland

Old photograph of Gordon Castle near Fochabers, Moray, Scotland. This Scottish castle was historically known as the Bog-of-Gight, it was the principal seat of the Dukes of Gordon. Following 18th century redevelopment, it became one of the largest country houses ever built in Scotland, although much has since been demolished. The original castle was built by George Gordon, 2nd Earl of Huntly in the 1470s and enlarged by his grandson.



Old photograph of Gordon Castle near Fochabers, Moray, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Video Thunder And Lightning Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland video of heavy rain, thunder and lightning on walking visit in Scone just outside Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. The climate of Scotland is temperate and oceanic, and tends to be very changeable, but not normally extreme. It is warmed by the Gulf Stream from the Atlantic, and given its northerly latitude it is warmer than areas on similar latitudes, for example Labrador in Canada, where the sea freezes over in winter and icebergs are a common feature in spring and early summer, or Fort McMurray, Canada, where −35 °C is not uncommon during winter. Even though most of the country has a temperate climate, the Northern islands and Highlands experience a type of weather close to the climate of the Faroe Islands or Southern Norway.

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Old Photograph Grantshouse Scotland

Old photograph of the railway station in Grantshouse, Berwickshire, Scotland. The nearest railway stations to this Scottish village are now at Dunbar to the north and Berwick-upon-Tweed to the South.



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Old Photograph North Haven Fair Isle Scotland

Old photograph of North Haven, Fair Isle, Scotland. Fair Isle is the most remote inhabited island in the United Kingdom, lying around halfway between mainland Shetland and the Orkney island. The majority of the sixty islanders live in the crofts on the southern half of the island. Fair Isle has been occupied since the Bronze Age. Fair Isle is known for a traditional style of knitting.



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Old Photograph Peterculter Scotland

Old photograph of Peterculter, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. In 1287, an agreement was made between the Abbot and Convent of Kelso and the brotherhood of the Knights of Jerusalem, regarding the Templars lands of Blairs and Kincousie, on the south side of the Dee, by which a chapel, built by the Templars at their house of Culter, was recognised as a church, with parochial rights, for the inhabitants of the said lands. It was this agreement that changed the existing parish of Culter into two separate parishes with two separate names, the other being Maryculter.



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Old Photographs Halkirk Scotland

Old photograph of Halkirk, Caithness, Scotland. Halkirk is the birthplace of Alexander Keith, born 1795, died 1873, who settled in Halifax, Nova Scotia and became established as a respected politician and brewer. He is known across Canada for his most famous beer, Alexander Keith's India Pale Ale.





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Old Photograph Dunsyre Scotland

Old photograph of Dunsyre in South Lanarkshire, Scotland. From 1867 until 1945 Dunsyre was served by a railway branch from Carstairs to Dolphington, originally built by the Caledonian Railway, and the disused embankment of this runs along the south side of the village close to the church.



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Old Photograph Halbeath Scotland

Old photograph of Halbeath by Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland. It derives its name from the Gaelic choil beath, which means " wood of birches ", and began as a colliery village. In the summer of 1789, a coal pit was sunk at Halbeath, two and a half miles north east of Dunfermline, and by 1821, 841 people were reported to be living in the village.



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Old Photograph Dunans Castle Bridge Scotland

Old photograph of Dunans Castle Bridge, Cowal Peninsula, Argyll, Scotland. This Scottish bridge was designed by Thomas Telford who also built Dunkeld Bridge in Perthshire. It was built for John Fletcher of Dunans, to commemorate the battle of Waterloo and was completed in 1815.



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Old Photographs Yarrow Feus Scotland

Old photograph of Yarrow Feus located seven miles West of Selkirk, Scottish Borders, Scotland.



Old photograph of Yarrow Feus located seven miles West of Selkirk, Scottish Borders, Scotland.

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Old Photograph King Street Glasgow Scotland

Old photograph of King Street, Glasgow, Scotland. Civic control of Glasgow's eighteenth-century street formation meant that the irregular contours of the medieval town gradually gave way to more planned and prestigious development. A striking early example was King Street, created during the 1720s to serve as a market centre for the city. Meat, fish and dairy produce were the main commodities on offer, together with fruit and vegetables in nearby Candleriggs.



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Old Photographs Barr Castle Scotland

Old photograph of Barr Castle in East Ayrshire, Scotland. This Scottish castle was constructed in the early 16th century by the Glen family, on the death of Alexander Glen in 1629, it passed into the hands of the Hamiltons of Ferguslie at the end of the 16th century who retained the castle until it was sold and abandoned for a new mansion in the late 18th century. Margaret Hamilton, eldest daughter of Allan Hamilton of Ferguslie, married John Wallace, second son of William Wallace of Elderslie. Barr Castle is now owned by Fergus MacDowall of Garthland, Chief of the Clan MacDowall and as such regarded as the clan seat.



Old photograph of Barr Castle in East Ayrshire, Scotland.

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Old Photograph Crofter Cutting Peats Scotland

Old photograph of a crofter cutting Peats on the Shetland Islands, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Lix Toll House Scotland

Old photograph of Lix Toll House by Killin, Scotland. This tollhouse is situated on the North side of the A85 public road immediately West of its junction with the A827 road. Many tollhouses were built by turnpike trusts in England, Wales and Scotland during the 18th and early 19th centuries. Those built in the early 19th century often had a distinctive bay front to give the pikeman a clear view of the road and to provide a display area for the tollboard. In 1840, according to the Turnpike Returns in Parliamentary Papers, there were over 5,000 tollhouses operating in England. These were sold off in the 1880s when the turnpikes were closed. Many were demolished but several hundred have survived as domestic houses, with distinctive features of the old tollhouse still visible.



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Old Photographs Muirkirk Scotland

Old photograph of cottages and houses in Muirkirk in East Ayrshire, Scotland. This Scottish village is located on the north bank of the River Ayr, between Cumnock and Glenbuck. It was developed around its church, which was built in 1631, and was a fertile recruiting ground for the Covenanter movement.



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Tour Scotland Video Pleasure Boat Crail Harbour East Neuk Of Fife



Tour Scotland video of Sea Monster pleasure fishing boat being moved to the slipway in the harbour on visit to Crail, East Neuk of Fife, Scotland. Crail probably dates from at least as far back as the Pictish period, and there is a Dark Age cross slab preserved in the parish church, itself dedicated to the early holy man St. Maelrubha. Crail became a Royal Burgh in the 1178. Robert the Bruce granted permission to hold markets on a Sunday, in the Marketgait, where the Mercat Cross now stands in Crail. This practice was still continuing in the 16th century, causing concern in the freshly puritanical circles of Edinburgh such that John Knox was moved to deliver a sermon in Crail Parish Church, damning the fishermen of the East Neuk for working on a Sunday. Despite the protests, the markets continued and were amongst the largest in Europe for their time.

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Tour Scotland Video Falknes Cargo Ship River Tay Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland video of the Falknes cargo ship leaving the harbour on the River Tay after a visit to Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. An overcast afternoon as this ship set off on July 22nd towards the North Sea.

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Tour Scotland Video Stone Carvings Holy Trinity Church St Andrews Fife



Tour Scotland video of stone carvings on visit to Holy Trinity Church in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland. Holy Trinity Church was built in South Street, on a site central to the developing burgh, not far from the market place and the town house.

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Old Photograph Tynribbie Scotland

Old photograph of cottages in Tynribbie, Argyll, Scotland. Clan Campbell was the main clan of the Argyll region. The Campbell clan hosted the long line of the Dukes of Argyll. Clan Gregor historically held a great deal of lands in this region prior to the proscription of their name in April 1603, the result of a power struggle with the Campbells. Clan Lamont historically both allied and feuded with the Campbell clan, culminating in the Dunoon Massacre. In the 19th century, the clan chief sold his lands and relocated to Australia, where the current chief lives.



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Old Photograph Kilconquhar Scotland

Old photograph of cottages, church and children in Kilconquhar, East Neuk of Fife, Scotland. In the 18th century this Scottish village was noted as a weaving centre. The industry faded in the late 19th century. Kilconquhar is the name of a parish, a village, a loch, and a mansion, and is said to mean " the cell, the burying place, or place of worship, at the head or extremity of the fresh water lake, " which answers very well at present; but will not suit, if the tradition is reliable, according to which the loch was only formed 260 years ago, by a violent wind filling the drain with sand which formerly carried the water to the sea. The tradition is borne out, so far, by the utter absence of any trace of the loch in Blaeu’s map. Some maintain that Conquhar or Connachar was the name of the founder of the cell or church, hence Kilconquhar. Locally, it is known as Kenneuchar. Some of the old forms are: Kilkonkath, Kilconkath, Kilcankath, Kylconchat, Kilconcar, Kylkonqwhar, and Kynconquhair.



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Old Photograph Mauchline Scotland

Old photograph of cottages and houses in Mauchline, Ayrshire, Scotland. Robert Burns, Scotland's National Poet came to live on the outskirts of this village at Mossgiel farm in 1784. Many of his poems are believed to have been written whilst he was there, notably The Holy Fair, To a Mouse, and Holy Willie's Prayer. Many of his poems were directed towards the perceived hypocrisy of the Church. The Church was particularly fanatical in Mauchline, which conflicted with the liberal attitude of Burns and his friends. Nonetheless Burns made many friends (his wife Jean Armour was born in Mauchline) and a lot of enemies whilst in Mauchline, many of whom are buried in the kirkyard: " Holy Wullie " Willie Fisher, the Reverend William " Daddy " Auld, John Richmond, " Clockie " Brown and notably Gavin Hamilton his best friend.



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Old Photograph Drumtochty Chapel Scotland

Old photograph of Drumtochty Chapel near Auchenblae, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. This was originally built as an estate chapel, and stands in open ground belonging to Drumtochty Castle estate. The church sits in a small cemetery with a few gravestones. The church was built by Arthur Clyne for Reverend J S Gammell, the then owner of the castle, in 1885.

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Old Photograph Glenapp Church Scotland

Old photograph of Glenapp Church near Ballantrae, Ayrshire, Scotland. This Scottish church was built in 1850. This is a small country church, which can comfortably seat 80 people and lies 6.5 miles from Ballantrae on the road to Stranraer. Originally the Church was for estate workers, nowadays occasional services are held there as well as weddings. Services are held four times a year.



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Old Photograph Craignish Church Scotland

Old photograph of Craignish Church located South of Oban, Scotland. Attractive Georgian church built in 1826 with hipped roof and harled masonry walls.



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Old Photograph Railway Station Perth Perthshire Scotland

Old photograph of the railway station in Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. The station was opened as Perth General by the Scottish Central Railway in 1848. Originally the terminus of the main line from Greenhill Junction near Glasgow, it soon became a junction of some importance with the arrival of the Dundee and Perth Railway from Dundee, following the completion of a bridge across the River Tay, the Edinburgh and Northern Railway from Ladybank on the Fife coast and the Scottish Midland Junction Railway from Forfar within months. Subsequent construction by the Perth and Dunkeld Railway and the Perth, Almond Valley and Methven Railway added further lines into and out of the city, with the former becoming part of what is now the Highland Main Line to Inverness in the Highlands. The SMJR meanwhile would become part of a through route to Aberdeen by 1856, thus giving Perth travellers easy access to all of the major Scottish cities.



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Old Photographs Neilston Scotland

Old photograph of a cottage, houses, shops and children in Neilston, East Renfrewshire, near Glasgow, Scotland. Neilston is mentioned in documents as early as the twelfth century, when the feudal lord Robert de Croc, endowed a chapel to Paisley Abbey to the North. Neilston Parish Church is said to stand on the site of this original chapel and has lain at the centre of the community since 1163. Sadly little remains of the original structure.





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Tour Scotland Video Archbishop James Sharp Tomb Holy Trinity Church St Andrews Fife



Tour Scotland video of the Archbishop James Sharp Tomb on visit to Holy Trinity Church in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland. James Sharp was born in Banff Castle in 1618 and studied at King's College, Aberdeen. In 1642 he was a regent at the University of St Andrews and in 1648 he became the minister at Crail. He married Helen Moncrieff with whom he had seven children. Sharp is now best known these days for his murder in 1679. The memorial monument consists of three tiers. The lower tier is a marble relief of the murder. The centre tier is a full size marble sculpture of the archbishop kneeling on top of his sarcophagus. The upper tier features a relief of the church of St Regulus at St Andrews.

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Tour Scotland Video Hunter Memorial Aisle Holy Trinity Church St Andrews Fife



Tour Scotland video of the Hunter Memorial Aisle on visit to Holy Trinity Church in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland. The Hunter Aisle, also called the Memorial Aisle, was built between 1907 and 1909 by Peter MacGregor Chalmers and is located at the south east of the church.

Recorded as Huntar, Hunter, and the female Huntress and Huntriss, this ancient surname is of Anglo Scottish origins. The derivation is from the Olde English pre 7th Century word " hunta ", from " huntian ", meaning to hunt, with the agent suffix " -er ", meaning one who does or works with. The term was used not only of hunters on horseback of game such as stags and wild boars, a pursuit in Middle Ages restricted to the ranks of the nobility, but also as a nickname for both bird catchers and poachers. The surname is first recorded in Scotland in the early 12th century, whilst the first English recording may be that of Simon Huntere in the Curia Regis Rolls for the county of Bedfordshire in the year 1220.

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Tour Scotland Video Wood Carvings Holy Trinity Church St Andrews Fife




Tour Scotland video of wood carvings on visit to Holy Trinity Church in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland. The east gable of the church has carved angels and a large, traceried window based upon one in Carlisle Cathedral in England. Holy Trinity Church was built in South Street, on a site central to the developing burgh, not far from the market place and the town house. It incorporates the tower and other remains of the church begun in 1411 by Bishop Wardlaw and subsequently re-built by Robert Balfour in 1798. The 1799 church was demolished in 1906 in order to rebuild, to the style of a late medieval burgh church by the architect P. MacGregor Chalmers.

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Tour Scotland Video Royal Burgh of St Andrews Coat of Arms Fife


Tour Scotland video of the Royal Burgh of St.Andrews Coat of Arms on visit to Holy Trinity Church in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland. These arms date from the 14th century. The arms show the local patron saint, St. Andrew of Scotland. The boar and oak tree recall the ancient history of the town, which was Muckross, meaning Headland of the boars. The motto means While I breathe I hope.

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Tour Scotland Video Photographs 18th Hole Old Golf Course St Andrews Fife



Tour Scotland video of photographs of golfers on the 18th hole of the Old Golf Course in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Video Sundial Dunino Fife



Tour Scotland video of the sundial on visit to the churchyard in Dunino near St Andrews, Fife, Scotland. An old Sculptured stone probably of pictish origins which was reused as sundial from 1698. Locals leave coins on the sundial for luck. Dunino is a village and parish in the East Neuk of Fife. It is 10 kilometres from the nearest town, St Andrews, and 17 kilometres from the fishing village of Anstruther. It is a small village with no local shops or services

Tour Scotland photograph of the sundial on visit to the churchyard in Dunino near St Andrews, Fife, Scotland.

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