Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Walk In The Rain To Scone Palace Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland video of an Autumn walk in the rain on ancestry visit to Scone Palace by Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. Scone was as an ancient gathering place of the Picts, and was probably the site of an early Christian church. Built of red sandstone with a castellated roof, the palace is one of the finest examples of late Georgian Gothic style in the United Kingdom. The State Rooms are open each year from April till the end of September. It is possible for groups to organize visits during the winter months. The Palace grounds are also open to the public.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Rain Stone Of Destiny Scone Palace Perth Perthshire




Tour Scotland video of Autumn rain on the Stone of Destiny on Moot Hill on ancestry visit to Scone Palace by Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. This where Kings of Scots, including Macbeth and Robert The Bruce were crowned. Also known as Boot Hill and the Stone of Scone. The place of coronation was formerly called Caislean Credi, Hill of Credulity. Robert the Bruce was crowned at Scone in 1306 and the last coronation was of Charles II , when he accepted the Scottish crown in 1651.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Rain Moot Hill Scone Palace Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland video of Autumn rain on a visit to the Chapel on Moot Hill on ancestry visit to Scone Palace by Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. A small Presbyterian chapel which was restored in Gothic style around 1804. Now a Mortuary Chapel and Stormont Mausoleum it is said to be the aisle of the old parish church, which is believed to have been built about 1624. The Boot Hill, or Moot Hill, was said to have been created by pilgrims each carrying a boot full of soil to the site in a gesture of fealty to the king.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Rain River Tay Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland video of Autumn rain on a visit to the River Tay in Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. The river in spate after some heavy rain, no fishing from these river banks on this day.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Walk in The Rain Greyfriars Graveyard Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of a walk in the rain on ancestry visit to Greyfriars graveyard in Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. This Scottish burial ground near the River Tay is on land previously occupied by the Perth Franciscan friary, founded around 1460. The friary was destroyed during the Reformation in 1559 and in 1580 the site became the new churchyard.

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Tour Scotland Video Rain Heather Garden Perth Perthshire


Tour Scotland travel video of rain on a visit to a Heather Garden in Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. This Scottish garden is located on the east bank of the River Tay.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Rain Rodney Gardens Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland video of Autumn rain on a visit to Rodney Gardens in Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. This Scottish garden is located on the east bank of the River Tay in the grounds of the Rodney Pavilion. The Riverside Park area includes Norie Miller Park, Rodney Gardens, the historic Kinnoull Aisle and Graveyard, Bellwood Park, a newly discovered Victorian folly, the Willowgate Walk, and part of the River Tay Public Art Trail.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Video Grain Window Holy Name Parish Church Oakley Fife



Tour Scotland video of the Grain stained glass window in Holy Name Parish Church on ancestry visit to Oakley, Fife, Scotland. This window was by Gabriel Loire, born April 21, 1904, died December 25, 1996. He was a French stained glass artist. Oakley is a village in Fife, at the mutual border of Carnock and Culross parishes, Fife, about 5 miles West by North of Dunfermline on the A907 road.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Video Mary and Jesus Window Holy Name Parish Church Oakley Fife



Tour Scotland video of the Mary and Jesus stained glass window in Holy Name Parish Church on ancestry visit to Oakley, Fife, Scotland. This window was by Gabriel Loire, born April 21, 1904, died December 25, 1996. He was a French stained glass artist.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Video Dove Window Holy Name Parish Church Oakley Fife



Tour Scotland video of the Dove stained glass window in Holy Name Parish Church on ancestry visit to Oakley, Fife, Scotland. This window was by Gabriel Loire, born April 21, 1904, died December 25, 1996. He was a French stained glass artist.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Video Bread Window Holy Name Parish Church Oakley Fife



Tour Scotland video of the Bread stained glass window in Holy Name Parish Church on ancestry visit to Oakley, Fife, Scotland. This window was by Gabriel Loire, born April 21, 1904, died December 25, 1996. He was a French stained glass artist.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Video Fish Window Holy Name Parish Church Oakley Fife



Tour Scotland video of the Fish stained glass window in Holy Name Parish Church on ancestry visit to Oakley, Fife, Scotland. This window was by Gabriel Loire, born April 21, 1904, died December 25, 1996. He was a French stained glass artist.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Video Recta pete Window Holy Name Parish Church Oakley Fife



Tour Scotland video of the Recta pete stained glass window in Holy Name Parish Church on ancestry visit to Oakley, Fife, Scotland. This window was by Gabriel Loire, born April 21, 1904, died December 25, 1996. He was a French stained glass artist. Recta pete means, Seek for right things.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Video Sun Window Holy Name Parish Church Oakley Fife



Tour Scotland video of the Sun stained glass window in Holy Name Parish Church on ancestry visit to Oakley, Fife, Scotland. This window was by Gabriel Loire, born April 21, 1904, died December 25, 1996. He was a French stained glass artist.

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Tour Scotland Video Of Photographs Holy Trinity Church Dunfermline Fife



Tour Scotland video of photographs of the Holy Trinity Church at East Port on ancestry visit to to Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland. The congregation of this Scottish church originally worshipped in a church on Pilmuir Street. Due to an increase in the size of the congregation a larger building was required, which resulted in the construction of this church on a new site in 1891 under the plans of Robert Rowand Anderson.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Sunset Kinnoull Woodland Park Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of sunset on visit to Kinnoull Hill Woodland Park by Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Drive To Scone Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of part of a morning drive on a narrow road from Kinfauns to visit Scone, Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Video Road To Applecross Scottish Highlands



Tour Scotland video of a drive on the road to Applecross, Wester Ross, Scotland. In 1822 a road was built from Kishorn in the east and over the Bealach na Ba, or Pass of the Cattle, to Applecross, Scotland. The pass is sometimes called the Bealach nam Bo. This is a video of part of the drive down the pass from Applecross to Kishorn.

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Old Photograph Balnakeil Scotland

Old photograph of Balnakeil located one mile North West of Durness, Northern Sutherland, Scotland. Balnakeil house, which dates from 1744 is built on the site of a monastery that served the church of Balnakeil. It was was built by the Clan Mackay chiefs.

Clan Mackay is an ancient and once-powerful Scottish clan from the far North of the Scottish Highlands, but with roots in the old kingdom of Moray. They supported Robert the Bruce during the Wars of Scottish Independence in the 14th century. In the centuries that followed they were anti Jacobite. The territory of the Clan Mackay consisted of the parishes of Farr, Tongue, Durness and Eddrachillis, and was known as Strathnaver, in the north west of the county of Sutherland. However, it was not until 1829 that Strathnaver was considered part of Sutherland when the chief sold his lands to the Earls of Sutherland and the Highland Clearances then had dire consequences for the clan. In the 17th century the Mackay chief's territory had extended to the east to include the parish of Reay in the west of the neighbouring county of Caithness. The chief of the clan is Lord Reay and the lands of Strathnaver later became known as the Reay Country.



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Old Photograph Durine Scotland

Old photograph of crofters cottages in Durine by Durness, Northern Sutherland, Scotland. Sutherland is perhaps best known for its saddest memory: the Highland Clearances, the forceful eviction of people from their homes in the 18th century by the landowners to make way for large sheep farms. Sutherland suffered more than most parts of the Highlands, scattering people far and wide across the globe. The clearances also saw many forced to move from their inland homes to live along the coast scraping a life with crofting and fishing. It was the villages produced by this policy that formed the last Gaelic speaking communities to be found on the east coast of Scotland.



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Old Photographs Portpatrick Scotland



Old photographs of Portpatrick, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. Of interest to folks with ancestry, genealogy or Scottish Family Roots in Scotland who may wish to visit one day. Dating back some 700 years and built adjacent to the ruins of nearby Dunskey Castle, Portpatrick's position on the Rhins of Galloway affords visitors views of the Northern Irish coast 21 miles to the west, with clifftop walks and beaches both north and south. This Scottish village was founded on fishing, operating from the sandy, crescent-shaped harbour that remains the focal point of the village today.



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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Pipers At The Gates Scone Palace Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of bagpipers at the entrance gates of Scone Palace, by Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Video Leaves And Swans Loch Faskally Highland Perthshire


Tour Scotland wildlife nature camera travel video of Autumn leaves and Swans on Loch Faskally on ancestry visit to Pitlochry, Perthshire, Scotland.
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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Trees Loch Tay Kenmore Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of trees on the banks of Loch Tay on ancestry visit to Kenmore, Perthshire, Scotland. The village of Kenmore dates from the 16th century. The original village was sited on the north side of river approximately two miles from its present site and was known as Inchadney. In 1540 Sir Colin Campbell of Glenorchy started the construction of Balloch castle on the opposite bank of the river and the entire village was moved to a prominent headland by the shores of Loch Tay, hence the name Kenmore, which translates from Scots Gaelic to large head. The village as it is seen today is a model village laid out by 3rd Earl of Breadalbane in 1760.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Highland Cow Side of The Road Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of a Highland cow by the side of the road on ancestry visit to Pitlochry, Perthshire, Scotland. Highland cattle, Scottish Gaelic: Bò Ghàidhealach; in Scots: 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.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Croft Moraig Stone Circle Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of Croft Moraig Standing Stones Circle on visit to Aberfeldy, Perthshire, Scotland. This stone circle is located near the road between Aberfeldy and Kenmore. It is the most complete stone circle of its type in Scotland. Croft Moraig dates from about 5000 years ago.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Weem Castle Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of Weem Castle also known as Castle Menzies near Aberfeldy in Highland Perthshire, Scotland. This Scottish Castle was the seat of the Chiefs of Clan Menzies for over 400 years. In 1665, Sir Alexander Menzies was created a Baronet of Nova Scotia. The chiefs opposed the religious and political policies of James VII, and when he was forced from his throne in 1688, Menzies declared for Queen Mary and her husband, the Prince of Orange. At the end of the eighteenth century, the Menzies name gained momentary prominence when James Menzies, a merchant in Weem, was one of the leaders of a protest by thousands of men and women against the Militia Ballot Act, passed in fear of a French invasion in the wake of the Revolution of 1789. The Menzies baronetcy became extinct on the death of Sir Neil Menzies of Menzies, eighth Baronet, in 1910. His sister, Miss Egidia Menzies, succeeded to the estates, but on her death in 1918, they were sold. Menzies Castle fell into a dilapidated state, and during the Second World War was used as a Polish army medical stores depot. It was saved from ruin in 1957, when it was purchased by the Menzies Clan Society.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Sunset Tay Valley Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of sunset over the Tay Valley and River Tay on visit to Kinnoull Hill by Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Setting Sun Tay Valley Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of the sun setting behind Tay Valley and River Tay on visit to Kinnoull Hill by Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Tree Reflections Loch Tay Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of tree reflection in Loch Tay on ancestry visit to Kenmore, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Video Crannog Loch Tay Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland video of the Scottish Crannog in Loch Tay on ancestry visit to Kenmore, Perthshire, Scotland. A crannog is a type of ancient loch dwelling found throughout Scotland and Ireland dating from 5,000 years ago. Many crannogs were built out in the water as defensive homesteads and represented symbols of power and wealth. The Scottish Crannog Centre in the video features a unique reconstruction of an early Iron Age loch dwelling.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Hot Air Balloon Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of a Virgin Hot Air Balloon taking off from North Inch Park on visit to Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video War Memorial Dull Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of the War Memorial in the churchyard in Dull on ancestry visit to Highland Perthshire, Scotland. In June 2012, the town of Boring in Oregon, USA, accepted the proposal of Dull to pair their municipalities, in an effort to promote tourism in both places as a play on their names. They became sister cities.

World War I Roll of Honour

Private; Duncan Dewar
Private; Archibald Forbes
Private; John Low
Captain; Robert Menzies
Private; James Menzies
Private; Donald Munro
Guardsman; Charles McCalley
Corporal; James MacIntosh
Sergeant; John MacIntosh
Private; Peter McNab
Sergeant; Robert Nicol

The distance from Dull to Glasgow and Paisley is 74 miles

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Parish Church Dull Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of the Parish Church in Dull on ancestry visit to Highland Perthshire, Scotland. This Scottish church is on the site of an early Christian monastery founded by St Adomnán, Abbot of Iona. In June 2012, the town of Boring in Oregon, USA, accepted the proposal of Dull to pair their municipalities, in an effort to promote tourism in both places as a play on their names. They became sister cities.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Drive Dull Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of a drive to the village of Dull on ancestry visit to Highland Perthshire, Scotland. This Scottish village located near Aberfeldy consists of a single street of houses on the north side of the valley of the River Tay. In June 2012, the town of Boring in Oregon, USA, accepted the proposal of Dull to pair their municipalities, in an effort to promote tourism in both places as a play on their names. They became sister cities.

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Old Photographs Shapinsay Scotland

Old photograph of fishing boats in Shapinsay, Orkney Islands, Scotland. The Balfour family dominated the village of Shapinsay during the 18th and 19th centuries; the Balfours transformed life on the island by introducing new agricultural techniques.




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Old Photograph Croftfoot Scotland

Old photograph of Croftfoot located on the the southeastern side of Glasgow, Scotland. This Scottish village is named after an old steading which was situated at the eastern end of the present day Croftfoot Road, where the Castlemilk Burn now enters a culvert downstream from the site of Castlemilk House.



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Old Photograph Crofters Hoeing Scotland

Old photograph of Crofters hoeing crops on the Orkney Islands, Scotland.



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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Walk In The Rain Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video shot on a walk in the rain by the River Tay on ancestry visit to Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video White Highland Cow Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of a white Highland cow grazing in a field on visit to rural Perthshire, Scotland. The distinctive Highland cattle are one of Britain's oldest breeds and are instantly recognisable for their rusty, red and brown hair and long horns. This cow is not albino, but has a recessive gene which means she has been covered in completely white and pale hair.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Waterfall Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of a Scottish Waterfall on the River Braan on ancestry visit to Dunkeld, Perthshire, Scotland. The River Braan is a tributary of the River Tay in Scotland. Within the county of Perth and Kinross, it flows 11 miles eastwards from Loch Freuchie, near Amulree, and joins the River Tay near Dunkeld.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Blair Castle Highland Perthshire




Tour Scotland Autumn video of Blair Castle, Perthshire, Scotland. Blair Castle from the viewpoint on the A9 road from Edinburgh to Inverness. This viewpoint is just North of Blair Atholl in Highland Perthshire. Always worth a visit. The castle stands in Glen Garry, and commands a strategic position on the main route, now the A9 road, through the central Scottish Highlands. In the Forty Five, Blair Castle was occupied twice by Prince Charles Edward Stuart and his Jacobite army: in early September 1745, for several days, and then in early February 1746, again for several days. However, the Jacobites then unwisely abandoned it and Government forces, including Lowland Clan Agnew then occupied it. They held Blair Castle against the Jacobites, who laid siege to the castle during the last stages of the rising, in March 1746. They were besieged to near starvation until the Jacobite forces withdrew to fight the British Government forces at the Battle of Culloden.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Golf Course Aberfeldy Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of the golf club and course on ancestry visit to Aberfeldy, Perthshire, Scotland. One of the oldest courses in the Scottish highlands, the first nine holes were built in 1895. It was laid out on what was then known as The Cour - grazing ground for cattle. In 1907, Sir Neil Menzies offered to rent the club Weem Cow Park, on the north side of the river, to make the course 18 holes. Negotiations failed and in 1908, the lady members proposed extending the course onto ground at Killiechassie, further east on the north side of the river. That also came to nothing. It was not until 1991 that the Weem Cow Park was finally purchased by the club. A new footbridge was built over the river and the course became the 18 holes.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Wades Bridge Aberfeldy Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of General Wade's Bridge over the River Tay on ancestry visit to Aberfeldy, Perthshire, Scotland. Lieutenant General George Wade, born 1673, died 1748, was sent in 1725 to Scotland following the 1689, 1715 and 1719 Jacobite uprisings to build roads and bridges in the Scottish Highlands. He constructed this famous in 1733 to the design of architect William Adam, father of the more famous Robert Adam.

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Old Photograph Rubh' an Dùnain Scotland

Old photograph of Rubha an Dùnain or Rubh' an Dùnain, an uninhabited peninsula to the south of the Cuillin hills on Isle Of Skye, Scotland. In the post Viking era Rubha an Dùnain was the home of Clan MacAskill and the peninsula contains the ruins of a small village, including an 18th century tacksman's house. The area was occupied until the clearances of the 1860s.

MacAskill, also spelt Macaskill, is a surname. It is an Anglicisation of the Gaelic Mac Asgaill, meaning " son of Asgall ". The Gaelic name Asgall is a reduced form of the Old Norse personal name Ásketill. In Gaelic the MacAskills are known as Clann t-Ascaill, and Clann t-Asgaill. In Scottish Gaelic, the surname is rendered MacAsgaill. In Irish, the surname is rendered Mac Ascaill. Early forms of the name on record in Scotland are Mackaiscail in 1766, Mackaiscal in 1769, and Macaiskill in 1790. An early form of the name in England is Mac Askil in 1311.



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Tour Scotland Parting Glass Video



Tour Scotland Celtic music video recommendation. Cara Dillon singing The Parting Glass. This is a Scottish and Irish traditional song, often sung at the end of a gathering of friends. It was the most popular parting song sung in Scotland before Robert Burns wrote Auld Lang Syne.

Of all the money that e'er I had, I spent it in good company.
And of all the harm that e'er I've done, alas it was to none but me.
And all I've done for want of wit, to memory now I can't recall.
So fill to me the parting glass. Goodnight and joy be with you all.

Of all the comrades that e'er I had, they're sorry for my going away,
And all the sweethearts that e'er I had, they would wish me one more day to stay,
But since it falls unto my lot that I should rise and you should not,
I'll gently rise and I'll softly call, " Goodnight and joy be with you all! "

A man may drink and not be drunk, a man may fight and not be slain
A man may court a pretty girl and perhaps be welcomed back again
But since it has so ordered been by a time to rise and a time to fall
Come fill to me the parting glass, good night and joy be with you all
Come fill to me the parting glass, good night and joy be with you all

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Old Photograph Crofters Cutting Peat North Uist Outer Hebrides Scotland

Old photograph of crofters cutting Peats on North Uist, Scotland. North Uist in the Outer Hebrides was hit hard during the Highland Clearances, and there was large scale emigration from the island to Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada.



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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Highland Calf Killiecrankie Highland Perthshire Scotland



Tour Scotland Autumn video of a Highland calf on a hillside on visit to Killiecrankie located North of Pitlochry, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Drive To Blair Atholl Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of an afternoon drive North on the B8079 road from Killiecrankie on ancestry visit to Blair Atholl and Pitlochry, Perthshire, Scotland. Blair Atholl is a small town in Highland Perthshire, built about the confluence of the Rivers Tilt and Garry in one of the few areas of flat land in the midst of the Grampian Mountains. The town is bypassed by the main A9 road and has a railway station on the Highland Main Line. The main road north from Perth to Inverness ran through the village until it was bypassed in 1984.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Drive To Episcopal Church Blair Atholl Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of a drive to St Adamnan's Scottish Episcopal Church at Kilmaveonaig on ancestry visit to Blair Atholl and Pitlochry, Perthshire, Scotland. This Scottish chapel was rebuilt in 1794 by John Stewart on the site of the old parish church of Kilmaveonaig built in 1591. Enlarged 1899 by the addition of the battlemented Gothic porch. Lorimer reredos added 1912. Old bell 1629, from Little Dunkeld church.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Celtic Cross Prayer Stone Pitlochry Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of a Celtic cross prayer stone on a hillside on ancestry visit North of Pitlochry, Perthshire, Scotland. This Pictish standing stone has a carved cross on either side and is located next to the remains of an old chapel beside the road, It is known locally as the Priest's stone. The Picts were a tribal confederation of peoples who lived in what is today eastern and northern Scotland during the Late Iron Age and Early Medieval periods. They are thought to have been ethnolinguistically Celtic.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Drive North Of Pitlochry Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of a morning drive on a narrow Scottish forest road North of Pitlochry, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Reflections Loch Faskally Highland Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of tree reflections on Loch Faskally on visit to Pitlochry, Perthshire, Scotland. The loch is popular with anglers. The water holds a good head of brown trout and the native fish are augmented by a stocking in the 1 to 5lb range. A 7 pounder was recorded in 2001. Salmon and a few sea trout pass through as they head up the Tummel and Garry systems. 54 salmon were caught in 2001 the best being a fish of 14 ½ lbs, however fish to 28lbs have also been caught. June also sees the arrival of the summer grilse. There are also good numbers of small pike with a few larger specimens mixed in. The best recorded pike have been over 30lb.

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