Old Photograph Rathven Church Scotland

Old photograph of the Parish Church in Rathven, Moray, Scotland. This Scottish church was built at the end of the 18th century to replace an earlier, medieval church nearby. The Addison family in Rathven can be traced back to the 17th century and this branch includes the Canadian-Czech philanthropist, Vincent Peter Addison who died in 2007.



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Old Photograph Bonnie Prince Charlie's Bay Eriskay Scotland

Old photograph of Bonnie Prince Charlie's Bay on Isle of Eriskay, Outer Hebrides, Scotland. On August 2, 1745 the small frigate le Du Teillay landed Bonnie Prince Charlie with his " seven men of Moidart " at Bonnie Prince Charlie's Bay or Traigh Leis on Eriskay to start the Forty Five Jacobite Rising.



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Old Photograph Highland Park Whisky Distillery Scotland

Old photograph of Highland Park Whisky Distillery in Kirkwall on the Orkney Islands, Scotland. The distillery was founded in 1798. The name of this whisky does not refer to the area of Scotland known as The Highlands, from which Orkney is excluded, but rather to the fact that the distillery was founded on an area called High Park distinguished from a lower area nearby.



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Old Photograph Dura House Scotland

Old photograph of Dura House in Dura Den a village near Cupar, Fife, Scotland. A branch of the family of Airth of Airth Castle lived here in the 16th. and early 17th. centuries. David was Sheriff or Sheriff-Depute of Fife in 1553 and George held the same office in 1592. He also represented Cupar in the Scottish Parliament of 1617. In 1624 Dura belonged to Magister David Wemys, minister of Leven. In 1750 it came to the Baynes through marriage. Alexander Bayne, Professor of Municipal Law at Edinburgh, acquired Rires in 1722. His father had been Sheriff Clerk of Fife in 1672. From the Baynes it passed to the Meldrums of Kincaple and Craigfoodie who were advocates. They took the name Bayne Meldrum and held the estate until 1951 when the house was purchased by David Anderson - later to be knighted - the bridge and tunnel expert. The plans for the Forth Road Bridge were drawn there, but he died before the bridge was built. He made a name for himself in the construction of the Moscow and London underground railway systems. He left his considerable fortune to a Chinese mission. In 1958 Dura was bought by the Howat family who later sold it to the Milnes.



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Old Photograph Kilconquhar Castle Scotland

Old photograph of Kilconquhar castle in Kilconquhar, East Neuk of Fife, Scotland. This Scottish castle was formerly owned by the Adams of Kilconquhar. Adam of Kilconquhar married Marjorie, Countess of Carrick to become the Earl of Carrick. Adam went to the Crusades with Prince Edward of England and died in Acre. His widow subsequently married Robert de Brus, 6th Lord of Annandale, who thus became Earl of Carrick and Lord of Kilconquhar. Their son was Robert the Bruce.





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Old Photograph Plough Woman Highland Perthshire Scotland

Old photograph of a Plough Woman in Strathtummel near Pitlochry in Highland Perthshire, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Salmon Leaping Falls of Kilmorack Scotland

Old photograph of a salmon leaping at the Falls of Kilmorack on the the River Beauly near of Beauly, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Duchess Lodge Leslie Fife Scotland

Old photograph of the Duchess Lodge gatehouse in Leslie, Fife, Scotland. In 1902, the ground near the turret on the left subsided revealing a secret chamber.





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Old Photograph Putting The Shot Highland Games Ballater Scotland

Old photograph of Putting the Shot at the Highland Games in Ballater, Royal Deeside, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Gate To Falcon Hall Edinburgh Scotland

Old photograph of the gate to Falcon Hall in Morningside, Edinburgh, Scotland. Falcon Hall was a large mansion home in Morningside. It was built in 1780 by William Coulter, a wealthy hosier and baillie who served as Lord Provost of Edinburgh from 1808 until his death in 1810. The property was acquired in the early 19th century by Alexander Falconar, a merchant of the East India Company. Dr John George Bartholomew, a co-founder of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society and owner of the famous map making company, John Bartholomew & Son Limited was a tenant of the house before 1908. The entrance to the property stood opposite to the old school. The pillars of the gateway were each surmounted by a falcon, one each side of the gates, painted in brown and gold. The gates were removed in 1874 and reassembled to form the entrance of Edinburgh Zoo in Corstorphine.



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Old Photographs High Street Aberlour Scotland

Old photograph of shops, houses and people on the High Street in Aberlour located twelve miles South of Elgin, Moray, Scotland. The full name of this Scottish village is Charlestown of Aberlour. The town was granted its feu charter in 1814 and began to operate its own markets. Whisky was a major industry even then and once the 1823 licensing act was passed and a longer warehousing process introduced it began to take on the more mature characteristics that we are familiar with today.





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Old Photograph Knocknagael Boar Stone Scotland

Old photograph of Knocknagael Pictish Boar Stone, Inverness, Scotland. Picts are assumed to have been the descendants of the Caledonii and other tribes that were mentioned by Roman historians or on the world map of Ptolemy. Pictland, also called Pictavia by some sources, gradually merged with the Gaelic kingdom of Dál Riata to form the Kingdom of Alba. Alba then expanded, absorbing the Brittonic kingdom of Strathclyde and Northumbrian Lothian, and by the 11th century the Pictish identity had been subsumed into the Scots amalgamation of peoples.



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Old Photograph Castlebay Scotland

Old photograph of houses, cottages, car and people in Castlebay on the Island of Barra, Outer Hebrides, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Entertainers Carnoustie Scotland

Old photograph of entertainers in Carnoustie, Scotland.



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Old Photographs Balmaha Scotland

Old photograph of cottages, paddle steamer and small fishing boats by Balmaha on the eastern shore of Loch Lomond, Scotland. This Scottish village is a popular tourist destination for picnickers and day trippers from Glasgow as well as walkers on the West Highland Way. Boat trips leave from Balmaha for the town of Balloch and the village of Luss as well as nearby Inchcailloch Island. The name Balmaha derives from the Gaelic Bealach Mo-Cha, meaning the pass of Saint Mo-Cha. The pass referred to is now named The Pass of Balmaha, a narrow route between hills at the north end of the village, carrying the road north along Loch Lomond. The saint referred to is Kentigerna, patron saint of the parish who was culted especially on the nearby island of Inchcailloch, meaning Island of Nuns. She is also commemorated in a well in the hills above the village, St Maha's Well.




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Old Photographs Carsphairn Scotland

Old photograph of a shepherd and sheep on the road through Carsphairn in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. Carsphairn was made an independent parish around 1627, prior to which it had been a part of the Parish of Dalry, and was created a Free Burgh in 1672 under a charter requested by Robert Grierson of Lag. Industry is mainly rural, but, historically, a significant mining industry existed, particularly of lead, following the discovery of significant quantities in 1837. By the mid 1850s the mine was producing 1000 tons annually. Mining continued in the area, with peak production between 1906 and 1914. Following the end of the First World War, the industry collapsed and by 1928 all lead mining operations had ceased.



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Old Photograph Byres Road Glasgow Scotland

Old photograph of a Tram, horse and cart, shops, people and buildings on Byres Road in Hillhead, Glasgow, Scotland. Stretching from Great Western Road at the Botanic Gardens in the north to Dumbarton Road at Partick Cross in the south, the road originally ran through a relatively rural area called the Byres of Partick, also known as Bishop's Byres. The oldest pub in the area is the 17th century Curler's, originally sited beside a pond used for curling and, legend has it, given a seven day licence by King Charles II. During the period when Hillhead and Partick were independent burghs, Byres Road was known by its original name of Victoria Street. By the time Hillhead was annexed by Glasgow on 1 November 1891, there were four different Victoria Streets in the expanded Glasgow area. All these streets were subsequently renamed with Victoria Street, Hillhead, becoming Byres Road. The burgh of Hillhead was created on 14 May 1869 and the Burgh Chambers were established in Victoria Street in 1873.



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Old Photographs West Port Street Selkirk Scotland

Old photograph of shops, cars, carts, people and buildings on the West Port Street in Selkirk, Scottish Borders, Scotland.




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Old Photographs High Street Dumfries Scotland

Old photograph of shops, people, buildings and cars on the High Street in Dumfries, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Esplanade Gourock Scotland

Old photograph of people walking on the esplanade in Gourock, Renfrewshire, near Glasgow, Scotland. Charlie Barr, born Charles Barr in Gourock, in 1864, was an accomplished sailing skipper who three times captained winning America's Cup yachts. As a young man he was apprenticed as a grocer before working as a commercial fisherman. In 1884, he took a job with his older brother John, delivering a sailing yacht, Clara, to America. Clara's racing success was such that in 1887, John was selected to skipper the Scottish challenger, Thistle, the representative of the Royal Clyde Yacht Club; Charlie served as a member of the crew. Thistle was soundly defeated by Volunteer. In the process, however, the brothers Barr were introduced to Nathanael Herreshoff, and Charlie Barr's yachting career was launched. Captain Charles Barr was skipper of the yacht Columbia in 1899 and defeated Sir Thomas Lipton's Shamrock. Two years later, in 1901, Charlie Barr was again at the helm against a Lipton sponsored yacht, Shamrock II. In 1903, Barr was the captain of the winning yacht Reliance, one of the most famous racing yachts to be designed by Nathanael Herreshoff. He is best known for setting the record for the fastest crossing by a sailing yacht of the Atlantic Ocean on the schooner Atlantic in the 1905 Kaiser's Cup Transatlantic Race. Barr died whilst visiting Southampton, England on 24 January 1911; he is buried in Southampton Old Cemetery. The distance from Glasgow and Paisley to Gourock is 28 miles.



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Old Photograph South Street Armadale West Lothian Scotland

Old photograph of a car, houses, and people on South Street in Armadale West Lothian, Scotland. Before the building of a new turnpike road between Edinburgh and Glasgow in 1786 the village of Armadale was little more than a rural farm community but its location at a main highway junction brought additional traffic and a toll house was built where the new road intersected with an existing road in the east of the estate. The estate comprising the lands of Barbauchlaw was sold to Sir William Honeyman in 1790 and upon his elevation to the bench in 1797 he took the title of Lord Armadale, from his mother's estate in Sutherland in the Highlands, and this name was then applied to the township.



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Old Photograph Soldier And Sister Perth Perthshire Scotland

Old photograph of a Scottish soldier and his sister in Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Landing Herring Wick Scotland

Old photograph of fishermen landing herring at the harbour in Wick, Scotland. Herring are forage fish which often move in large schools around fishing banks and near the coast. Herring has been a staple food source since at least 3000 B.C. There are numerous ways the fish is served and many regional recipes: eaten raw, fermented, pickled, or cured by other techniques, such as being smoked as kippers.



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Old Photograph Gylen Castle Scotland

Old photograph of Gylen Castle on the southern part of the island of Kerrera, Scotland. This is an island in the Scottish Inner Hebrides, close to the town of Oban. The island is known for the ruined Gylen Castle, built in 1582 by the Clan MacDougall. Gylen was only occupied for a relatively short period of time. The castle was besieged then burned by the Covenanters under General Leslie in 1647 during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. The island was also the place where King Alexander II of Scotland died in 1249. Most of the island is owned by the McDougalls of Dunollie, who are descended from the Scottish prince Somerled.



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Old Photograph Hospice Fort Augustus Abbey Scotland

Old photograph of a vintage car outside the Hospice at the Abbey in Fort Augustus, Highland, Scotland. Fort Augustus Abbey owed its inception to the desire of John Crichton Stuart, 3rd Marquess of Bute, for the restoration of monasticism in Scotland. The site at Fort Augustus was given by Simon Fraser, 13th Lord Lovat. It comprised the buildings of a dismantled fort, built in 1729 and originally erected for the suppression of Highland Jacobites. It had been purchased from the Government by the Lovat family in 1867.



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Old Photograph Tron Church Edinburgh Scotland

Old photograph of Tron Kirk on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh, Scotland. This Scottish church was " dedicated to Christ " by the citizens of Edinburgh in 1641, and known as " Christ's Kirk at the Tron ". It was built for the North West parish, one of the four parishes of Edinburgh after the Scottish Reformation of 1560. Prior to the erection of this new church, parishioners of the North West parish worshipped in St. Giles' Cathedral. There were special grants of pews made by the Edinburgh Town Council to noblemen, Senators of the College of Justice, citizens of Edinburgh Old Town, Principals and Professors of the University. A full list of seat holders has been preserved for 1650, the year of the battle of Dunbar, and for 1745, when Bonnie Prince Charlie was in Edinburgh. In 1697, Thomas Aikenhead, an 18 year old student, became the last person in Scotland to be executed for the crime of blasphemy after a fellow student reported that he had blasphemed against God outside the Tron Kirk.



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Old Photograph Skeldon House Scotland

Old photograph of Skeldon House in East Ayrshire, Scotland. Kerse Castle is said to be have been dismantled for use in the building of Skeldon House circa 1760 by Mr Ross of Sandwick. Alexander Craufurd was the last male Craufurd proprietor of Kerse as his heir, a daughter named Christian Crawford of Kerse, married a Mr. Moodie. The couple had no offspring and she passed the lands of Kerse to William Ross of Sandwick. The Ross family built Skeldon House circa 1760. The estate of Kerse then passed to his children who sold it to the Oswalds of Auchencruive, with whom it still remained into the 19th century. Of interest to folks with ancestry, genealogy or Scottish Family Roots in Scotland who may wish to visit one day.



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Old Photograph Mollinsburn Scotland

Old photograph of the blacksmith in Mollinsburn, North Lanarkshire, Scotland. This Scottish village is situated on the A80 road between Condorrat to the east and Moodiesburn to the West. The Antonine Roman Wall passes close to Mollinsburn and there is a small fort at Mollins.



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Old Photograph Soldiers Kirkconnel Scotland

Old photograph of soldiers marching past cottages in Kirkconnel, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Glen Loin Youth Hostel Scotland

Old photograph of the Youth Hostel in Glen Loin, Arrochar, Scotland. This Hostel was located one mile north of Arrochar and was officially opened by Sir John Stirling Maxwell, chairman of the Forestry Commission, at 5pm on 19th March 1932.



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Old Photograph Banton Scotland

Old photograph of cottage and houses in Banton near Kilsyth, North Lanarkshire, Scotland. Originally a cluster of houses and a farm to the north, now referred to as High Banton was what existed of the village and then coal mining brought about the village we see today. The Covenanter army under General William Baillie formed near Banton for their engagement with the Royalist forces under the command of Montrose at the Battle of Kilsyth on August 15, 1645; a major battle of the Wars of the Three Kingdoms.



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Old Photograph Colvend Scotland

Old photograph of a vintage car outside a cottage in Colvend near Dalbeattie in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Crofters Harvesting Fair Isle Scotland

Old photograph of crofters harvesting by a cottage on Fair Isle, Scotland. This is an island in northern Scotland, lying around halfway between mainland Shetland and the Orkney Islands.



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Old Photograph Pierhead Street Stromness Orkney Islands Scotland

Old photograph of a vintage car and bus on Pierhead Street in Stromness, Orkney Islands, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Little Duchrae Scotland

Old photograph of the cottage where Samuel Rutherford was born in Little Duchrae near Castle Douglas, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. S. R. Crockett, born 24th September 1859, died 16th April 1914, was a Scottish novelist. He was born at Duchrae, Balmaghie, Kirkcudbrightshire, the illegitimate grandson of a farmer. He was raised on his grandfather's Galloway farm, and graduated from Edinburgh University during 1879. His first successful story of The Stickit Minister was published during 1893.



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Old Photograph Grandholm Bridge Aberdeen Scotland

Old photograph of Grandholm bridge over the River Don in Woodside, Aberdeen, Scotland. The Grandholm Bridge is a private bridge, constructed for the Crombie Mills in the 1920s.




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Old Photograph Cottage Nethy Bridge Scotland

Old photograph of elderly Scots outside a cottage in Nethy Bridge, Scotland. Known locally as simply as " Nethy " the village has, since Victorian times been a tourist destination noted for its quiet and secluded location at the edge of the Abernethy Forest. It is situated in the heart of Strathspey in the Highlands of Scotland between Aviemore and Grantown-on-Spey.



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Old Photograph Kildonan House Barrhill Scotland

Old photograph of Kildonan House by Barrhill in South Ayrshire, Scotland. Euan Wallace Member of Parliament inherited the estate on condition that he made it his home. He employed Miller to design this enormous house in English Manorial Revival style, complete with a theatre and indoor tennis courts. Kildonan was ready for occupation by 1923, the world it was designed for had all but vanished and the interiors were never completed. Captain David Euan Wallace, born 20 April 1892, died 9 February 1941, who went by his middle name of Euan, was a British Conservative politician who briefly served as Minister of Transport during World War II. He was the son of John Wallace, of Glassingall, Dunblane, at that time in Perthshire. Wallace gained the rank of Captain in the service of the 2nd Regiment of Life Guards Reserve, acted as a special Commissioner for the North East coast and acted as Aide-de-camp to the Governor General of Canada in 1920 and was decorated with the award of the Military Cross. He was first elected to the House of Commons at Member of Parliament) for Rugby, England from 1922 to 1923, then represented Hornsey from 1924 until his death in 1941.



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Old Photograph Scottish Soldiers Birnam Perthshire Scotland

Old photograph of Scottish soldiers at Military Barracks outside Birnam, Perthshire, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Burnside House Lundin Links Fife Scotland

Old photograph of Burnside House in Lundin Links by Lower Largo, East Neuk of Fife, Scotland. Burn is a Scottish word for a small stream.



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Old Photograph Lanrick Castle Scotland

Old photograph of Lanrick Castle near Doune, Stirlingshire, Scotland. Lanrick was the property of the Haldane family In the 19th century it belonged to the MacGregors, and was owned in the later 19th century by Robert Jardine of Castlemilk, Glasgow. It was probably built around 1790, and Gothic additions in the style of James Gillespie Graham were made in around 1815. Alistair Dickson inherited Lanrick in 1984. In April 1994 the castle was gutted by fire and lost its roof. On 16 February 2002 the remaining structure was demolished.



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Old Photograph Inchdrewer Castle Scotland

Old photograph of Inchdrewer Castle near Banff, Scotland. This Scottish castle was Originally owned by the Currour family, it was purchased by the Ogilvies of Dunlugas in 1557 and became their main family seat. The Ogilvies were staunch Royalists, which resulted in the castle coming under attack from the Covenanters in 1640. George Ogilvy, 3rd Lord Banff was murdered in 1713 and his body hidden inside the castle, which was then set on fire. The castle came under siege again in 1746, during the Jacobite rebellion. At the start of the 19th century, following the death of the 8th Lord Banff, the property was inherited by the Abercromby of Birkenbog family, who leased it to a tenant. It became uninhabited after 1836 and the structure deteriorated.



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Old Photograph Strathtummel Perthshire Scotland

Old photograph of sheep on the road in Strathtummel near Pitlochry in Highland Perthshire, Scotland.



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Old Photographs Lochinver Scotland

Old photograph of Lochinver, Sutherland, Scotland.



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Old Photograph Loch Cairnbawn Scotland

Old photograph of a car on the road to Loch Cairnbawn located North of Ullapool, Scotland. This loch was the site of the World War Two midget submarine training base, Port HHZ. The base was heavily involved in the training for the X-Craft operations to sink the German battleship Tirpitz.



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Old Photograph Achmelvich Bay Scotland

Old photograph of Achmelvich Bay and beach located three miles North West of Lochinver, Sutherland, Scotland.



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