Tour Scotland Travel Video Summer Road Trip Drive Rait Road Eastern Perthshire



Tour Scotland Summer travel video of a road trip drive with music and songs on the single track Rait road on ancestry visit to Eastern Perthshire, Scotland. This road is only wide enough for one vehicle. It has special passing places. If you see a vehicle coming towards you, or the driver behind wants to overtake, try to pull into a passing place on your left, or wait opposite a passing place on your right. Give way to vehicles coming uphill whenever you can. If necessary, reverse until you reach a passing place to let the other vehicle pass. The surname Rait, also seen as Raitt and Rate, has been taken from different places all over the country. Nairn, Perth, and Ayrshire all have places named Rait, as well as Fife with Raith. A charter by John Comyn, cousin of the John Comyn killed by Robert the Bruce in Dunfries, 1306, Earl of Buchan, was witnessed by Andreas de Raath in 1299. A lease of property, for land in village of Glesbany, was witnessed in 1321by John de Ratis. It is recorded that in Scone, in 1332, an agreement between John de Rate and the abbot and convent was made, and after a brief episcopate, John Rait, bishop of Aberdeen died in 1355. David Rat was a recorded citizen of Brechin in 1471, Gavin Rath was commissary, in 1477, of William Scheves, archdeacon of St. Andrews, and in Glasgow, in 1487, Andrew Rayt was recorded as being in possession of a tenement. An old family in the Mearns area were the Raits of Hallgreen. Other recorded spellings of this name include Raitht, Reat, and Reyth.

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

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