Spring Road Trip Drive To Longforgan Perthshire Scotland



Tour Scotland Spring travel video of a road trip drive, with Scottish music, on visit to Longforgan in Carse and Gowrie, Perthshire. A record survives of Sir Patrick Gray, as Baron of Longforgan, holding a baronial court here in 1385 on the Longforgan or Hund Hill; a moot hill. The village was created a burgh of barony in 1672. William Wallace is said to have stopped here to rest after escaping from Dundee where he had killed the English governor's son. The name Longforgan may be derived from Scottish Gaelic lann, meaning " enclosure " or " church ", or lòn, meaning " marsh ", coupled with fothir grund, meaning a fertile field. Its form in modern Scottish Gaelic is Forgrann. Alexander Thoms was born on 9 November 1837 in Longforgan, the son of John Thoms of Clepington, and his wife, Barbara Wise. Around 1854 he went to Bengal in India and spent around three decades there managing tea plantations. He returned permanently to Scotland in 1884 and settled in St Andrews where he already had family links. He was a church elder in St Leonard's Church and served as Kirk Treasurer from 1889 to 1921. In 1905 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Ben Peach, John Horne, Robert Kidston and James Currie. He died on Boxing Day, 26 December 1925, at his home on Playfair Terrace in St Andrews. He married three times. Firstly in 1879 to Mary Watson Wemyss, born 1849, daughter of Dr Alexander Watson Wemyss of St Andrews, Fife. Mary died in March of the following year a few days after giving birth to their only child, who also died. He then, around 1885, married Jean Fowler Munro, born 1855, of Ratho. They had a son Alexander Thoms, born 1886. In April 1898 he married Clementina Christian Sinclair Heddle, born 1860, died 1942, daughter of Prof Matthew Forster Heddle of St Andrews University. Clementina emigrated to California in 1939.

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