Interior Of The Parish Church On History Visit To Guthrie Angus Scotland

Tour Scotland 4K travel video, with Scottish music, of the interior of the Parish Church in Guthrie on ancestry, genealogy, family history visit to Angus. The present church was built in 1826 to a Telford design. Guthrie Parish war memorial is housed in the church in the form of a cabinet board listing the names of the fallen. The Sower stained glass window was installed by the Guthries of California in 1976. The David James and John Dickson Good Shepherd stained glass window was dedicated by the Dickson family in 1920. the Reverend William McConachie memorial in the Parish Church on ancestry visit to Guthrie, Angus. Erected by old friends to the dear memory of the Reverend William McConachie. minister of Guthrie 1893 to 1906 and of Lauder 1906 to 1931 A true friend and faithful minister aged 67. The Guthrie surname derives from the Scottish place-name of Guthrie, a barony known as the lands of Guthrie in Angus in NE Scotland. The root of the name is a Gaelic word meaning " windy place" or " arrows in the wind " The Guthrie place name gave rise to the Guthrie clan. The Guthries of Guthrie received their estates by a charter from King David II sometime in the mid-14th century. The clan came to prominence in 1461 when Sir David Guthrie of Guthrie, Armor Bearer to the King, was appointed Lord Treasurer of Scotland. He obtained a warrant to build Guthrie castle near Forfar in Angus, which remains standing to this day. Enterprising Scots and Scots Irish, including Guthries, discovered America in the 18th century, arriving there from Philadelphia in the north to Charleston in the south. James Guthrie came to America with his wife in 1730 and settled in Chester county, Pennsylvania. His father was a Covenanter who had escaped persecution by fleeing to Ireland. Another James Guthrie came and his wife Elizabeth in the 1760s and they later settled in North Carolina. He too was descended from a Covenanter. Family legend has it that two of their sons were married to two sisters and they travelled on horseback over the mountains to settle in Tennessee. Robert and Bridget Guthrie arrived sometime in the 1740s. After a brief period in Philadelphia, this couple lived in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Robert was a carpenter and cabinetmaker, the organizer of the Carpenters' Guild of Carlisle, trades that were followed by his descendants. All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

View the most recent Tour Scotland photographs.

No comments: