William Blyth Foundryman Gravestone On History Visit To Cathedral Ruins St Andrews Fife Scotland

Tour Scotland 4K short travel video clip, with Scottish music, of the William Blyth, Foundryman, gravestone in the Cathedral ruins graveyard on ancestry, genealogy, family history visit and trip to St Andrews, Fife. The surname Blyth was first found in Berwickshire an ancient county of Scotland, presently part of the Scottish Borders Council Area, located in the eastern part of the Borders Region of Scotland. Blyth was an old barony in the lordship of Lauderdale some time ago. The first on record was of William de Blyth of Chirnesyde in Berwickshire who represented the family and rendered homage to King Edward I of England on his brief conquest of Scotland in 1296. James Blyth, aged 28, a farm labourer, arrived in Wellington, New Zealand aboard the ship " London " in 1840. John Blyth, aged 20, a labourer, arrived in Saint John, New Brunswick aboard the ship " Neptune " in 1834. Mary Blyth, arrived in Virginia, America, in 1651. All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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