Old Photograph North Cliff House North Queensferry Fife Scotland

Old photograph of North Cliff house in North Queensferry in Fife, Scotland. This house was once owned by members of the family that founded the Anderson Paper Mill, in nearby Leslie, which went on to be one of Europe’s biggest paper and packaging groups.





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Old Photograph Lindores House Fife Scotland

Old photograph of Lindores House by Lindores Loch near Newburgh, Fife, Scotland. This house was owned at one time by Rear Admiral Frederick Lewis Maitland, who captured Napoleon. He lived at Lindores House and was a founder of the Caledonian Curling Club.



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Old Photograph Castle Street Aberdeen Scotland

Old photograph of cars, trams, people and buildings on Castle Street in Aberdeen, Scotland.



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Old Photographs Glenburnie Fife Scotland

Old photograph of cottages and houses in Glenburnie near Newburgh, Fife, Scotland.




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Old Photographs Beith Scotland

Old photograph of shops, children and houses in Beith in North Ayrshire, Scotland. This small Scottish town is situated in the Garnock Valley, approximately 20 miles South West of Glasgow. Beith has a historical connection to smuggling and built a reputation during the 18th century as being a town which harboured those whose intentions were not always lawful. In 1733 forty or fifty Beith smugglers sacked the Irvine Customs House, escaping with a rich booty of confiscated contraband goods and by 1789 a company of 76 soldiers were quartered in the town dealing with the continuing illicit trade in tea, tobacco, and spirits. This caused great inconvenience to the law abiding citizens on whom the soldiers were billeted. The town was policed in this fashion for some time thereafter. Hence, the Main Street's popular public house is still called the Smugglers Tavern, recalling the days when Beith's location between the coast and Paisley and Glasgow, made it a convenient stopping off point for those involved in nefarious activities. One of Beith's various claims to fame is that a signatory of the American Declaration of Independence, the Reverend John Witherspoon, was a former minister of one its Church of Scotland parishes between 1745 and 1757. In 1745 he led the men of Beith to Glasgow to defend King George III against the Young Pretender in the 1745 rebellion. Despite receiving orders to return to Beith, Witherspoon carried on, was captured at the Battle of Falkirk and imprisoned for a time in Doune Castle. He later emigrated and became a member of the US congress and in July 1776 he voted for the Resolution for Independence. Dr Henry Faulds, the originator of the concept of forensic use of fingerprinting, was born in Beith in 1843.



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