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L. Beattie

Modern Methods of Sea Fishing [Summary only]

Zoology, Agriculture

TDGNHAS Series III, 19 (1933-35), 30(WARNING very large file size: 50.85 MB)

Abstract

A very interesting paper was contributed on this subject, dealing mainly with Mr Beattie's own experiences when accompanying the herring fishers of the Firth of Clyde and also with the boats fishing for hake, etc., from Fleetwood. For the first time in th

A. Durie

Moffat for Health? A Spa Town in Victorian Times [Lecture to the Society, 7th November, 2003]

Proceedings, Recent, Recent (Social)

TDGNHAS Series III, 78 (2004), 153(4.91 MB)

Abstract

Summary of a lecture delivered 7th November 2003. A review of the Moffat Spa town over the centuries was provided but the lecture concentrated on the Victorian period - with particular reference to the history of the Hydro Hotel and its subsequent destruc

Alison Brown

‘Mokisins’, ‘Cloaks’ and ‘A Belt of a Peculiar Fabric’: Recovering the History of the Thomas Whyte Collection of North American Clothing formerly in the Grierson Museum

Antiquarian, Museums, Ethnography

TDGNHAS Series III, 83 (2009), 131(WARNING large file size: 5.11 MB)

Abstract

In 1965 the Grierson Museum, Thornhill, was disbanded and its rich collections of natural history and antiquities were distributed to other museums and to private dealers. Glasgow Museums acquired several pieces, including some rare items of clothing that mostly originated in the Great Lakes region of North America. The collection history of these items has become obscured, but current research to reattach the clothing to surviving documentation suggests that it was acquired by a Dumfriesshire man, Thomas Whyte, early in the nineteenth century. This paper introduces this little-known collection and the archival processes through which its history is now being reconstructed and recast. It also reflects upon the social relationships through which the Grierson Museum was developed and highlights possibilities for future research into its fascinating history.