3087-11
A Note on the Growing of Flax and the Manufacture of Linen in the Lochmaben Area
History, Agriculture, Industrial Archaeology, Manufacturing (Textiles)
TDGNHAS Series III, 87 (2013), 195(WARNING large file size: 5.67 MB)
3087-11A Note on the Growing of Flax and the Manufacture of Linen in the Lochmaben Area History, Agriculture, Industrial Archaeology, Manufacturing (Textiles) TDGNHAS Series III, 87 (2013), 195(WARNING large file size: 5.67 MB) |
3087-10David F. Devereux, Alison Greenshields and Elaine Pattison Corporal Donaldson’s Complaint: An Example of Military Support for the Board of Customs in Counter-Smuggling Activities in Early Eighteenth-Century Galloway History, Smuggling, Military History, Administration TDGNHAS Series III, 87 (2013), 191(WARNING large file size: 5.67 MB) |
3087-7Narrowboats in Galloway: Alexander Gordon, Marl, and the Carlingwark Canal History, Transport History (Canals), Biography TDGNHAS Series III, 87 (2013), 117(WARNING large file size: 5.67 MB) |
3087-6Gaill, Gàidheil, Gall-Ghàidheil and the Cenéla of Greater Galloway History, Early Mediaeval, Linguistic History TDGNHAS Series III, 87 (2013), 81(WARNING large file size: 5.67 MB)
Abstract
Scandinavian incursions and settlements in both Scotland and Ireland were of significance in the development of both nations. Social, political, and economic change then ensued, leaving long lasting linguistic, cultural and genetic legacies. The name Galloway contains the Gaelic words ‘Gall’, originally a foreigner and later a Scandinavian, and Gàidheil, a Gaelic speaker. Fergus of Galloway was known as ‘righ Gall-Ghàidheil’, king of the foreign or Scandinavian Gaelic speakers. Questions arise as to the geographical origins of the Gall-Ghàidheil and when they intruded into greater Galloway. That greater Galloway was Gaelicised can be seen not only from place-name studies but also from the very large number and great variety of Gaelic surnames associated with the region. The origin of Fergus of Galloway, still an unsolved problem for historians, is considered in the light of the given names of his descendants. These names suggest that Fergus was either a Gael or a very much Gaelicised individual. The focus then moves to the medieval cenéla of greater Galloway. The names of leading individuals and kindreds, in particular those of the greinours of the Clenafren, are analysed. Two Muintir groups recorded in Carrick are also examined in some detail. The tantalising but as yet unproven possibilities of Irish Dál Fiatach origins for both the Clenafren and the McKerrells are outlined. The apparent absence of well-researched genetic data which might prove helpful in illuminating the origins of the kindreds of greater Galloway is commented on. The future availability of such data could potentially assist in further unravelling Galloway’s complex past. The meanings of contractions and Gaelic words used are given at the end of the article. |
3087-3The Founding of Our Society 1862: Contemporary Context and Cultural Climate History, Recent (Social), Recent (Literature & Art) TDGNHAS Series III, 87 (2013), 15(WARNING large file size: 5.67 MB)
Abstract
It is truly an honour to be invited to speak on this auspicious occasion, which I see as an opportunity to reflect on some of the great achievements and some of the great achievers in Dumfries and Galloway around the time the Society was founded on 20 November 1862. A secondary theme is the relationship of most of these people with the unique landscape of the region and the influence of the environment upon them. In 1862 most of the population of the three south-western counties still depended upon the land for their material existence. A remarkable number became naturalists, while poets and writers celebrated Nature’s heritage in the beauty of their surroundings. In a Christian era many were concerned with the wonder of Creation rather than with any sense of ‘blood and soil’ or lebensraum, with celebrating the joy of their environs rather than environmental determinism. |
3087-2The Founding and Early History of Our Society History, Recent (Social), Recent (Literature & Art) TDGNHAS Series III, 87 (2013), 5(WARNING large file size: 5.67 MB)
Abstract
Dumfriesshire and Galloway Natural History and Antiquarian Society celebrated its 150th year in 2012. To mark the anniversary the Society held a one-day conference on Saturday, 8 September 2012. The President of the Society, Dr Francis Toolis, opened the event with a history of the early days of the Society. He recounted something of the lives of founders such as Dr Gilchrist, the second Physician Superintendent at the Crichton Royal Institution and Dr Grierson of Thornhill, whose remarkable private museum was the inspiration for the African explorer, Joseph Thomson, also a member of the Society, the man after whom the Thomson gazelle is named and the inspiration himself for Sir H. Rider Haggard’s King Solomon’s Mines. Sir William Jardine of Applegarth, a true polymath and the author of many books, was the Society’s first President. Among the later members was Samuel Arnott, one-time Provost of Maxwelltown, who wrote extensively for the Society’s Transactions and was recognised in his time as a world authority on snowdrops. This is the text of the President’s opening address. |
3086-9Corruption, Regionalism and Legal Practice in Eighteenth-Century Scotland: The Rise and Fall of David Armstrong, Advocate Recent (Social), History, Cartography, Biography TDGNHAS Series III, 86 (2012), 145(4.08 MB)
Abstract
The career of David Armstrong was unusual by the standards of the eighteenth-century Scottish bar but at its height it presents a picture that was in some ways a signpost for the future development of the legal profession. Financial problems, consequent to the collapse of the Ayr Bank, reveal the importance to him of his local Dumfries connections and also led him into a scandal by which his career was cut short. This article examines that scandal and draws from Armstrong’s career a number of conclusions about the nature of contemporary legal practice in Scotland that have a wider resonance for the history of the profession generally during the long eighteenth century. |
3086-7Harestanes of Craigs – A Family Come and Gone TDGNHAS Series III, 86 (2012), 119(4.08 MB)
Abstract
The family of Hairstanes rose to prominence as burgesses of Dumfries in the later 1500s, only to die out in the male line in the mid-1700s when four sisters inherited. In 1739 they sold the family properties, Over and Nether Kelwood and Bourlands. The family took their designation from the lands of Over Kelwood, but used the name ‘of Craigs’, that being the house on the property. In Edgar’s History of Dumfries (1915) which R C Reid edited, there is a long note, no 30, on Kelwood and its owners and at the end of the volume a pedigree of Hairstanes is included. Unfortunately, the descent as deduced by Reid is not correct in some details, although one must pay tribute to his scholarship. Only two of the four sisters, Isabella and Elizabeth, appear to have had issue. Elizabeth married William Maxwell of Preston and was the mother of two daughters; Mary, wife of William Gordon, 17th Earl of Sutherland; and Willielma wife of John Campbell, Lord Glenorchy. Lady Glenorchy died without issue, so it is probable that the surviving genes of the family rest with the Sutherlands. |
3086-5Gaelic in Galloway: Part Two – Contraction History, Etymology, Ethnography, Linguistic History TDGNHAS Series III, 86 (2012), 63(4.08 MB)
Abstract
The end of Gaelic in Galloway is as obscure as its beginnings. It is likely that the survival of Gaelic was intimately bound up with the survival of a distinct Galwegian identity. The persistence of this Galwegian identity was a recurring source of conflict with Scottish kings from David I to David II. Crucially, it led Galloway’s Gaelic kindreds to support the Balliols against the Bruces in a struggle for the Scottish crown which lasted from 1286 to 1356, when David II prevailed over Edward Balliol. Even then, it was not until after Archibald Douglas established his lordship of Galloway in 1372 that the power of the Galwegian kindreds was diminished through the plantation of Scots speakers in Galloway. Under the Douglases, Scots began to displace Gaelic as the language of Galloway. By the end of Douglas rule in 1455, the once powerful Galwegian identity had faded into insignificance and the region was peacefully absorbed into Scotland. This acceptance of Scottish identity suggests that Scots had also replaced Gaelic as the language of Galloway. |
3085-11A Medieval Hunting Leash Mount from Palnure, Dumfries and Galloway Analysis and Discussion TDGNHAS Series III, 85 (2011), 164(3.42 MB) |
3085-9The Decline of Liberalism in Dumfriesshire: Was It the Standard Wot Done It? TDGNHAS Series III, 85 (2011), 143(3.42 MB)
Abstract
In its editorial on 14 December 1963 the Dumfries and Galloway Standard and Advertiser declared, ‘The fact must be faced, Liberalism in Dumfriesshire is on its deathbed and nothing short of a miracle will revive it.’ The evidence for such a statement was strong. In the by-election occasioned by the elevation to the peerage of the sitting member, Niall Macpherson, and whose result had just been declared, the Liberal party, fielding a candidate in the constituency for the first time since the General Election of 1945, had secured a derisory 4,491 votes and forfeited its deposit. This figure, suggested the Standard, was ‘amazingly small’. ‘No juggling of the figures can produce a single crumb of comfort for the Liberals.’ The party’s candidate, Charles Abernethy, and his supporters had ‘put everything they had into the campaign, but however strong Liberalism in Dumfriesshire may have been in the past the by-election figures show that the new generation of voters are thinking along different lines’. A week later, following the publication of two critical letters in its correspondence columns, the newspaper felt it necessary to defend itself against the charge that it had itself contributed to the Liberal party’s predicament because ‘it did not throw its whole weight behind the Party, as in the old days’. A newspaper’s primary function, the Standard argued, is ‘to give a fair and unbiased account of the news, particularly in the controversial field of politics’. If, then, the Dumfriesshire Liberals were looking for a scapegoat for the result of the poll, ‘they must look elsewhere. We have no intention of accepting the role.’ |
3085-10The Gatehouse Adventure: The Makers of a Planned Town 1760 to 1830 Recent (Social), Industrial Archaeology, History, Genealogy TDGNHAS Series III, 85 (2011), 119(3.42 MB)
Abstract
This paper uses a variety of original sources on planned settlements in South West Scotland and the local industrial archaeology in order to explore the progress of Gatehouse of Fleet from the early 1760s, focusing first on the early feuars in the settlement established by James Murray of Broughton near his new mansion at Cally. The paper tracks attempts to bring industry such as tanning and brewing to Gatehouse. Using legal papers in particular, evidence shows how James Murray, other landowners, his partners in the new businesses and local tradesmen all became caught up in the rapid rise and subsequent failure of the Ayr Bank in 1772. The lasting effects of the bank’s failure on the local economy due to the financial burden on Murray and others is examined and we see how this led to a lack of new building, followed by the emigration of a number of the Gatehouse feuars. Development began to pick up only in 1777 when Murray promoted the settlement in the press and reduced feu duties for all new building. Cotton manufacture came to Gatehouse in 1785 with the signing of a contract between Murray and the Birtwhistle family, which led to the construction of a substantial mill. The rapid but short lived development and subsequent decline of the cotton industry and its effect on Gatehouse is examined in some detail. Finally we see how Gatehouse returned to its earlier role as a supplier of tradesmen to Cally Estate under Alexander Murray of Broughton. |
3085-7The Dumfries Collectors and the King’s Boat at Carsethorn, 1764–1799 TDGNHAS Series III, 85 (2011), 93(3.42 MB)
Abstract
For a period of nearly one hundred years the senior customs officers at the port of Dumfries believed that the establishment of a king’s boat at Carsethorn was the best means of stopping smuggling up the Solway Firth. These king’s boats were comparatively small when compared with the revenue cutters stationed round the Scottish coasts – the nearest of these was at Whithorn. They were essentially open boats with four, six or eight sets of oars and a sail. They were manned by a commander with a crew of men, who had been bred to the sea. The main source of information about the king’s boats is the copy books of letters from the Board of Customs in Edinburgh to the collector and comptroller at Dumfries and the local officers’ letters to the Board and to their own staff. This paper describes the relationship between the collectors and the commanders of the king’s boat, during the period 1759 to 1799, for which there is the most detailed information. |
3085-6Gaelic in Galloway: Part One – Expansion Early Mediaeval, Mediaeval, History, Ethnography TDGNHAS Series III, 85 (2011), 85(3.42 MB)
Abstract
For at least 600 years, between the tenth and the sixteenth centuries, Galloway was a Gaelic speaking land. Although both the beginning and the end of Gaelic Galloway are uncertain, that Gaelic was the language of the kingdom of Galloway established by Fergus in the early eleventh century, and was still the main language of the Douglas lordship of Galloway at its end in 1455, is indisputable. In addition to the Gaelic personal and place names recorded in medieval charters, the thousands of Gaelic place names which survived to be recorded by the Ordnance Survey in the 1840s bear witness to Galloway’s Gaelic past. Furthermore, despite the language shift to Scots, there is evidence of cultural continuity between the agriculture of Gaelic Galloway and the farming practice of seventeenth and early eighteenth century Galloway. Then, at the end of the eighteenth century, the process of agricultural improvement began, a process which has continued to the present. The cumulative effect of this process in the lowlands, combined with afforestation in the uplands, has been the erasure of Galloway’s past. The Galloway landscape known to the Galloway Levellers and the Covenanters would have been familiar to the medieval Gaelic farmers who named the land, but none would recognise the landscape of the present. |
3085-5Sir Enguerrand de Umfraville: His Life, Descent and Issue TDGNHAS Series III, 85 (2011), 67(3.42 MB)
Abstract
The relationship of the Balliols and Umfravilles of Redcastle and Urr has caused historians problems, even to the extent of the suggestion that there might have been two of the name Enguerrand (Ingelram) de Umfraville. The most recent book3 shows Enguerrand in an altogether different position in the pedigree, without annotation, but obviously as an attempt to make sense of the evidence. I shall show that Sir Enguerrand de Umfraville enjoyed an exceptionally long life, being born about 1245 and dying after 1321, that he was the first cousin and co-heir of Sir Enguerrand de Balliol II (d 1298) son of Sir Eustace (d 1270/76), and that his mother was indeed Eustace’s sister Eva, daughter of Sir Enguerrand de Balliol I (d ca 1244) of Urr and Redcastle. Furthermore I reposition Sir Henry de Balliol of Cavers as the son, not the brother, of Sir Enguerrand de Balliol I, both on chronological grounds, and on the evidence that Sir Enguerrand had a son Henry who also had a son Henry, as did Sir Henry de Balliol of Cavers have a son Henry, so giving two matching pairs of Henrys. |
3084-8Were the Wigtown Martyrs Drowned? A Reappraisal TDGNHAS Series III, 84 (2010), 121(3.44 MB)
Abstract
This article explores the vituperative controversy which erupted in the mid 19th century over whether the Wigtown Martyrs were drowned. As the available evidence is neither easily accessible nor widely known, it is explained and evaluated. The conclusion is that they were drowned but there remain several mysteries including what happened to a reprieve from the Privy Council. Some historians have therefore been unable to agree that the drownings took place. |
3084-7The ‘Old Edinburgh Road’ in Dumfriesshire and Galloway TDGNHAS Series III, 84 (2010), 101(3.44 MB)
Abstract
The ‘Old Edinburgh Road’ marked on Ordnance Survey maps of the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright forms part of a route of great antiquity. A brief summary of its history before the turnpike era was given by the writer in a previous paper.2 The following notes are intended as an amplification of this and its extensions into Dumfriesshire and Wigtownshire, based on observations made in the intervening forty years. |
3084-6The Gordons of Earlstoun Mediaeval, Recent, History, Genealogy TDGNHAS Series III, 84 (2010), 73(3.44 MB)
Abstract
The Gordons of Earlstoun are interesting in that they, probably more than any other family in Galloway, suffered the most extreme vicissitudes of fortune. Senior cadet branch of the Gordons of Lochinvar (later Viscounts Kenmure), they built up such a large landholding that by the mid-1600s they had become one of the most powerful and influential families in Kirkcudbrightshire, and later they acquired a baronetcy. Yet within a century the family were so reduced that they were compelled to dispose of their estates, and for the next seventy-five years they remained landless. However, in the mid-eighteenth century a younger son emigrated to Jamaica where he became involved in the lucrative sugar trade, and established the foundations for a revival in the family’s fortunes. Building on this, and inheriting the baronetcy, his son was adjudged heir of entail to an estate near Borgue. Consequently the family regained much of its former eminence |
3084-5Personal Allegiance in South West Scotland: 1286 – 1356 TDGNHAS Series III, 84 (2010), 57(3.44 MB)
Abstract
The death of Alexander 3rd in 1286 threw Scotland into tumult and struggle. When, in the same year, the South West was attacked by the forces of Robert Bruce it gave an unpleasant foretaste of what was to come. The strategic position of the region ensured that it became a transit area, traversed by the participating armies at least 13 times during the period. However, through-transit cannot explain the full-scale invasions, almost 30 battles and serious skirmishes and the very frequent harrying of the region throughout a 70 year period of intermittent warfare. Indeed, only 27 of these 70 years were without significant conflict somewhere in the South West. Thus the South West became pivotal in the wars of this period and often exhibited non-conformist and anti-central authority patterns of allegiance and support. The reasons for this persistent local turbulence are complex. |
3083-17The Lochenkit Moor Covenanters – a Newly Discovered Account of a ‘Killing Times’ Incident TDGNHAS Series III, 83 (2009), 229(WARNING large file size: 5.11 MB)
Abstract
The killing of four Covenanters by Crown forces on Lochenkit Moor near present-day Crocketford in Kirkcudbrightshire in early 1685 was one of the most notorious events of the ‘Killing Times’. Today, a walled enclosure protects the site of their grave and an impressive obelisk nearby records the circumstances of their killing2. However, an account of the incident has been recently discovered in a manuscript book held in the Stewartry Museum in Kirkcudbright, which, if accurate, offers an alternative interpretation of the event. |
3083-13The Birtwhistles of Galloway and Craven: Drovers, Industrialists, Writers and Spies Agriculture, Recent (Literature & Art), Industrial Archaeology, History, Genealogy TDGNHAS Series III, 83 (2009), 151(WARNING large file size: 5.11 MB) |
3083-11Smuggling and Kirkcudbright Merchant Companies in the Eighteenth Century TDGNHAS Series III, 83 (2009), 105(WARNING large file size: 5.11 MB) |
3083-10J. Brann, N. Coombey and G. Stell Glenstocken, Gutcher’s Isle, Colvend Post-mediaeval archaeology, History, Architecture, Cartography TDGNHAS Series III, 83 (2009), 91(WARNING large file size: 5.11 MB)
Abstract
This article illuminates the history of a rare survival of a 17th century farmstead, variously known as ‘Glenstocken’, ‘Glenstocking’, and ‘Nether town of Glenstocking’, on the coast near Colvend and describes a project to consolidate the structure. The scheme was implemented by the National Scenic Area (NSA) project on behalf of the partners (Scottish Natural Heritage, Dumfries and Galloway Council and the East Stewartry Coast NSA Advisory Group). |
3083-6A Note on the Dating of Barhobble Chapel Bones and the Historical Context of their Deposition TDGNHAS Series III, 83 (2009), 51(WARNING large file size: 5.11 MB) |
3083-5Rosnat, Whithorn and Cornwall TDGNHAS Series III, 83 (2009), 43(WARNING large file size: 5.11 MB)
Abstract
For nearly four hundred years, historians have been perplexed by the location of ‘Rosnat’, a British monastery and house of studies mentioned in the lives of various Irish saints. It was long taken as Whithorn in Galloway, and this is still argued, as we shall see. However, what follows discusses the problem and then (on the basis of new evidence) suggests that the place was Old Kea in Cornwall, on a tidal creek between Truro and Falmouth. If so, it allows us to identify (somewhat unexpectedly) a home of Celtic learning and spirituality that for centuries enjoyed international fame, was the intellectual centre of Cornish or south-western Christianity in the sixth century, and has implications for our understanding of religion in early Scotland, as elsewhere in Britain and Ireland. The present paper may here seem ungracious in trying to show that a home of early learning was not at Whithorn. But, being published in Dumfries and Galloway, it perhaps suggests that, if there was not much learning there in the sixth century, there is a great deal in the twenty-first. |
3038-6The Border Grahams, their Origin and Distribution Genealogy, Recent, Mediaeval, Recent (Social), History TDGNHAS Series III, 38 (1959-60), 85(WARNING very large file size: 44.37 MB) |
3082-33The History of Cally Designed Landscape Proceedings, Recent, Recent (Social), Recent (Literature & Art), History, Agriculture TDGNHAS Series III, 82 (2008), 160(2.63 MB)
Abstract
A presentation which revealed how the Murray family developed their parks and pleasure grounds at Cally, Gatehouse of Fleet. Although the designed landscape is now largely hidden by forestry planting many historical features are still recognisable and hel |
3082-32The Birtwhistles of Galloway and North Yorkshire: Drovers, Industrialists, Poets and Spies Proceedings, Recent, Recent (Social), History TDGNHAS Series III, 82 (2008), 160(2.63 MB)
Abstract
Lecture in Kirkcudbright Town Hall The speaker showed how records from some dozen English and Scottish archives had enabled a picture to be built of the lives of three generations of the Birtwhistle family, possibly the greatest drovers and graziers of th |
3082-24Union of the Parliaments 1707-2007 TDGNHAS Series III, 82 (2008), 156(2.63 MB)
Abstract
Since the 1960s the historiography of the Union has been dominated by those historians who believe it was achieved by means of corruption, English threats and the venality of Scots MPs, and on the other hand, those who have concentrated on Scotland’s de |
3082-22Favourites from the Stewartry Museum Proceedings, Museums, History, Recent (Literature & Art), Recent (Social) TDGNHAS Series III, 82 (2008), 156(2.63 MB)
Abstract
In an illustrated lecture, the retiring President, David Devereux, Museums Curator for the Stewartry in Dumfries and Galloway Museums Service, presented a wide variety of archaeological and local historical artefacts, fine and decorative art, photographs, |
3082-21Francis John Stewart, LLB, WS Obituary, History, Parish History, Recent, Recent (Social) TDGNHAS Series III, 82 (2008), 153(2.63 MB)
Abstract
Obituary of Frank Stewart a Life Member of the Society - he contributed a numner of articles to the Transactions on the history of the New Abbey area. |
3082-20Duncan Adamson, MA 1936-2007 Obituary, History, Recent (Social), Recent TDGNHAS Series III, 82 (2008), 152(2.63 MB)
Abstract
Obituary of Duncan Adamson a former President of the Society - he contributed a significant number of articles to the Transactions on various aspects of the history of the Dumfries and Galloway area. He acted as historian to the Anne Hill Committee. |
3082-19We Will Remember Them: Kirkcudbright's Sons (1939-1945) by Ian Devlin Review, Recent, Recent (Social), History, Parish History TDGNHAS Series III, 82 (2008), 150(2.63 MB)
Abstract
A review article |
3082-18Kirkcudbright Shipping 1300-2005 by David R Collin Review, Mediaeval, Recent, Recent (Social), History, Parish History TDGNHAS Series III, 82 (2008), 150(2.63 MB)
Abstract
A review article |
3082-9The Development of Cally Designed Landscape Geography, Agriculture, Botany, Recent, Recent (Social), Recent (Literature & Art), History, Genealogy TDGNHAS Series III, 82 (2008), 95(2.63 MB)
Abstract
This report has arisen from the production of a management plan for Cally designed landscape for the Gatehouse Development Initiative in 2007. That plan is a practical tool to inform management and maintenance of the landscape and interpretation and enjoy |
3082-8The Statistical Accounts Recent, Recent (Social), History, Antiquarian TDGNHAS Series III, 82 (2008), 83(2.63 MB)
Abstract
This article explores the distinctive features of the Accounts for the shires of Dumfries, Kirkcudbright and Wigtown and the changes revealed in the lives of the people and their environments between the First and Second and between the Second and Third A |
3081-27Action at Sea Proceedings, Recent (Social), History TDGNHAS Series III, 81 (2007), 139(2.95 MB)
Abstract
Detailed lecture into sailing and navigation within the Solway. |
3081-23Hannahfield and the War Department Connection Proceedings, Recent, Recent (Social), History TDGNHAS Series III, 81 (2007), 138(2.95 MB)
Abstract
An illustrated talk on the Dumfries Hannahfield estate c.1829-1928 was given by a local military enthusiast who, having discovered by chance two War Department Boundary Stones near the Kingholm completed some months of on site investigations and research |
3081-14The 1745 Rebellion and the Southern Scottish Lowlands by A E MacRobert (A Review) Review, Recent, Recent (Social), History TDGNHAS Series III, 81 (2007), 125(2.95 MB)
Abstract
Review article |
3081-11E A Hornel and Kirkcudbright Recent, Recent (Social), Recent (Literature & Art), History, Parish History, Genealogy TDGNHAS Series III, 81 (2007), 115(2.95 MB)
Abstract
This paper is based on the script of a lecture entitled ‘E A Hornel Citizen of Kirkcudbright’ presented by the author as a contribution to a study day arranged by the National Trust for Scotland, which took place in Kirkcudbright, on May 13 2006. |
3081-9The Ordeal of Patrick McMaster: A Galloway Merchant in the American Revolution Recent, Recent (Social), Genealogy, History TDGNHAS Series III, 81 (2007), 99(2.95 MB)
Abstract
Patrick McMaster was born on March 19, 1741, at Currochtrie in Kirkmaiden parish. This article describes the various vissisitudes that befell him while in business in Colonial Boston at the time of the American War of Independence. The article aims to con |
3080-28The Slaying of the Red Comyn, Dumfries 10th February, 1306 Mediaeval, History, Proceedings TDGNHAS Series III, 80 (2006), 179(3.8 MB)
Abstract
Lecture to the Society, 3rd February, 2006. Mention only. |
3080-27The History of the Gardens of Dumfries and Galloway Botany, History, Agriculture, Meteorology, Recent, Recent (Social), Proceedings TDGNHAS Series III, 80 (2006), 179(3.8 MB)
Abstract
Lecture to the Society, 20th January, 2006. This talk related that Dumfries and Galloway has some of the finest gardens in the country which reflect the climate, topography and history of the area. There is a range of gardens that are right on the sea goi |
3080-24James Clerk Maxwell TDGNHAS Series III, 80 (2006), 178(3.8 MB)
Abstract
Summary of a lecture given to the Society on 7th October, 2005. Scotland’s renowned Physicist and greatest Countryman, whose home was in Parton Parish, was born in Edinburgh. James Clerk Maxwell is well known to the scientific world but, shamefully, is |
3080-23Glenkens Schools Proceedings, Recent, Recent (Social), History TDGNHAS Series III, 80 (2006), 178(3.8 MB)
Abstract
Summary of a lecture given to the Society, on 18th November, 2005. |
3080-18The Brus Family in England and Scotland 1100-1295 by Ruth M Blakely. A Review TDGNHAS Series III, 80 (2006), 174(3.8 MB)
Abstract
Ruth Blakely’s magisterial study of the rise of the Brus family, from its Norman roots, through its acquisition of land in both Scotland and England throughout the 12th and 13th centuries, defines the power base from which its most famous descendant, Robe |
3080-17We Will Remember Them - Kirkcudbright's Sons 1914-18 by Ian Devlin. A Review Review, Recent, Recent (Social), Recent (Literature & Art), History, Parish History TDGNHAS Series III, 80 (2006), 173(3.8 MB)
Abstract
Review of Ian Devlin's booklet 'We Will Remember Them - Kirkcudbright's Sons 1914-18' produced by the Stewartry Museum. |
3080-14The 'Classified Summary' of the Minutes of the Road Trustees of the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright Recent, Industrial Archaeology, History TDGNHAS Series III, 80 (2006), 168(3.8 MB)
Abstract
The purpose of this addendum is to make it known that copies of the above summary have been deposited for reference in the Ewart Library and the Archive Centre, Dumfries and the Stewartry Museum. It may be used to locate references to roads, bridges and |
3080-13A Microfilm Miscellany Recent, Recent (Social), History, Parish History, Antiquarian TDGNHAS Series III, 80 (2006), 165(3.8 MB)
Abstract
A seclection of notes on Torthorwald Kirk Session, 1696-1882; the Baronie of Cluden papers, 1712-31 and Dumfries Burgh Treasurer's Accounts for 1708-10. The notes and observations were made during the course of the transciption of these records held on mi |
3080-12Newton Stewart: A 1939 Account of the Town and District Recent, Recent (Social), Industrial Archaeology, History, Agriculture TDGNHAS Series III, 80 (2006), 157(3.8 MB)
Abstract
During the course of a Field Study Meeting in Galloway, centred on Newton Stewart, the Institute of Sociology heard a lecture on 9th August, 1939. The talk had been prepared by Alexander S Morton but to his incapacity because of illness the talk was read |