SCOTS Number 39 

The Journal of The Scots Heritage Society 

Published February 2008.

 
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REGULARS

4       Editorial

6       Letters to the Editor

8       SCOTS Q & A. 

42     Painting with Light - Andy Lock - Loch Shiel.

102   SCOTS Book Reviews - Seumas MacLeod  

106   Clans and Societies

108   SCOTS SHOWCASE

            

FEATURES

10 The Underwater World of Glen Cowans

Glen Cowans is one of the world's top underwater photographers.  The son of a Royal Navy submariner, Cowans takes us deep into the world's oceans, a realm of astonishing beauty and vibrant, colourful life.  In Fremantle, Western Australia, he spoke with Angus Urquhart.   

18 A Right Royal Welcome

HRH Prince Charles has agreed to become the official patron of The Gathering 2009, the two days of Highland Games and clan celebrations to be held in Edinburgh in July next year.  Iain Gunn reports. 

20  An Island Life 

The Mackinnon family has been farming on the Isle of Canna since the early eighteenth century.  Donald Cameron spoke with Geraldine Mackinnon, one of only a few women farm managers in Scotland. 

26  Capital of the Mind

In the early eighteenth century, Edinburgh was a filthy backwater town synonymous with poverty and disease.  Yet, by the century's end it had become the marvel of modern Europe, home to some of the finest minds of the day and the scene of breathtaking innovations in architecture, politics, economics, science and the arts.  James Buchan describes Edinburgh before this transformation into a city that changed the world.  

32  Isolation Shepherd  

Iain R Thomson, writer, poet, artist and musician, recalls the rigors and the joys of working as a shepherd in some of Scotland's most spectacular and remote country.  

36  Lennoxlove

Lennoxlove, the Duke of Hamilton's three-storey L-plan tower house in East Lothian is one of the finest country homes in Scotland.  After a chequered career in which it played host to some of the most colourful figures in Scottish history, Lennoxlove has undergone a £3 million restoration, ready for a new life as a luxury retreat.  Heather Ross reports.  

42 James Morrison - New Landscapes

Scotland's most distinguished landscape painter, Dr James Morrison, plunged into a period of profound gloom and despair with the death of his wife Dorothy after 50 years of marriage.  So much so that he doubted he would ever paint again.  At his studio in Angus he tells Bruce Stannard how he fought off depression by capturing his wife's spiritual essence in a stunning landscape depicting the barren mist-shrouded wildness of Assynt.

46  Iron Road

The story of Scotland's railways begins in the eighteenth century when horses pulled coal wagons along rails of wood.  In the Victorian era a national railway network was built, much of it by navvies wielding picks and shovels.  During the Edwardian era steam trains carried everything and everybody from commuters and industrial materials to tourists holidaying in the countryside.  It is a fascinating story and no one knows more about it than the distinguished railway historian P J G Ransom.  At his home in Lochearnhead, Perthshire, John Ransom spoke with Fiona MacGillivray.  

54  My Highland Perthshire

Writer and artist Lavinia Grant observes the wonders of Spring at her home by the shores of Loch Tay in Highland Perthshire. 

60  Scottish Silver

The National Museum of Scotland is staging the biggest ever display of Scottish silver in a special exhibition celebrating the 550th anniversary of hallmarking in Scotland.  In Edinburgh, Catriona Stuart spoke with George Dalgleish, the Museum's Principal Curator of Scottish History. 

66 St Ninian's Cave

Seumas MacLeod takes the ancient pilgrim's trail out through Dumfries and Galloway to explore the sacred sites associated with St Ninian, the son of a converted British chieftain who became the first named Christian of Scottish record.   

70  Commando Country

The Commando Memorial at Spean Bridge in Inverness-shire is one of the most powerful and moving monuments in Scotland.  Three bronze soldiers stand on a bronze plinth with magnificent Highland views south to Ben Nevis and north across the Great Glen to Achnacarry where the commandos trained and had their headquarters during World War II.  The story of their exploits at home and abroad is told in a new book by historian Stuart Allan.  In Edinburgh he spoke with Isla MacDonald.   

82  Dun Coillich

Thanks to the exceptional generosity of an anonymous benefactor, a 1,000 acre conservation zone surrounding Perthshire's mini-mountain, Dun Coillich, has been purchased to help re-create part of the great Caledonian Forest.  Robin Hull reports.    

88  Gentle Giants

Scotland's famous Clydesdales are renowned for their size, weight and strength as well as their placid patient and affectionate temperament.  Now they have another more dubious distinction: Clydesdales are officially listed an endangered by Britain's Rare Breeds Survival Trust.  Heather Ross reports on the struggle to keep the gentle giants alive in their ancestral homeland.

94  Scotland 1907

Valentine and Sons of Dundee were once Scotland's most successful commercial photographers.  In 1907, at the height of the postcard revolution, their photographs showed Scotland in its many guises and were bought with pride and pleasure by Scots and visitors alike.  R J Morris, Professor of Economic and Social History at Edinburgh University, puts their significance into perspective.