The West End of Earlston, Haughhead and Craigsford, Thomas Weatherly, stationer & printer, John Gray, photographer, Dr. Robert Riddell and the well known Whale Family - they all feature in this the second of two posts on the memories of the Rev. William Crockett (1866-1945).
Part One of Rev. Crockett's memories you will find HERE.
Part One of Rev. Crockett's memories you will find HERE.
William
Shillinglaw Crockett was born in Earlston in 1866. On leaving school, he worked as
an apprentice chemist in the village, before training in Edinburgh for
the Church. He spent most of his ministry in Tweedsmuir, Peeblesshire
and was a prolific writer of many publications on Borders life and
literature.
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THE WEST TOUN END
"This is the most ancient part of Earlston, for long it remained as a little village of its own - a community in itself. Its weavers' cottages, its crofts, its gardens of beauty, were just an ideal old fashioned hamlet in days gone by. Now of course, everything is changed.
Who ever heard today of "The Acre Barn" , that so popular rendezvous for dances, kirns and penny-weddings, at which a plate was passed around to pay expenses with a gift for the bride.
One place I remember well was Mag Forrest's tramps' howff, scene of many a grim fight or drunken brawl.
In a house behind the White Swan (once the Beehive) pend, Thomas Bayley, who had lost a leg in the *Peninsular Campaigns, taught his small "side school", one of many in Earlston then. And in it Robert Carter of New York, founder of of the most famous bookshop in America, began life as a teacher."
West End, c. early 1900's
HAUGHHEAD CORNMILL "functioned as such from a remote period .....for generations it was occupied by the Shields, a notable family in the district of whom came Alexander (born 1661) and Michael, both valiant heroes of the *Covenant.....Both brothers joined the *Second Darien Expedition in 1699 and they never again saw Leaderside, perishing amidst the hardships of that ill-fated adventure."
The site of Haughhead Mill, June 2018
CRAIGSFORD was a sort of village in itself in those distant days,with a row of cottages, beginning with that in which James Blaikie lived.
"A ravine of the burn hard by - the Clattering Ford, was used by the body snatchers, of Burke and Hare time, for concealment of newly buried corpses taken from the kirkyard. Here it is said that the body of Nance Kerss lay before it came into the hands of the notorious Dr. Knox. When the alarm was raised, David Walker, the parish schoolmaster and another Earlstonian were sent to identify the body at the Surgeon's Hall, Edinburgh, "Eh, Nance, Nance", said the latter, "Ye never thocht ye wad ever be in Edinburgh".
THOMAS WEATHERLY
"A printer from Berwick, he migrated to the west of the shire (about 70 years ago) and had his stationer's and bookseller's shop on the High Street.
Weatherly's enterprise took him into the publishing and newspaper field, with an eight page weekly "The Border Beacon", followed by a second, having the rather high sounding title "The South of Scotland Live Stock Journal". I fancy that very few, if any copies, have survived, apart from those I have myself kept in file those many years. As Weatherly discovered, Earlston was scarcely the place for a successful venture into the journalistic sphere
In
the 1901 census, John P. Weatherly was described as a 40 years old
Postmaster of 73 High Street, living with his wife, mother-in-law and
children Edward, Ellen and Margaret. The Trade Directory two years
later adds to his role that of bookseller, stationer, and printer.
JOHN GRAY, PHOTOGRAPHER
"A printer and photographer, he was the first to popularise this art in Earlston, especially with his carte de visite portraits. which had wide vogue at that time."
This
photograph came into the Auld Earlston collection and was identified on the reverse as David Swanston, Post Runner,
here adverting the business of James Gray, photographer in the Square.
It is one of the oldest photographs in the group's collection, as David died in 1874.
DR. ROBERT RIDDELL
"Here was a man skilled in diagnosis, a very capable servant, responsive to every phase of human distress. Even if (because of his slightly humped back),they spoke of him as "Humpy" Riddell, it was never with any feeling of disrespect.The doctor was endowed with a big brain; poor people said he had a heart of gold. He showed his queer habits on occasions - a street fight fascinated him for instance. Dr Riddell believed in prayer and once told the minister "I always pray before I start an operation."
THE WHALE FAMILY
"Two of Andrew Whale's sons cut notable figures in active manhood - Lancelot, Rector of the Grammar School in Kelso, where Sir Walter Scott was his most eminent pupil; and Thomas, originator of an enterprise which gave to his native town, a prime distinction in the realm of commerce - the gingham industry.
It is safe to say that no article of wearing apparel was so fashionable in its time. Over 140 hand looms (mostly in private houses) in Earlston and the surrounding area wer engaged in the manufacture of these finely woven and cotton fabrics. They were worn by all classes and in every quarter.
Much of the prosperity of the trade - and indeed its high watermark - indeed, came after Whale's day, when his two daughters - Marion and Christian succeeded to the business, extending clientele throughout many parts of England - and even exporting their wares across the Atlantic.
Rhymer's Lands (some nine and a half acres) was acquired by those two enterprising women, Christian and Marion Whale, of gingham celebrity. by purchase from Dr. Francis Home of Cowdenknowes. In 1842 they rebuilt the mill on its present site, the old structure having been destroyed by fire the previous year."
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EXPLANATORY NOTES
* Peninsular Campaigns
The Peninsular War (1807–1814) was a military conflict between Napoleon's empire (as well as the allied powers of the Spanish Empire), the United Kingdom and Portugal, for control of the Iberian Peninsula during the Napoleonic Wars.
*The Darien Scheme was Scotland's ambitious attempt to become a world trading nation by establishing a colony called "Caledonia" on the isthmus of Panama on the Gulf of Darien in the late 1690s. Thousands of ordinary Scots invested money in the expedition, to the tune of approximately £500,000. Five ships sailed from Leith in July 1698 with 1,200 people on board.
But the project was beset by poor planning and provisioning, divided leadership and finally disease. Seven months after arriving, 400 Scots were dead. More ships set sail from Leith in November 1699 loaded with a further 1,300 pioneers,unaware of the fate of the earlier settlers. The colony was finally abandoned in 1700 after a siege by Spanish forces,
Only one ship returned out of the total of sixteen that had originally sailed. With the loss of the £500,000 investment, the Scottish economy was almost bankrupted.
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SOURCES:
- The Rhymer's Town: Some Notes on Earlston's Past, by Dr. W.S.Crockett. In "The Southern Annual: 1937.
- The Rhymer's Town: More Notes on Earlston's Past, by Dr. W. S. Crockett. In "The Southern Annual:1941.
- The Rhymer's Town: Further Notes on Earlston's Past, by Dr. W. S. Crockett. In "The Southern Annual:1942.
- The Rev. W. S. Crockett: Preacher and Litterateur (interview and biographical notes), by John North. In "Border Magazine" July 1905.
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Do you have memories of growing up in Earlston or
know stories passed down by your parents or grandparents.
know stories passed down by your parents or grandparents.
If so, we would like to hear from you.
E-mail: auldearlston@aol.com