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Help ma Bob! A've Lost Ma Grandfaither!
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It was a daft thing to do I suppose. Even a wee bit careless you might say, but it happened, nevertheless.
You know how it is. When you're young and have your relatives all around, you've no particular interest in who went before them. You live in the present and it never occurs to you to ask all those questions you should have until it's too late.
It's only later in life when they've all gone and members of your own generation begin to "topple off the perch" that you realise your own mortality and start looking back to your roots. That's when I realised I had, indeed lost my Grandfather and for that matter my Grandmother too!
You see, my Grandfather on my father's side died in the 1923 long before I was born. My Dad died in 1943 during the year I was born and the two remaining members
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of the McLaren side of the family, an aunt and uncle, died in the late 1950s early 1960s.
I'd always known they were a fairly prominent family in the village, with a sawmill business, employing joiners and other men in a sawmill and the woods in the surrounding area.
Their base was the house known as Viewfield up the Manse Brae. As the business prospered the house was developed into a 2 storey building with joiners shop, byre and other outhouses together with a sawmill on the east side. That was burnt down about 1914 but they recovered from that and rebuilt it down at the Station where it remains, under other ownership, to this day.
A McLaren gravestone in the old churchyard allows me to trace the family back to 1788 without breaking sweat. What I didn't appreciate until fairly recently was
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that the old gravestone didn't contain my Granny and Grandad's names, nor did any of the others in the graveyard.
So where are they? As yet I don't know but I will find out in time. The lair records for the old churchyard have not survived well and don't help.
What did they look like. I have a photograph of my Grandmother, sent out to Australia about 70 years ago and returned recently but none have survived of Grandad although I did see one when a boy and remember it vaguely.
From here on the detective work started and is continuing.
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1910 - Inauguration of the first piped water supply in Gargunnock, paid for by the minister.
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This photograph was taken in 1910 at the inauguration of the first piped water supply in the village, paid for by the then minister the Rev. Robert Stevenson DD (shown in the small circle).
From it I knew my granny, Robina Deuchar McLaren (nee Mailer) was third from the left in the small group in the rectangular box. Surely on an important occasion such as this my Grandad would be there too, but where?
The mystery looked set to remain a mystery until recently I unearthed an old letter written by Dr Stevenson in the 1940s to the Rev. William Turner in which he identifies the small group on the right of the platform as…….
Mr and Mrs McIntosh (Church organist and wife) - Will McLeod Alec - Jack McLaren -Annie McNeil (over Mrs McIntosh's shoulder
So what does that mean? Was he naming them from front to back? Mr and Mrs McIntosh first then the three behind, "Will McLeod Alec - Jack McLaren - Annie McNeil."
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So which one is John (Jack) McLaren?
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So who is Alec? Why does the name appear after Will McLeod and with no hyphen between? Why 6 names when there are 5 in the group? No matter, I had already decided that the figure with the bowler hat set at a jaunty angle was similar to that half remembered photograph from years ago. That was my grandfather John (Jack) McLaren at last. (I hope!)
But that's not all. McLaren senior was born in 1860. In the 1881 census return he is shown as a 21 year old joiner living in the family home, Owlet Hall, locally nicknamed Houlet Ha' and now known as Viewfield, up the Manse Brae.
His relationship to the head of the household is one of nephew to uncle but none of the surviving McLaren brothers and sisters is married and his birthplace is shown as England! Hmm, do I detect a family skeleton in the cupboard here somewhere? Watch this space for further details.
_____________________________
And here are further details. A few days after writing the above I tried the Mormon Family History Database on the Internet (www.familysearch.org) Don't ask me why they should have recorded details of so many non-Mormons in their database, they just do and although it's not perfect or complete it's worth a try.
From that I have determined that apparently the John McLaren in the pictures above had a father also called John who married an Isabella Hepburn on 18th may 1856 in Stirling and they later had their son, John, christened on 3rd Feb 1861 in Tilton, near Leicester, England. That's unusual in itself as normally a fertile, married woman in these days produced children continuously for twenty years or so, hence the big families. So there is no skeleton in the cupboard after all (apart from having a technically English grandfather) but I still need to demonstrate the link through to the tribe of McLarens on the big gravestone in the churchyard.
Although John is shown as the nephew of one of the brothers thereupon, there is no sign of his father, John, on it. The Mormon database, however has thrown up an additional child of the family called Alexander so there might yet be a John to be discovered. There's also an Australian connection somewhere still to be defined.
Anybody beside themselves with excitement over all this yet? Watch this space for yet more details.
Still with me? Then read on One piece of information I did glean very quickly, though was my grandfathers date of death. Armed with that a quick visit to the Registrar in Stirling for an examination of his death certificate revealed that my great-grandfather was in fact Alexander McLaren. So much for the Mormon database?
So are the mists of time beginning to clear just a little? Was Alexander the only male child of the original family to marry and move away (perhaps to England for a time and does he not appear on the gravestone because he was the one who erected it in memory of the family?
I remember, many years ago, seeing a large black metal box in my lawyers office with the McLaren name on it. I was sure that it contained old documents which might now be of interest or of use in my quest for family history.
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So I contacted my lawyer who searched the archives and sure enough produced the very old, very dusty box I remambered. I took it home, dusted it carefully, opened it and there, before my eyes, a treasure-trove of old title deeds, wills, business documents etc. About 60 of them, most are hand-written in legal language, the earliest one on semi-transluscent vellum partly Scots English, partly Latin and dated 1726. It'll take years to go through them properly.
There's obviously much more mileage in this one yet.
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Left - The dusty box with the 60 or so documents waiting to be examined in detail.
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Stop Press - The latest
John More, farmer at the Beild farm stopped me one day and gave me a telephone number to ring to discover something interesting. It turned out to be a Hugh Ramsay who was researching the history of an old horse drawn cart he had bought for renovation. The enamel name-plate on it gives the makers' name as John McLaren, Sawmiller, Gargunnock and he reckons it was built about the same time as the above photograph was taken.
We're going to meet soon and I shall take lots of photographs of the cart. Even better is the fact that Hugh knows of another McLaren cart owned by a collector at South Queensferry! Is there no end to my good fortune?
And more
April 2001 - Following a meeting with Hugh and inspection of the his cart I followed the trail to the other chap who turned out to be a collector-extraordinaire with about 14 carts including 2 McLarens, all restored to the highest possible standards (8 coats of paint) in a large workshop using nothing but the best materials and techniques. And this collector knows of others which have been sold in Ayrshire during the past year or two! More details to follow when I have time. (Who am I trying to kid!)
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List of Surnames in Gargunnock Churchyard Inscriptions
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Most people end up in a graveyard eventually….when looking for ancestors that is!
The following is an alphabetical list of names appearing on inscriptions in all of the gravestones in the old Gargunnock Churchyard, adjacent to the church. Updated April 2004. There is also a "new" (40 years old) graveyard at a lower level off to the left, behind the Rest The number after the name is one given to each headstone. Some of the headstones have now toppled over and are unreadable. I have a full list of the actual inscriptions and locations so contact me if you want to know more.
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Abercrombie 85 Adie 135 Allen 184 Allison 27 Anderson 106, 146 Atkinson 183
Bain 62, 63, 65, 66, 92 Barr 26, 99 Baxter 145 Beck 149 Bell 161 Bernard 127 Bevis 104 Birell 42, 142 Bonthrone 169 Bowie 114 Broun 221 Brown 31, 117, 118, 196, 200 Bryce 129 Buchanan 7, 176 Burns 116
Cairney 168 Cameron 85 Campbell 174 Carrick 87 Carson 159 Cassels 143 Chisholm 61, 115 Christie 50 Christison 206 Chrystal 100, 101 Connel 1 Connel-Rowan 1, 2 Coutts 179 Cowan 185 Cowbrough 39, 90, 102, 118 Craik 121 Crawford 117 Cunningham 105 Cunninghame 201
Dalrymple 1 Davidson 102 Dewar 197 Dodds 180 Doig 178 Dow 69 Downie 154 Dropper 59 Duncan 210 Dunlop 115, 116, 172,
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176
Eadie 164 Elder 88, 113 Evitts 67
Fairlie 54 Ferguson 65, 76, 124, 151, 188 Findlay 67 Fleming 75 Forrester 62, 64, 153 Forsythe 79, 200 Fraser 199 Fulton 74
Gibson 39 Glason 36 Goreham 60 Gourlay 122 Graham 55, 86 Gray 128, 156, 197, 198 Grey 191, 192
Hamilton 5 Hardie 157 Harvey 177 Hodgeson 127 Hunwicks 217
Inglis 163, 164
Jack 88 Jamieson 109, 208 Jenkins 132, 192 Johnson 25, 201
Karighan 131 Kay 146, 197, 198 Keir 196 Kelly 135 Kennedy 61, 121, 151 Kerr 27, 56
Lang 38, 107, 108, 164 Laurie 204 Law 28 Lawson 87 Leckie 53, 73, 209 Liddel 130 Loch 187 Louder 21
Mackieson 116, 209, 225
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Mailer 52, 96, 129, 133 Marshall 25, 68 Martin 119 Matson 116, 225 Maxton 164, 216 McArthur 47, 209 McCallum 43, 168, 169, 220 McCulloch 163 MCEwan 46 McFarlane 89, 119, 126, 128, 198 McGlashan 192 McGowan 141, 148, 159 McGregor 29, 77 McIntyre 75 McLaren 101, 132, 133, 152, 188 McLeary 183 McLeish 216 McLennan 152 McNab 221 McNair 137, 177, 178, 179 McNaughton 131, 214 MacNie 118, 143 McPhee 112 McQueen 54 Menzies 28 Millar 77, 78, 137 Mitchell 14, 15, 26, 46, 223 Moir 39 Moon 60 More 665, 89 Morrison 178 Mortimer 81 Murdoch 36, 37, 38, 87, 101, 136, 146, 153, 160, 161 Murphy 148
Nelson 29 Nimmo 33
Ogelbe 136 Ogilvie 202
Parlan 192, 193 Parlane 191 Paterson 14, 56, 57, 58, 113, 197 Patterson 55, 67, 103, 104, 105, 194
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Penman 28 Philp 89 Prentice 210
Ramsay 106 Ready 223 Reid 217 Reilly 47, 199 Richardson 69 Ritehardson 160 Robb 91 Robertson 31, 68, 80, 208 Ronald 108 Rorie 23 Rowan 1 Russel 157
Saffrey 9 Sands 107, 130 Sharp 98 Shaw 141 Shirray 79 Silver 184 Simpson 40 Sinclair 145 Sorley 112 Stark 100 Stevenson 176, 180 Stewart 58, 59, 94, 172 Stirling 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 77, 111 Strachan 133, 174 Strang 40, 220
Todd 15 Travis 217 Turnbull 63, 105, 142, 147, 195 Turner 98, 99
Walker 208 Ward 187 Warden 205 Watson 87, 134, 136, 202 Watt 76 Wilson 165 Wingate 103, 147 Wingzet 122 Wright 193
Yuill 145
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