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The Canoe Boys

Page 24

by Alastair Dunnett


  page 24

  Lucy Ashton: Clyde built in 1888, the paddle steamer would remain in service until the end of the 1940s.

  Chapter 4

  page 28

  John L Kinloch: the old campaigner was soon to become editor of the nationalist Scots Independent, drawing to Kilcreggan a new generation of young visitors (the Renfrew writer Iain Hamilton describes his own encounter with Kinloch in Scotland the Brave, Michael Joseph, 1957).

  Barra land raids: the first Highland Land League led the bitter struggle which won crofters security of tenure in the wake of the Clearances with the 1885 Crofters’ Act. The organisation’s revival in the early 20th century followed the tradition of ‘land raids’ (high-profile occupations of landowners’ property). Both groups shared interests with the growing socialist movement, thrived on public protest and campaigned for parliament – which is to say, they were among the main reasons the ‘Highland problem’ was a matter for public consideration at all. The latter League’s first secretary was AMD’s future mentor Tom Johnston.

  page 30

  wen: growth on the body

  Highland Mary: Mary Campbell and her untimely death in 1786 inspired Robert Burns to at least two songs and a famous poem of love and loss. Erected on Castle Hill on the centenary of Burns’ death, her statue overlooks Dunoon’s Victorian pier – one of the busiest destinations for the Glasgow crowds heading ‘doon the watter’ on holiday.

  pannikin: tin pan

  Orphan Homes of Scotland: from the 1870s and for more than a hundred years William Quarrier’s philanthropic project saved tens of thousands of children from destitution. Up to 1936 many of them were emigrated to Canada for a new start and ‘a life … of usefulness and honour.’

  breeks: trousers

  page 32

  pease: pea meal

  ‘took the bus to Dunoon’: only when they saw the newspapers here did the canoeists realise the previous day’s weather had been bad enough to force the cancellation of a full-scale regatta on the Clyde.

  Maryhill: a burgh in the north of Glasgow

  page 34

  gurly: blustery and threatening

  page 36

  TT riders: celebrating its centenary in 2007, the Isle of Man Tourist Trophy is among the world’s great motorcycle races.

  three-quarter line: the standard formation of backs in rugby

  page 37

  pech: gasp for breath

  Chapter 5

  page 39

  wale: abundance

  steep-to rocks: a near-perpendicular shore

  fathom: two yards

  page 41

  ganzies: thick Guernsey-style jumpers

  page 43

  cuddies: young saithe (coley or pollack)

  John Splendid: predating Para Handy by some years, Inveraray-born Neil Munro’s first novel follows the sack of Inveraray and the devastation of Argyll by Montrose in 1645, making satirical comment on the clansmen’s love of butchery. Its conclusion is dark; having observed his chief’s timid attempts to instigate more peaceful ways, the swaggering adventurer for whom the book is named chooses the bloody life of the mercenary. In 1944 the shores of Loch Fyne were the training ground for over half-a-million troops in preparation for the D-Day landings.

  ‘a legend of my childhood’: born in 1891, Duncan Campbell MacTavish was related to AMD through his mother’s tight-knit Loch Fyneside family. After surviving the stigma of Conscientious Objector status during the 1914–18 war, he rose through the ranks in the Argyll county offices, finding there a rich source of historical material as well as scope for administrative reform. In the year of the canoe boys’ visit he had edited and introduced a new edition of the Psalms in Gaelic. His next book (The Commons of Argyll, 1935) centred on a list of the rebels recruited by the Earl of Argyll to fight Charles II; MacTavish had unearthed the 1685 document among the records of Inveraray Sheriff Court. He contributed to the Oban Times (collected as Inveraray Papers, 1939) but did not live to see the publication of the second volume of his reframing of the 17th-century Presbyterian administration of the Highlands (Minutes of the Synod of Argyll 1639–1651 and 1652–1661), which was prefaced by a quotation from Neil Munro: …of a country that is dear to us in every rock and valley, of a people we know whose blood is ours. He died of a stroke in Castleton cottage in 1943.

  page 44

  ‘foreseeing gift which she and many of her people possess’: AMD’s Gaelic-speaking mother was tight-lipped about her own glimpses of the supernatural, but her mother had been known to envisage funerals for the not-yet-dead and other grim premonitions.

  page 49

  lochan: small loch

  ‘There was not a barrow in the place, or at least, not one which would come out on Sunday…’: the Sabbatarianism of rigidly Presbyterian parts of the Highlands and particularly the islands has resulted in phenomena like the Sunday chaining of children’s swings. In 2006 the introduction of the first Sunday ferry service to Harris was opposed by the majority of the island’s population.

  page 51

  Dunadd: for several hundred years the distinctive rocky outcrop here was the capital of the kingdom of the Scots (until the growing Kingdom of Alba moved to Scone under King Kenneth MacAlpin in the mid-ninth century).

  Islandadd: next to the bridge which spans the river Add the canal is crossed by a cast-iron swing bridge which has to be cranked open by hand.

  Bellanoch Bay: almost entirely sheltered from the open Atlantic beyond, the bay is an unusually tranquil lagoon.

  Corryvreckan: an infamous and deadly tidal cauldron between the islands of Jura and Scarba – the largest whirlpool in Europe – whose roar in spate can be heard as far as ten miles away. It was used by AMD’s great friend Michael Powell as the setting for the climax of his film I Know Where I’m Going (1945).

  Chapter 6

  page 54

  jauping: rippling, quivering

  popple: bubbling liquid, like boiling water

  page 57

  coulter: blade

  Chapter 7

  page 65

  Alexander II: the Scottish king died of a fever in Kerrera in 1249 while on his way to dissuade the Western Isles from their traditional loyalty to Norway.

  Short Sunderland: during the WW II the depth charge-equipped Sunderland flying boat (manufactured by Short Brothers) was a key weapon in the Battle of the Atlantic, sinking many of the German U-boats which were disrupting vital supply convoys from North America.

  page 68

  tashed: beaten up bens: mountains

  page 70

  plowtering: dabbling, splashing aimlessly with the hands

  blashing: wet battering

  bannock: scone of oatmeal or flour, traditionally baked on a griddle

  William Black: the Glasgow-born journalist’s gothic romances were immensely popular (and critically preferred to Anthony Trollope’s) though he is now little remembered. The fancifully castellated 30-foot tower of the Duart Point light was built in 1900, two years after his death, and is still operational today.

  page 71

  skelped: smacked

  Chapter 8

  page 73

  John MacGregor: the influential A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe (1866) has been frequently reprinted and is available online: in walking you are bounded by every sea and river, and in a common sailing-boat you are bounded by every shallow and shore; whereas … a canoe [can] be paddled or sailed, or hauled, or carried over land or water. Robert Louis Stevenson was among the many who fell under the spell, describing his own Rob Roy trip in An Inland Voyage (1878). Twenty-five years later, John Marshall had made his first canoe trips in a Rob Roy before developing his own design.

  Slocum: Nova Scotia-born Joshua Slocum was a shipwright and adventurer who made the first solo voyage round the world in the last years of the 19th century. His Sailing Alone Around the World (1899) aroused strong feelings; Arthur Ransome wrote ‘boys who do not like this book should be drowned at once�
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  Uffa Fox: ‘The King of the planing hull’ (1898–1972) designed many race-winning sailing dinghies and canoes in his native Isle of Wight, often testing them on intrepid voyages. Among his more colourful inventions was an ‘airborne lifeboat’ which saved the lives of many wartime airmen.

  page 75

  Shorter Catechism: from Question 1 (What is the chief end of man?) to Question 107 (What doth the conclusion of the Lord’s Prayer teach us?) the Westminster Shorter Catechism of 1647 has long been a source of doctrine for Presbyterian churches (including the Church of Scotland, where alphabet and multiplication tables were appended to the back of the volume as an aid to education of a more mundane kind).

  page 76

  Lord Kelvin:William Thomson (1824–1907) came up with many practical innovations (among them instruments for accurately measuring and predicting the tides) while struggling towards a unifying theory of physics as Professor of Natural Philosophy at Glasgow University. The Kelvin scale of absolute temperature is named after him.

  page 77

  ‘with a box kite…’: 75 years later the boom in kite-surfing gave the notion new impetus: On Kalama’s maiden voyage the canoe kite combo went off without a hitch. ‘We got going pretty fast, around 20 knots, going downwind,’ he says. ‘Going over waves we’d get some air, with the nose up eight or 10 feet.’ (‘Paddlers Take to the Sky’, Paddler Magazine Nov/Dec 2000)

  page 80

  dwam: daze

  wersh: insipid

  fushionless: lacking fibre

  page 82

  kent: familiar

  Chapter 9

  page 83

  kelpie: water spirit in the form of a horse

  trig: smart

  Mrs McFlannel: some 20 years after the canoe trip, comedic soap opera The McFlannels would become one of the most popular shows on the ‘wireless’ (also among the cast was comic Rikki Fulton as Reverend McCrepe, at the start of a lifetime of characterising funny ministers). Meg Buchanan can be seen in the Scottish films The Maggie and Laxdale Hall.

  page 85

  navvymaster: labourers’ gang-master

  page 86

  ‘minister of Anstruther’: James Melville (1535–1617) also recorded the preaching of John Knox and one of the first instances of golf at St Andrews.

  silly: pitiable

  trauchled: bedraggled

  barque: three-masted ship

  fluke: the triangular blade at the end of the anchor’s arms

  The Spanish galleon in Tobermory Bay inspired Robert Louis Stevenson’s story The Merry Men, and continues to be a subject of (often contradictory) legend.

  page 87

  The Lord of the Isles: ‘a wild tale of Albyn’s warrior day’, the narrative poem (1815) follows Robert Bruce’s progress from Hebridean fugitive to victor at the battle of Bannockburn. The Norse/Gaelic Lords of the Isles were at one time among the most powerful rulers in Britain, controlling the islands and much of the western coast of Scotland (as well as Bruce’s reputed retreat on Rathlin island in Antrim) with fleets of galleys.

  page 89

  run-rig: the corrugated furrow-and-ridge method of cultivation which was prevalent in the Highlands before the Clearances

  the ‘Forty-Five’: the second Jacobite Rising

  deaving: deafening

  page 90

  ‘the seamen who took him on his Western Isles trip’: prior to writing The Lord of the Isles, Scott had accepted an invitation to join the Commissioners for the Northern Lighthouse Service on a voyage of inspection around the Scottish coast.

  furze: gorse, burned in winter to improve the ground for grazing and game

  ‘a frieze of onlookers’: the Daily Express reported one old woman’s amazement – ‘Co tha sin Eskimos? [Who are these Eskimos?]’

  ‘The Canoe Boys! … It’s the Canoe Boys!’: 60 years later, revisiting the island, Seumas would overhear one local in a Tobermory shop telling another: ‘And one of the Canoe Boys is on Calve!’

  page 92

  ‘hydroelectric scheme’: now administered by Scottish and Southern Energy and refurbished in 2003, the Tobermory turbines are still turning.

  Chapter 10

  page 97

  wont: custom

  page 100

  glamoured to: casting a spell over

  page 102

  midden: dunghill the

  back end: the tail of the season

  stooking: setting up to dry in stooks, or bundles

  essay: try-out

  drills: the shallow furrows in which the potatoes are planted

  coal hawkers: peddlers of coal from a cart

  tattie-howking: potato picking

  steadings: farm outbuildings

  ‘it was not a joke which would have been made’: in Lochaber, homeland of the Cameron clan, Locheil – though in one sense simply a geographical epithet – would be considered the chief’s title alone.

  paling stob: fence post

  guising: trick-or-treating

  page 104

  the Minch: the stormy 15 to 45-mile wide strait between the Inner and Outer Hebrides

  haycock: heap of hay ready for carting

  page 105

  Fingalian: according to myth the cathedral-like vault of Fingal’s Cave on the Inner Hebridean isle of Staffa, like the steps of the Giant’s Causeway a few miles away across the Irish Sea, are evidence of the legendary warrior king’s stature.

  thwarts: the crosspieces which form the rowers’ seats

  horn gramophone: wind-up record player with a cone to amplify the sound

  page 106

  job price: discount rate

  page 107

  punctilio: attention to formal detail

  page 109

  false-face: mask

  dooking: ducking face-first in a bowl of water

  page 110

  dowager: elderly upper-crust widow

  kist: chest parlour: living room

  page 111

  favours: small gifts

  displenish: sell off (as in the effects of a farm)

  Chapter 11

  page 113

  furth: beyond home

  tinkers: itinerant pedlar people, often of gypsy or dispossessed Highland stock

  page 114

  ‘a Scottish monarch’: James IV occupied Mingary in 1493 and 1495 during his campaign to subdue the MacDonald Lords of the Isles.

  breenge: rushing drive

  page 116

  the ben end: the inner part

  ‘some cables’ length’: a cable measures 200 yards.

  burn: stream

  lowe: flicker

  ingle: the fire on the hearth

  page 117

  demesne: domain, territory

  page 118

  gurnet – grey gurnard, a small coastal fish which inhabits the seabed

  page 119

  skailed: broke up, went their separate ways after school

  page 120

  sheep-fank: dry-stone enclosure

  page 121

  gant: gape of the mouth for breath

  page 122

  ‘Fleetwood trawler’: large steam trawlers from Fleetwood in Lancashire were once a common sight, fishing for Hake and overnighting in Tobermory harbour.

  page 123

  dyked: walled

  page 124

  ‘the group of four inhabited Small Isles’: much has changed here in the intervening years (see note to Chapter 1 p.137).

  Chapter 12

  page 126

  ‘Rhum’ postmark: the original spelling of the island’s name has since been reclaimed, rejecting the Bullough family’s pseudo-Gaelic insertion of an ‘h’.

  page 128

  stacher: stagger, totter

  page 130

  glebe: cultivated land

  fell: cruel

  ‘blaescones’: blae: bruised, scarred

  page 131

  harbour bar: sea wall

  page 133
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br />   dowered: endowed

  page 137

  gillies: hunting guides

  page 138

  ‘there was nothing else to be done here’: there has been progress in the Small Isles. Rum was bought from Lady Monica Bullough in 1957 by Scottish Natural Heritage, who work hard to supplement the island’s population of around 30 with visitors; there are guided tours of crumbling Kinloch Castle, where once alligators and tropical turtles swam in heated pools. In 1997 Eigg became the subject of one of Scotland’s first and highest-profile community buyouts, and is now owned by the 60 islanders in partnership with the Scottish Wildlife Trust and Highland Council. Still run as one large farm, Muck today offers hotel, bed & breakfast, camping and self-catering accommodation. Canna’s owner John Lorne Campbell gifted his island to the National Trust for Scotland in 1981.

  page 141

  haled: hauled in (as a fishing net)

  Chapter 13

  page 143

  Albyn: Gaelic Scotland

  leal: honest

  Samuel Johnson: A Journey to the Western Isles of Scotland, 1775

  page 144

  ‘to stagger England to the vitals’: London was in panic by the time the Jacobite army (125 miles away at Derby) decided to carry its invasion no further.

  A Hundred Years In The Highlands: Osgood Hanbury Mackenzie (1842–1922) spent his lifetime transforming a treeless rocky promontory into the botanical gardens at Inverewe. His book describes a harsher history, including the earlier struggles of his family and their Wester Ross tenants during the great famine of 1846–48.

  page 145

  plenishing: equipping

  page 146

  doles: handouts

  page 150

  ‘the same period of history’: Lark Rise to Candleford describes life in a poor Oxfordshire village in the late 1800s; Norman Maclean named his reminiscence of contemporaneous Skye and Raasay after Solomon’s biblical interrogation of the claim ‘the former days were better than these.’

  page 152

  ‘facilities are still being freely offered to emigrant recruiting agents from overseas’: an Australian government office on Edinburgh’s Princes Street was offering £10 ‘assisted passage’ to would-be emigrants well into the 1970s; much of the subsidy was paid by the UK Treasury.

  stump the country: tour the country making speeches

 

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