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Title Celebrity Visit
Image Celebrity Visit © Donnie Morrison
Description Celebrity Chef Ross Burden pays a visit to Habost Polytunnels
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HISTORYCOMMUNITYSPORTSTOURIST INFONEWS

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Home > History
History
Brian Wilson Gives 4th Angus Macleod Memorial Lecture

Pairc School in Gravir was packed out once again on the evening of Thursday 25 October for the annual Angus Macleod memorial lecture – an event which has really put South Lochs on the historical map of Lewis, attracting people from all over the island and further afield. This year the speaker was journalist and former Government Minister Brian Wilson, who was a friend of Angus Macleod’s and who has with strong Lewis connections. His title was ‘The Future of Crofting – the Case for Crofting Tenure’, a highly appropriate theme given Angus’s key role in revamping the Scottish Crofters Union in the 1980s and current issues under consideration by the Shucksmith Committee of Inquiry into Crofting.

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Brian Wilson

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The Village Prayer House and the Voluntary Gaelic Schools

The village prayer house has long been an established institution in the life of the community in the Scottish Islands and through it lay members take a very active part in the affairs of the Gaelic Church. That came about through the instrumentality of the Edinburgh Gaelic School Society, which had a tremendous impact on the outlook of the people both in the field of religion and education in the 19th Century.

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Driftwood and 'The Park Murder'
 In the 18th and 19th Centuries timber was very scarce in Lewis hence the reason why any useful drift wood that was thrown up  on the shore by the sea, was highly appreciated as well as used for roof timbers.   If however a suitable log came ashore they sawed it up into boards suitable for boatbuilding etc.   The sawing of the logs was done in a saw-pit constructed for that purpose called ‘Sloc-sabhaidh’.    The method of construction was to build two parallel walls about five feet high, a few feet apart open-ended.  The log was placed on timbers over the pit and using a two handed saw   ‘Sabh-mor’  with one man standing above and one below the log they could saw very big logs into thin boards.  These saw-pits were usually near the shore.  There is one in Tolsta Chaolais and there was one in Calbost on Croft No 10 near where Loch Dubh goes into the sea. The area is still clled ‘Sgaid Sabhaidh’.  The idea came from Canada.
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Times Were Hard

DELVING through old records and books can have its rewards. We can gain an insight into life as it was for our parents, grandparents and the generation before that and we often come across items that give us graphic glimpses into an existence that was harsh and uncompromising.

 

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Sealladh Feasgair Samhraidh&..

Seach gu bheil am feasgar blàth, ar n’obair-latha seachad ‘s gun an còrr an urra rinn nach gabh sinn ceum air ar socair gu mullach cnoc àraidh gus an cuir sinn urram aon uair eile air an t-sealladh ro-phrìseil a tha air a ghealltainn don fhear a ghabhas an trioblaid gu dìreadh chun a' mhullaich.

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