An Taillear Ruadh (the red-haired tailor) was Donald Montgomery from Leurbost.
Explains the colour of my beard (when I had one and before it got 'bleached'!).
He was paid 1s 6d (8p) for a suit. Apparently is was 1s for the jacket and 6d for the trousers.
He married Annie Murray of Atholl Cottage, Laxdale (later called Roanoke) and settled in 43 Newmarket Laxdale. Donald lived from 1824-1902 and Annie from 1830-1914.
Atholl Cottage, Laxdale 1906
She had a wee shop and was wet-nurse to the children of the Provost of Stornoway.
I have been unable to identify who was 'Provost' at this time?
Their family was Allan, Alec (these two built the Carloway Bridges), Norman (my great grandfather)...who had a son John went abroad, inventor had an avenue called after him.
This was John Murdo Montgomery, born 1877, but where he went and what he invented is unknown to me.
I have already written of the two Masons: Carloway Bridges
A great grandson of Donald Montgomery, James Phair, had his own half a million pound factory in Florida for the manufacture of outdoor electric lighting. He was consultant for the lighting of Niagra Falls.
Another of his great grandson's was my Dad, a fact I mention purely because I am prone to get lost in the tangled web of my ancestry!
Mary, who I met in Bragar on my first island excursion in 2007, has written this authoritative piece on the Whale Bone Arch at Bragar, which her father Murdo Morrison, the Postmaster, created:
Bragar Whale Bone Arch
She also made an episode of 'Taisdealach' for BBC Alba, but unfortunately it is not available on iPlayer: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00hww4n
Note: Thanks are due to my cousin Dorothy, for furnishing me with Mary's notes, and to Donald (Dorothy's brother), for giving me a whistle-stop tour of Lewis, but, most of all, to Mary herself.
The list of Stornoway provosts can be found on http://bit.ly/gGysAM
ReplyDeleteMany thanks for that link.
ReplyDeleteAs the earliest Provost listed is in 1892, when Annie was in her 60s and twenty-years past her last child's birth, I suspect that it may have been an earlier Provost whose children she wet-nursed (although I understand that biologically it is perfectly possible for a post-menopausal woman to lactate).