Fàilte! (Welcome!)

Fàilte! (Welcome!)
This blog is the result of my ongoing research into the people, places and events that have shaped the Western Isles of Scotland and, in particular, the 'Siamese-twins' of Harris and Lewis.
My interest stems from the fact that my Grandfather was a Stornowegian and, until about four years ago, that was the sum total of my knowledge, both of him and of the land of his birth.
I cannot guarantee the accuracy of everything that I have written (not least because parts are, perhaps, pioneering) but I have done my best to check for any errors.
My family mainly lived along the shore of the Sound of Harris, from An-t-Ob and Srannda to Roghadal, but one family 'moved' to Direcleit in the Baighs...

©Copyright 2011 Peter Kerr All rights reserved

Wednesday 8 March 2023

HEBRIDEAN RECOLLECTIONS by Rothes Goodall

Occasionally, something rather wonderful happens as was the case when I was contacted by a reader regarding Scarista Manse. He, together with his sister and her husband, had compiled a document based upon a handwritten account of holidays in Harris written by their late father (and father-in-law) Robert Rothes Goodall.

In addition to the manuscript they also possess two collections of photographs, one of which contains images taken by Rothes whilst the other is an album of photographs that Rothes' mother, Margaret Goodall, had taken.

The family, headed by John Murray Goodall who worked for the Church of Scotland, took many holidays across the nation and its islands including both Lewis and Harris. Margaret records one stay in Harris in 1923, following several earlier holidays based in Lewis, and Rothes' own photos probably date from another stay in 1928.

What follows is a truly wonderful account, transcribed and assembled into a unique document that I have the great privilege of publishing for the very first time.

I am sure readers will find it a fascinating read and also enjoy the evocative images that bring to life, in particular, the Minister John Kerr and his wonderful wife Adèle.

With grateful thanks to David, Alison, and John.

Sunday 5 March 2023

A (Tall?) Tale of Two Hills

It has been some time since I blogged about placenames but one aspect that particularly interests me is how taking a group of nearby names into consideration, or even just a pair, can help reveal new insights.

The example that I have been pondering recently regards the two hills at the northern end of Berneray which are shown on the latest Ordnance Survey (OS) map as Beinn Shlèibhe (with it’s 93m trig point) and Beinn Ghainche. These are usually rendered in English as Ben Leva and Sandhill, although Moor Hill is also sometimes seen for the first of them.

At the time of the first OS mapping of Harris in the mid 1870s the Name Books provide us with an earlier name for Sandhill that came from Captain Otter's admiralty chart of 1857 and, more significantly, what they called the ’Old Map’. This is a reference to the wonderful work of William Bald performed in 1804/1805 under the watchful eye of his master (the celebrated mapmaker Mr Ainslie) on behalf of one ’Alexander Hulme’.

This was Alexander Hulme MACLEOD, the anglophile son of Captain MacLeod of Berneray who dumped his family name such was his ambition to remove any reference to his roots from his personage. This attitude is important because it perhaps explains Bald’s anglicisation of placenames on his otherwise astonishingly accurate map of the Estate of Harris.
The map title may be seen at:

The earlier name referred to by the OS is Green Hill and that name stuck until it was replaced by Sandhill at some point during the two decades separating the 1857 chart and the 1876 map.

It stuck, but it was quite possibly wrong.

If one looks closely at Bald’s map it is manifest that the name is written as ’Creen Hill’. There are two examples of the capital letter ’G’ in close proximity and the distinction between them and the capital ’C’ is unequivocal. There is also a capital 'C' at the clachan of 'Crockgunne' for comparison and it is a perfect match. Bald provided Moor Hill and Creen Hill for his master's client and that is, I believe, no mistake: 

https://maps.nls.uk/view/74400301#zoom=7&lat=2178&lon=4133&layers=BT


What we have for sure is a big hill and an adjacent little hill. So what is the origin of ’Moor’ and ’Creen’, as rendered into English some two-hundred and twenty years ago? My (very) tentative conjecture is that they could come from Mor, meaning big, and Crìon meaning “little or diminutive”. There may well be alternative manglings of Gaelic that lead to the anglicisation ’Creen’ but this is one possibility that appears as if it might fit.

Oh, and as ’sleibhe’ can mean a ’mountain of the highest magnitude’ (and Beinn Shleibhe is indeed the highest peak in Berneray) does that not also add weight to the suggestion that what we may well have here is a big/little pairing, rather than a moor/green one? I think it's worth considering.

I’ll leave what appears to be the relatively recent adoption of Sand Hill for others to ponder, although the area is certainly susceptible to seasonal sand blow: