Annie Swan

Annie Swan (8 July 1859 - 17 June 1943) Prolific author of light romantic fiction, she wrote 197 novels and was immensely popular in her time though virtually unread today. Born near Edinburgh, she spent part of her childhood at Templehall Farm and was later a frequent visitor to the village. Some of her most popular novels were set locally. It is a measure of her popularity in the late 19th and early 20th centuries that houses around Coldingham still bear the names of her most famous titles viz. Carlowrie, Aldersyde, St Vedas, Orr's Haven.

The novel that made her reputation was Aldersyde (1883), a romance set in the Scottish Borders, which was favourably reviewed. Swan received an autographed letter of appreciation from Lord Tennyson, while the prime minister, William Ewart Gladstone wrote in a letter to The Scotsman that he thought it as "beautiful as a work of art" for its "truly living sketches of Scottish character".

Later successes included The Gates of Eden (1887) and Maitland of Lauriston (1891). These owed a debt to the fiction of Margaret Oliphant, who was among her critics, accusing Swan's novels of presenting a stereotypical, unrealistic depiction of Scotland. In a review of Carlowrie (1884), Oliphant went so far as to say Swan "presented an entirely distorted view of Scottish life."

Because of her dominance over Women at Home, editor-in-chief W.R. Nicoll often called it Annie Swan's Magazine. She later became editor of the magazine from 1893 to 1917. While writing for the British Weekly, she became acquainted with S. R. Crockett and J. M. Barrie, whose work like hers was given the unflattering epithet kailyard, an allusion to its parochialism and sentimentality.
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Evelyn Simpson

Evelyn Simpson (15 December 1855 - 23 January 1920)

Evelyn Blantyre Simpson was born in Edinburgh but spent a lot of time in Coldingham, at Bonardub which is still owned today by the Simpson family. She was actually christened Eve and was the daughter of Sir James Y Simpson who popularised the use of chloroform as an anaesthetic. She was a friend of Robert Louis Stevenson of whom she wrote two biographies, as well as a biography of her father.

Her other published writings included a notable book on the folklore of Scotland. Evelyn Blantyre Simpson died in Edinburgh in 1920 of liver cancer and there is a memorial plaque on the inside of the Priory, commemorating her life " and the happy days she spent in this parish".

Her Published Books

» Nelson and Puck: dogs of other days, Edinburgh: Blackwood & Sons, 1882.
» Sir James Y. Simpson, Edinburgh: Oliphant, Anderson and Ferrier, 1896, ("Famous Scots Series")
» Robert Louis Stevenson's Edinburgh Days, London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1898.
» Robert Louis Stevenson, Edinburgh: T.N. Foulis, 1905.('Spirit of the age series' no. 2).
» Folk lore in lowland Scotland, London: J.M. Dent, 1908.
» The Robert Louis Stevenson Originals, [With illustrations and facsimiles.] London & Edinburgh: T. N. Foulis, 1912.

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George Dunbar

George Dunbar (1755 - 6 December 1851)

Of humble origins, his grandfather and subsequently his father lived in one of the cottage on the Kiln Knowe, south of Bridge Street.

In childhood, George had a fall from a tree that left him unsuited for heavy manual work and he secured a post as a gardener. His employers, recognising the lad's intelligence provided for his education.

He repaid them fully by rising to become Professor of Greek at the University of Edinburgh.

Although a man of great energy and industry, Dunbar did not produce anything of permanent value. He deserves mention, however, for his Greek-English and English-Greek lexicon (1840), on the compilation of which he spent eight years. Although now superseded, it was the best work of its kind that had appeared in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1806.

Patrick Brydone

Patrick Brydone (1741 - 1818)

Son of the Manse, Patrick Brydone's father and maternal grandfather were both ministers in Coldingham. His grandfather was a somewhat fiery character whose appointment caused such dispute that the military had to be called out to quell the riot and he subsequently carried two pistols into the pulpit whenever he preached.

His parents lived at Abbey Park just outside the village but, by the time of Patrick's birth, his father had succeeded to the ministry and it is most likely that Patrick was born in the old manse which stood south of the Priory.

Interested in electricity, he travelled to Switzerland to conduct experiments, engaging in correspondence with Benjamin Franklin. On the basis of his publications on electricity he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1772.

He is famous as the author of one of the earliest travel books A Tour through Sicily and Malta, in a series of letters to William Beckford Esq. of Somerley in Suffolk. Despite the cumbersome title, the book is a lively and, to this day, highly readable account of a trip with two companions. Descriptions of Mount Etna, of encounters with banditti, a sort of proto-Mafia, of the Italian love of ices, of the heat of the sirocco in Malta and much else made his account immensely popular and it became a best seller running to several editions and being translated to French and German.

peripheral figure of the Scottish Enlightenment, he was praised by David Hume and denounced by Samuel Johnson which, considering who and what else the lexographer denounced, amounts to an accolade.

He was a Founder Member of The Royal Society of Edinburgh, link below, and Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries.

He was admired by Burns who visited him and hailed him in his poem "The Vision". Sir Walter Scott describes him in "Marmion" as "a reverend pilgrim".

He spent his later years at Lennel House in Coldstream.

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Thomas Thomson

Thomas Davidson Thomson - C.M.G., O.B.E., M.A., LLB, FSA Scot

Colonial District Commissioner, Historian, Representative for Eastern Borders.

Born in Edinburgh and coming from a family that had lived at The Hill House in Coldingham for around 170 years, he completed university in Cambridge and Edinburgh before joining the Colonial Service to work in Nyasaland (now Malawi) for over 30 years including the transition to independence.

He wrote extensively on Nyasaland history, customs and place-names and a language course "A Practical Guide to Chinyanja".

Upon returning from East Africa in 1962, he became the Treasurer of Coldingham Priory and oversaw the internal restoration of the building.

He persuaded the department of archaeology at Glasgow University to do some excavation work in the 1970s, and further excavations took place in 1967 and 1970 by the Berwickshire Naturalists Club of which he was the President and, in conjunction with his wife Marjory, contributed many articles to The Proceedings of the B.N.C. including "A Postal History of Berwickshire".

He wrote "Coldingham Priory by T.D. Thomson" in 1972, revised in 1981. This is still the standard guide to the Priory. The Guide may be read online here.

In 1969 he became "Brain of Britain" on the general knowledge radio programme.

"T.D." as he was often referred to, was very much behind the formation of the Eastern Borders Development Association (EBDA). Along with EBDA's field officer, he was responsible for attracting Dexters (now Ahlstrom), the non-woven fabrics manufacturer to the Chirnside paper mill, improving Eyemouth harbour, researching the possibility of farmers growing vegetables commercially in The Borders, setting up the processing plant at Eyemouth and in totally reversing a near-20% loss in the population of Berwickshire during the first 20 years of the post-war era. His and EBDA's contribution to the welfare and tourism of Berwickshire, Kelso and North Northumberland was a remarkable achievement.

He was buried in the Davidson-Thomson plot at the Priory.

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Watty Sword

Watty Sword (Village Caretaker)

The following information has been supplied by Dave Thomson - son of Notable Resident TD Thomson.

Scanned image from April 1986.

Started working for the council in 1957 he though he would be looking after Coldingham Priory for a few months. The months turned into years after thinking he would stay in the job for 3 months.

Follow the link for the Full Article Below: (Click/Tap)

  1. Watty calls it a day - by Martin Dempster (Newpaper Article)

Robert Hutchinson

Robert Gemmell Hutchinson (1855 - 1936)

One of the many artists drawn to the Berwickshire coast, Gemmell Hutchison was a frequent visitor.

He used local people, often children, in his work. Never part of a group such as the Scottish Colourists or the Edinburgh School, his style was influenced by the Dutch school and the Faed brothers.

Navigation Link Below: (Click/Tap)

  1. Paintings by Robert Gemmell Hutchinson on Wiki Gallery

John Wood

John Wood (1854 - 1915

Pictures from the Potting Shed - by David Burgess

One of the most exciting and remarkable photographic finds of recent years was made in, of all places, a Borders garden shed. Comprising a massive accumulation of glass negatives, it's the work of John Wood, a photographer whose studies of village life at the turn of the century sparkle with a quality rarely seen.

It's a find which has enthralled everyone who has seen prints taken from Wood's negatives. In the short time since their discovery, several Scottish museums as well as one south of the Border have shown interest.

The unique collection came to light in May 1983, when Coldingham garage owner Bob Thomson and his 10-year-old son, Roy, were on the hunt for material to use in a school project Roy was tackling. He was researching early 20th century life in the Berwickshire coastal village. Bob, a keen amateur photographer, had copied and enlarged a couple of old postcards he'd been given and was told that a local man, Jimmy Brown, might have some more. As it turned out he didn't, but 85-year-old Jimmy, a retired market gardener, told Bob there was something in his potting shed which might be of interest and which he was welcome to have. That "something" turned out to be two boxes full of sadly neglected half-plate glass negatives, thickly coated with decades of grime, dust, leaves and goodness knows what else.

"As I pulled the first one from the grimy box my heart skipped a beat," Bob told me when I spoke to him recently. "I held it up to the light and saw at once it was the negative of a family sitting in a horse and gig with a black and white dog at their feet." The photograph had been taken outside a house in Coldingham.

"Jimmy told me the plates were the work of John Wood", the very photographer who had taken the postcards which triggered off the search in the first place.

Bob began the arduous, time-consuming task of cleaning the 600 or so usable plates. Several hundred more were so badly damaged they had to be dumped.

"At 6 ½ inches by 5 inches., the negatives were obviously far too big to fit into the enlarger I use for my normal photographic work," continued Bob. "However, I was able to contact print them, which consists of laying each negative on photographic paper, exposing it briefly to light from the enlarger and developing in the normal way". The results were beyond my wildest dreams. Out of my developing dishes came pin-sharp pictures of all aspects of rural life in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

As well as Coldingham, the towns and villages of Eyemouth, Duns, Ayton, Reston and St Abbs feature in the photographs. Before me I had photos of ploughmen in the fields, early motor vehicles, soldiers, stonemasons, sheep-shearers, blacksmiths, shipwrecks, magnificently posed portraits :- you name it, John Wood had captured it with his massive half-plate camera.

"I think some of Wood's favourite photographs must surely be those of deep-sea divers at nearby St Abbs harbour," said Bob. "The collection contains nearly half a dozen plates of these men. They present the classic picture of divers : 'goldfish-bowl' helmets, baggy suits and lead - weighted boots. I reckon they were pioneers of their profession. Unfortunately, the emulsion on all the plates of the divers is badly damaged and prints taken from them aren't of too high a quality."

It's obvious that Wood was a man of imagination. He realised the photographic potential in scenes, which would have been part of everyday life and accepted as such by most people. What's more, he persuaded folk from all walks of life to pose for him.

The picturesque village of Coldingham hasn't changed too much since Wood's days. As Bob gave me a guided tour he pointed out pubs, houses, even whole streets, which have remained basically unaltered. We stopped at a quaint red-tiled cottage and compared it with a photo taken around 1895. The picture could almost have been taken the day before. "Sadly, there are no photographs of my own garage business," said Bob. "It was a smiddy at one time and I desperately hoped there would have been at least one negative taken here, but no."

After a lengthy search, Bob managed to purchase an old half-plate enlarger in Dundee, enabling him to produce prints of almost any size. To help offset the cost of what was proving to be a rather expensive "inheritance", he offered prints for sale and an eye-catching display in his garage forecourt has proved most popular with villagers and visitors alike.

In order to let still more people enjoy the photos and, hopefully, to begin the daunting task of putting a name to as many faces as possible, Bob copied the photographs, using 35-mm slide film. It's "standing room only" in village halls when he takes his show on the road. Older folk can enjoy an evening of nostalgia while younger members of the audience are treated to a riveting history lesson.

"A one-hour slide show often stretches to two or three, with the audience discussing the pictures and arguing about who they think the subjects are," said Bob. "Many have been deeply moved on recognising relatives."

John Wood himself is a bit of a mystery man although, after many hours of poring over records in Register House in Edinburgh, Bob says the story is gradually beginning to unfold.

At the age of 23, John married a Glasgow girl, Rosina Lynch, at Dennistoun, in June 1877. The marriage certificate gives his occupation at that time as a joiner journeyman. During the next 13 years, Wood made his way to Coldingham, divorced his first wife and took up with local woman Margaret Kerr. She, too, had had a history of marital misfortune. She had a brief marriage to a Robert Kerr who died at the early age of 33. Margaret then fell for his brother, Thomas, and, as marriage to such a close relative was illegal, the pair ran off to be wed in France, at Boulogne in March 1882. That must have given the local gossips something to talk about!

Thomas fared little better than his brother, dying in September 1888. Within 18 months, Margaret found herself with a third husband, John Wood. Now describing himself as a photographer, he married her in January 1890. Margaret had two sons and three daughters including twin girls to her previous husbands and, by the end of their first year of marriage, she'd given John a daughter, Evelyn.

They lived in Coldingham for the next 20 years, Margaret dying in 1911, aged 59, and John outliving her by three years. Both lie in an unmarked grave in Coldingham Priory churchyard. The gravedigger there can pinpoint the spot through his records.

But as the fascinating pieces of the jigsaw began to fall into place, one snippet of information came to light, which Bob frankly admits he would rather not have known about.

It came from 85-year-old Forsyth Lindores, who told Bob how the plates had found their way into the potting shed over half a century before.

After Wood's death, his daughter Evelyn asked Forsyth, who was the village handyman, if he could make use of some old glass. Forsyth snapped up the offer and cleared away two lorry-loads from the Wood household. Two lorry-loads of glass negatives !!

What surely must have amounted to thousands of these unique photographic plates were then washed clean and used to glaze greenhouses and sheds. Others were trampled underfoot as "rubble" before being concreted over to make bases for those same buildings.

Bob admits he was shattered when Forsyth broke the news. However, at least a small part of John Wood's incredible collection avoided this undignified fate and lay untouched until the day in May 1983 when Bob Thomson found it.

"I consider it a great privilege to be able to bring Wood's work to life again after so many years," said Bob. "For the moment, I'd just like to finish the job of printing and cataloguing the negatives. I've about 200 still to do, so I can't see myself having much spare time on my hands in the foreseeable future!"

©2000 Bob and Mary Thomson, Prior Bank, Coldingham, TD14 5NJ.

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