H.D. Paton and W. Scott
The Dumfries Register of Marriages, 1616-1632
Genealogy, Recent, Recent (Social), Parish History
TDGNHAS Series III, 9 (1921-22), 168(WARNING very large file size: 12.92 MB)
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H.D. Paton and W. Scott The Dumfries Register of Marriages, 1616-1632 Genealogy, Recent, Recent (Social), Parish History TDGNHAS Series III, 9 (1921-22), 168(WARNING very large file size: 12.92 MB) |
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The Dumfries Sillar Gun History, Parish History, Recent, Recent (Social), Antiquarian TDGNHAS Series III, 75 (2001), 177(1.92 MB)
Abstract
A revised assessment of the status of the Dumfries Sillar Gun which was gifted to the Dumfries Incorporated Trades in 1617 by James VI. The Trades held a royal injunction to assemble in military array and shoot for the trophy once a year and to encourage |
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The Dumfries ‘Troublemaker’: Lord Loreburn’s Critique Of British Foreign Policy, 1899–1919 TDGNHAS Series III, 87 (2013), 165(WARNING large file size: 5.67 MB)
Abstract
At the foot of the kirkyard at Mouswald, sloping down towards the Solway Firth, lie the mortal remains of Robert Threshie Reid, first and last Earl Loreburn. The simple stone cross marking his grave, lies broken on the ground, its condition a telling commentary on the evaporation of the historical reputation of one who served for more than six years as a leading and much respected member of Britain’s pre-First World War Liberal government. That distinguished administration, formed by premier Henry CampbellBannerman in December 1905, contained three future Prime Ministers – H.H. Asquith, David Lloyd George and Winston Churchill – as well as such luminaries as Edward Grey, Foreign Secretary at the start of the war, and Richard Burdon Haldane, perhaps the most accomplished War Minister of the twentieth century. But Reid’s appointment to the Lord Chancellorship was seen at the time as a step of considerable importance. Indeed, he was the first prospective minister to be approached by Campbell-Bannerman as the latter set about constructing his cabinet. |
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P.G. Williams with R. Coleman, Ronald Copland, Elaine Kennedy, David Rose and Joanne Turner The Dumfriesshire and Galloway Natural History and Antiquarian Society Library Antiquarian, History, Libraries, Recent TDGNHAS Series III, 88 (2014), 117(WARNING large file size: 7.34 MB)
Abstract
Dumfriesshire and Galloway Natural History and Antiquarian Society’s lending library was already established by 1864. In 1904, when the Ewart Public Library opened, books of local importance were transferred to the Ewart Library and formed the core of the ‘Local Collection’. Over the years many of the remaining books have been dispersed either by donation or sale. In 2011, the Council of the Society formed a committee2 to assess the residue of the Society’s library and to organise its disposal, also to collate and catalogue the archive collection relating to the Society.3 This article recounts the history of the Society’s library and records the actions taken by this committee. |
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The Dumfriesshire Mounts Reconsidered TDGNHAS Series III, 80 (2006), 59(3.8 MB)
Abstract
In 1906 the so-called Dumfriesshire fragments were presented to the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland in Edinburgh by a certain Norman B. Kinnear. They were registered under the number FC 179 and are still partly exhibited in the current archaeological e |
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The Dumfriesshire Origin of Hector Boece Genealogy, Mediaeval, Etymology TDGNHAS Series III, 23 (1940-44), 75(WARNING very large file size: 40.26 MB) |
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The Dumfriesshire Rook Census and Tracking the Greenland White-fronted Goose TDGNHAS Series III, 91 (2017), 141(4.71 MB) |
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The Early Annandale Charters and their Strange Resting Place TDGNHAS Series III, 6 (1918-19), 137(WARNING very large file size: 54.31 MB) |
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The Early Browns in Newabbey Mediaeval, Genealogy, History, Parish History TDGNHAS Series III, 37 (1958-59), 93(WARNING very large file size: 28.54 MB) |
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The Early Christian Archaeology of North Britain. (C. Thomas: Oxford University Press) A Review TDGNHAS Series III, 48 (1971), 154(WARNING very large file size: 24.76 MB) |
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The Early Church in Dumfriesshire and its Monuments TDGNHAS Series III, 12 (1924-25), 46(WARNING very large file size: 32.71 MB) |
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The Early Coinage of Scotland TDGNHAS Series II, 24 (1911-12), 285(WARNING very large file size: 15.37 MB) |
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The Early Crosses of Galloway TDGNHAS Series III, 10 (1922-23), 205(WARNING very large file size: 60 MB) |
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The Early Ecclesiastical History of Kirkgunzeon Mediaeval, Etymology, Parish History TDGNHAS Series III, 14 (1926-28), 201(WARNING very large file size: 125.46 MB) |
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The Early History of Crichton Royal Recent, Recent (Social), Genealogy, History TDGNHAS Series III, 33 (1954-55), 9(WARNING very large file size: 20.98 MB) |
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The Early History of Eskdalemuir Mediaeval, Genealogy, Recent (Literature & Art), Recent, Recent (Social), Folklore, Bronze Age, Parish History TDGNHAS Series III, 14 (1926-28), 323(WARNING very large file size: 125.46 MB) |
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The Early History of the Corries of Annandale, a Further Contribution TDGNHAS Series III, 4 (1915-16), 29(WARNING large file size: 5.51 MB) |
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The Early History of the Corries of Annandale Genealogy, Mediaeval, Heraldry, History TDGNHAS Series III, 1 (1912-13), 86(WARNING very large file size: 21.99 MB) |
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The Early History of the Parish of Keir [Mention only] Genealogy, Mediaeval, Recent, Parish History TDGNHAS Series III, 5 (1916-18), 136(WARNING very large file size: 17.97 MB)
Abstract
This valuable paper has had to be omitted owing to lack of space. It is hoped that it will appear as a chapter in the History of the Grierson Family, which its author has in preparation |
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The Early Homes of the Balliols TDGNHAS Series III, 18 (1931-33), 235(WARNING very large file size: 68.6 MB) |