New Midlothian Archive Guide available

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In Spring 2012, Midlothian Council Archive Service launched a new guide to the Midlothian archives. The purpose of the guide is to raise awareness of the archive collection and to encourage greater use of it. Copies of the new guide are available from local libraries or from Midlothian Local Studies

The Midlothian archive collection began shortly after the end of Second World War largely thanks to a man called Andrew Fraser, an unassuming native of Bonnyrigg who became county librarian for Midlothian County Library Service (then based inEdinburgh). Andrew had enough intelligence and foresight to start collecting material which was then regarded as insignificant and could be had for next to nothing. One example of this is a wonderful collection of old postcards of Midlothian. In Andrew’s day, these could be obtained quite cheaply, but are now very expensive and highly expensive.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Andrew Fraser saved a lot of archive material which was almost thrown away during local government reorganisation in 1970s. Amongst these were volumes of burgh records, council minutes, and logbooks and class registers from local schools. These records form the basis of the current collection, although there have been many later additions, usually donated by the public.

Currently, Midlothian archives are based in two sites: Library headquarters in Loanhead and at the Council Records Centre in Bonnyrigg, which is not open to the public. The collection is maintained by the Council Library Service. Midlothian Council has not employed a professional archivist for some years, but there is a Local Studies Officer and a Records Officer who jointly care for the archives.     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Midlothian collection is not vast, but there are plenty of interesting and unique items. Probably the best example is the Black Collection which contains over 150 scrapbooks about Penicuik and the surrounding area. These were compiled by two local men, James Black and his son Robert, from about 1880 to 1930. The scrapbooks record almost every aspect of life in Penicuik and are a rich source for local historians and genealogists.

The bulk of the archive collection comes from the nineteenth- and twentieth-centuries, but there are a few earlier items. These include eighteenth-century minute books from the Guild of the Dalkeith Hammermen, the Penicuik Farmers’ Society, Loanhead Subscription Library (1818-53), and the Trustees of the Burgh of Dalkeith, which began in 1760. There are also several family and estate collections, such as the Don Wauchope of Edmonstone papers, a prosperous family that lived at the Edmonstone house in the parish of Newton, just outsideEdinburgh.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The new archive guide is an attempt to summarise the Midlothian collection and to make it more accessible to users. The guide is organised into eight basic categories, such as Local Authority Records and Unions, Guilds and Associations. There is also an index and a glossary of unfamiliar terms. It is worth remembering that many people may be unfamiliar with archive collections and may not understand how they are organised. The guide was made as simple and clear as possible whilst maintaining the highest archive standards.

It is hoped that the new guide will be first in a series and that new versions will be produced at regular intervals. There is still plenty of material to be added and many new donations. Recently, we were given the punishment book from the Dalkeith Combination Poorhouse which records the penalties handed out to inmates for misbehaviour. This is a fascinating document that shows the harshness of the Victorian workhouse system. In February 1874, a woman called Jane Brunton, who was 23-years-old, was locked up for 8 hours and denied food for being insubordinate to the matron.      

As well as the guide, we are also compiling new catalogues for individual collections. Once these are completed they are placed on the Midlothian Council website as PDFs. This is, of course, time-consuming but also rewarding and a good way to become more familiar with the collections and to uncover hidden treasures.

There is a huge amount of work to be done with theMidlothianarchives but we think that the new guide is big step in the right direction.   

 

 

 

 

Volunteer!

Would you like to help West Lothian Council Archives in its work of preserving and enabling access to its historic collections?  Anyone with spare-time and an interest in history or considering a career in the archives profession can volunteer in the Archives and Records Centre.

Volunteering provides an opportunity to work within a small friendly team, to use existing skills and learn new ones.  It offers a unique perspective of archives and allows you to get up close and personal with historical documents and photographs.

Volunteers can assist in a variety of projects such as cleaning, sorting, listing and re-housing records, or help in the digitisation of some of the thousands of photographs and negatives held in the archives.  Recent volunteers have been listing estate papers and the records of the Soroptimist Club of West Lothian; assisted with putting together exhibitions and promotional material for Livingston 50; and digitising negatives from the Bob Wallace collection and hundreds of LDC photographs.

The Archives has been awarded funding from the National Cataloguing Grants Programme for Archives to catalogue our Livingston collections. The funding award recognises these collections as being of national and international significance and the project coincides with the 50th anniversary of the new town.  Entitled “Livingston New Town, from Plan to Community, 1962-2012”, the project will involve cataloguing and preserving the records of Livingston Development Corporation; local Community Councils; Craigsfarm Community Centre; the Livingston Players; Tam Dalyell, MP; and the Reverend Dr. James Maitland.  The project archivist will begin work on the 18 month project in July and there will be opportunities for volunteers to work on a number of different tasks and types of record.  If you are interested in helping in this exciting project then please contact us by the end of July.

We also offer week-long work placements to local school pupils throughout the year, through the West Lothian work experience programme.  The pupils are shown all aspects of the work carried out at ARC and are given small pieces of digitisation, preservation and indexing work to complete.  We also encourage them (and our volunteers) to write blogs about their experience!

We consider all requests for voluntary placements or work experience, we provide basic training, and work with volunteers to develop an interesting and varied programme of work.  If you are interested in volunteering some of your time please feel free to contact or visit the Archives and Records Centre.

A Policeman’s Lot…

Archives, though often mentioned in the same breath as museums and libraries, and though sharing some similarities with them, are different in several ways. One crucial distinction is that although museums hold original & unique artefacts, the public are seldom allowed contact with these; libraries on the other hand do allow handling of their holdings by users although they do not usually possess unique items.  Archives not only hold original and irreplaceable items but also provide ‘hands on’ access to their users.  This presents more difficult problems with preservation and though digitising records and making them available online is one solution to this dilemma, it is an expensive and time-consuming option.  Consequently, the favoured answer for many archives, when money allows, is for the most severely damaged and worn items in archival collections to be professionally conserved.

ECA has been very fortunate in these financially-straitened times to have  been awarded a considerable end of year sum for just this purpose.  Our holdings of Lothian & Borders Police records – an important and extensive collection – is about to receive some long overdue TLC.  This contains, among other things, some excellent personnel records which have been well used by both academics and genealogists in the past and some items, such as a series of ‘Weekly Records’ (ED6/5) which are an ongoing log of promotions, punishments and resignations within and from the Edinburgh Police Force.Lothian & Borders Police Records

Opposite is an example of the poor state of some of this series and a volume which is so badly water-damaged and fragile that it is currently unfit for production to the public.  When conserved this, and several other similar volumes will once again be available to the public in our search room.  One comparable volume in this same collection – a ‘Conduct Book’ covering the years 1851-1901 (ED6/8/3) was conserved some time ago, keeping as much of the original volume in tact whilst repairing the most damaged parts. Now, its rich treasure of the records of careers of generations of 19th century policemen  in their impressive – and in some cases, not so impressive detail – is accessible once again to the public.

ED6/8/3 To give some insight into its content it can be said that although the promotions through the various grades of police officers and their salaries are useful genealogical details, it is perhaps the record of their misdemeanours and subsequent punishments which is so fascinating.

The policeman’s job, then as now, must have been a difficult and often dangerous one. This volume shows that in the 19th century at least, officers were helped through their daily trials by liberal amounts of alcohol.  Even a cursory leaf through its pages is enough to show that occasions  for reprimand, fine or even dismissal for being drunk while on duty could almost be said to be the rule rather than the exception on the evidence of this volume.  In 1879, one Arthur Cooper, not content for merely dropping into the local on his beat for a quick pint was demoted for “…being found along with a Constable of the Section of which he was Sergeant within a Brewery where they had gone to drink.”  Another constable, James Knox, perhaps under the influence himself, was reprimanded in 1899 for “…improperly larking on the public street in uniform.” What the ‘larking’ entailed exactly is not recorded!

Ronald Macdonald, though not specifically reported for drinking, was fined 1/- for being found “…sitting on a wall asleep while on duty” – a feat both difficult and dangerous to achieve one might have thought.  Finally, whether or not drink was involved in a case of the double dismissal from the service of Andrew Davidson and John Mackay in 1898, or indeed if they had been on duty at the time is not recorded.  The record shows however, that they were “Allowed to resign forthwith for improperly visiting a suspected brothel” – this just goes to show that immorality, as well as insobriety, were not to be tolerated within the ranks of Edinburgh’s 19th century keepers of the peace!

Dalkeith High School Magazine

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thanks to our friends at Glasgow University archives, Mildothian Local Studies recently received a generous donation of Dalkeith High School magazines. We were delighted to receive these as we had only one copy in our collections. Ephemeral material of this kind if often very difficult to obtain but is of great interest and social value.

The magazine was first produced in December 1933 although this was described as a ‘New Series’ and presumably it existed in an earlier format. The donation runs upto the 1970s.

The reader cannot help but be struck by the high quality of production of the earlier magazines from the 1930s and 1940s. They are attractively designed, well printed and fine examples of the art of typeography. They contain lots of articles about life in the school, including reports about sports matches, clubs and societies, short stories and poetry.

 

Some issues contain woodcuts and photographs. As always, the advertisements for local shops and companies, many now long gone, are of great interest. 

It is noticeable that there is a marked decline in the quality of production the magazine in the 1970s, although some of the groovy covers are quite eye-catching.

Do schools still produce magazines of this kind? Please let us know.

19th Midlothian (Loanhead) Scouts

Midlothian Local Studies holds a run of magazines produced by local Boy Scouts in the 1930s. The Glenrath Review was issued by the 19th Midlothian (Loanhead) Troop. The first issue appeared in 1932. Two hundred copies were produced and it cost sixpence. The paper for the magazine was donated by local paper manufacturers in Midlothian. It is a well produced magazine that provides a fascinating insight into the world of the Boy Scouts.  

Glenrath Review cover 1939

The Boy Scout movement began in 1908 and quickly swept the country catching the imagination of boys everywhere. It stressed informal education, standards of behaviour and practical outdoor activities, such as camping, woodcraft and sports. A Scout troop was formed in Loanhead before the First World War and flourished in the 1920s and 1930s. John Bayne, a local man, became Scoutmaster in 1927 and he did much to encourage the movement locally, including editorship of the magazine.

The Glenrath Review took its name from Glenrath farm near Peebles where the Loanhead Scouts often held a summer camp. The magazine has a huge variety of articles and features contributed by local Scouts. These included articles about travel and local history, short stories, cartoons, puzzles, jokes and poetry.

The ‘Camp Number’ for 1937 includes the following list of ‘Books to Read’:

The Bicycle by I.M. Tyred
Electricity by O. Switchoff
The K.O. Kid by Esaw Stars
The Cliff Tragedy by Illene Dover
The Rustlers by E. Pinch
The Broken Window by Eua Brick

Special issues of the magazine were produced for King George V’s Jubilee (1935), the Coronation of Edward VII (1937) and the Empire Exhibition in Glasgow (1938). This last included an essay competition for Scouts who had visited the Exhibition, first prize 2/6d.

The issue from late 1939, when the Second World War had started, is described as ‘the First Blackout Number’.

Earlier issues of the magazine contained some advertising, which seems to have been drawn by the boys themselves.

Writers were aware of what was happening in the wider world and how it impacted on them. The 1935 issue contained a poem called To Glenrath Review by ‘Snainy’ which included the following two verses:

Herr Hitler’s a dictator.
He’s kicked out every Jew,
Don’t call him ‘Bad Potater’,
Send him Glenrath Review.

But Baldwin is our leader,
We’ll stick to him like glue,
He’s our most constant reader,
He loves Glenrath Review.

The most important articles were reports of the annual camp, including lists of participants. The boys had lots of fun but it rained a lot.

Glenrath Review survived until the late 1960s.

Loanhead Subscription Library

Loanhead Library Subscribers' list

 

 

Midlothian Local Studies holds two volumes from the Loanhead Subscription Library: a minute book dating from 1818 to 1850 and a record of borrowings between 1832 and 1855.

The Loanhead Subscription Library was established in May 1818 ‘as a means of diffusing useful knowledge to a great number of persons in and about the neighbourhood whose circumstances and life will not admit of the purchasing of books upon an enlarged scale’.

The minute book lists office bearers and 21 ‘articles’ or rules for the running of the library. There is also a list of the 56 original subscribers which included two women, Miss Christie and Miss Helen Dickson. Other women joined the library later.

Members of the library committee who were absent from meetings were fined 1s, and this rule was rigidly enforced.

The library was housed in the Loanhead Subscription School, so called because it was erected by public subscription. The building became known as Park’s School after the name of its first headmaster.

Loanhead Library Loans December 1835

The record of borrowings provides a fascinating insight into the types of books that the library held and also what members were reading. Predictably, the novels of Sir Walter Scott were much in demand and were regularly borrowed. Other popular authors were Tobias Smollett, Henry Fielding and Henry Mackenzie. Non-fiction was also read, including works on history, politics, travel and science.

Around 1840, the library seems to have run into some difficulties, but the committee turned down a suggestion that it be amalgamated with Lasswade Library. The last minute of the library committee is dated 12 February 1850 but books were still being borrowed in 1855.

It would be interesting to know what happened to the book stock once the library was discontinued and whether any of the books survive.

In 1901, Loanhead Town Council turned down an offer from the philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to build a new public library in the town. The local Miners’ Welfare Institution held a small number of books but it was not until the late 1960s that a new public library was finally opened for the reading public in Loanhead.

The Bathgate Forge Ltd / Chieftain Forge Ltd

One of Bathgate’s best known companies, The Bathgate Forge Ltd and its associate companies, George Wolfe and Son’s Ltd and Chieftain Forge Ltd, were British market leaders and world renowned for their high quality hand-made spades and shovels. A dig into the companies’ historical papers offers the opportunity to gain an insight into the long and varied family tradition that the factories embodied.
 
  
George Wolfe and Sons Ltd
 
In around 1869, Robert Fraser, the owner of the Drumcross Paraffin Oilworks and Brickworks, set up a foundry and engine works at Burnside Road in Bathgate. A few years later in 1871, James Wait and his five sons, took over the premises and began a small shovel making forge. Meanwhile, George Park and George Wolfe, a Bathgate tinsmith, decided to open their own shovel making business called the West Lothian Spade and Shovel Works. The premises were first located in Mill Road in Bathgate but soon ground was bought at Bridgend and larger works were built. Shortly after this, George Wolfe left the partnership and set up on his own at 56 North Bridge Street, Bathgate. In 1884, Park sold out and Wolfe bought the Bridgend premises and moved his business there. Finding it increasingly difficult to find appropriate materials, Wolf established his own steel rolling mill at Glasgow Road, Bathgate and in 1907 formed George Wolfe and Sons Ltd.

The Bathgate Forge Ltd

In 1909 Wait and Sons went bankrupt and by 1911, Wolfe had bought the Burnside Road forge, his son, Major Tom Wolfe had modernised the machinery and the whole business was re-named the Bathgate Forge. Tragedy struck in 1914 when a serious fire almost destroyed the Burnside Road premises but the company quickly recovered and soon took over the Holm Forge Company at Bellshill. George Wolfe died in 1924 and his sons Tom, Charles and Monty took over the business. Tom’s main concern was the forge, Charles focused on the steel mill and Monty was the company accountant. Tom died in 1957 and his son, the present William Wolfe took over. In 1962, Charles died and his son, George succeeded him in looking after the rolling mills until 1965, when the mill shut.

Chieftain Forge Ltd
 
In 1840, a forge called James Donald and Sons was established at Barblues, Plains, near Airdrie. In 1958, the principal shareholder of the company, James Jarvie wanted to retire and so sold the controlling shares to William and Charles Wolfe. A year later James Donald and Sons changed their name to Chieftain Forge and moved into premises adjoining the Bathgate Forge. In 1967, Bathgate Forge went into liquidation and amalgamated with Chieftain Forge. Soon, they began to focus on the manufacture of tools and equipment for forestry work, rather than just the traditional spades and shovels.

1986 sees more changes when Chieftain Forge (1986) Ltd is formed and takes over from and becomes tenant to the old company. Unfortunately, this was not enough to boost business and in 1989 the shovel works closed. Chieftain Forge (1986) Ltd ended their lease in 1996 and the old company bought the machinery back to donate it to the Almond Valley Heritage Trust. Walter Chapman, who co-founded Chieftain Forge Ltd (1986), continued as the sole trader under the name Chieftain Forge when the company moved to Guideon Street, Bathgate. To this day Chieftain Forge continues to trade and can be found at Whiteside Industrial Estate, also in Bathgate.

The companies’ papers are available to consult in the Archives and Records Centre. Some of the original machinery used in the spade and shovel making process is on display at the Almond Valley Heritage Centre in Livingston. Together, these resources mean that part of Bathgate’s rich industrial history is preserved for future generations to enjoy and appreciate.

Centenary of Public Libraries in Midlothian

 

The earliest libraries in Midlothian were private subscription libraries, which meant that anybody who wished to use them had to pay a regular fee to gain access to the books. Penicuik Subscription Library opened in 1797, Loanhead in 1818 and the Dalkeith Scientific Association, which was founded in 1835, had a private library for its members.

Some shops also ran their own borrowing libraries, which people could use for small fee. In Bonnyrigg there was a library in a local café, which was known as the ‘Coffee-House Library’.

In 1853 the Public Libraries Act gave burgh councils the option of running a free public library. These were paid for out of local taxation, which often meant that poorer areas of the country like Midlothian were unable to afford them.

The free public library movement in Scotland was greatly encouraged by the generosity and foresight of Andrew Carnegie. 

Carnegie was born in Dunfermline in 1853. He emigrated to the United States where he became a wealthy iron and steel magnate. In his later life, he used his vast fortune to finance many philanthropic projects. He offered money for the building of public libraries on condition that others donated building land and paid for the books and running costs.

The first Carnegie library in the old Midlothian County was opened at West Calder on 24 November 1903. Two years earlier a new public library had been proposed for Dalkeith. After great debate the Burgh Council rejected it because it would impose a heavy burden on local ratepayers.

Bonnyrigg Town Council, however, accepted Carnegie’s offer and land was obtained in Lothian Street. Building work started on 31 July 1908 and a memorial stone was laid by Provost Archibald Gilchrist on 2 September 1908.

Bonnyrigg Public Library was opened on Saturday 2 October 1909 amidst an ‘extraordinary degree’ of interest from ‘hundreds of inhabitants’. A special commemorative poem was written by Provost Porteous of Lasswade, which began:

‘Twas on a lovely autumn afternoon,
A great big day for Bonnyrigg toon;
What a folk did gather there
Fra round about far and near.

For to attend a demonstration
Of Carnegie’s presentation;
A lovely mansion here you’ll  find
With beauty and order all combined.
 

The opening ceremony was performed by Dr Hew Morrison, who represented Andrew Carnegie. He was accompanied by Provost Gilchrist and his wife, and representatives of the Town Council and other bodies in Bonnyrigg. Dr Morrison was presented with a special silver key to open the building, but, as the Dalkeith Advertiser reported, there was a ‘slight contretemps’ when he tried to open the front door:

‘The Doctor inserted and turned the key in the lock, but the door did not respond to the gentle push with which he attempted to open it. Even the combined efforts of the Provost and some other gentlemen in the vicinity failed to open it. Presently however the door swung easily open, the appearance of the caretaker behind indicating the bolt securing the door from inside had been withdrawn. The incident lasted no more than a minute, and its only effect was to cause merriment amongst the spectators.’

Following the opening ceremony there were a long series of speeches in the library hall followed by a reception:

Now when the business it was over
They did adjourn to the corner,
And as some were cauld and shakey
They got cakes and wine and aqua vittie.

The new library was designed by the Edinburgh architectural firm of Greig, Fairbairn and McNiven. It was built in the English ‘medieval style’ style in red sandstone and had many fine details, including the Dundas family coat-of-arms over the main entrance. On the ground floor, the library had a lending section and a reading room with spaces for 36 readers and a separate alcove for women. A side entrance to the building gave access to a meeting room and also to a public bathroom, which had ‘two spray baths, one plunge bath and a changing box’. On the first floor there was a public lecture hall that could hold 200 people. The building included a flat for the librarian and caretaker. The total cost of the library was £2300 of which Andrew Carnegie donated £2000.

The library housed around 6000 books which had been chosen to suit all tastes, including fiction by the latest authors. There was also a selection of ‘Juvenile Literature’ for children, which Provost Gilchrist hoped would ‘shape and mould their minds in the right direction’. The Reference Room included newspapers and magazines.

The Lending Library was open on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays between 3 and 5 o’clock in the afternoon and between 7 and 9 o’clock in the evening. The Reference Room was open each day except Sunday between 9am and 10pm. Access was available to every ratepayer in Bonnyrigg but they were only allowed to borrow one book at a time. The library had strict rules about behaviour. Users were not allowed to cut articles out of the newspapers and they were not to be ‘intoxicated, disorderly or uncleanly’. Users were fined one penny for every three days that their books were overdue.

The library was originally run by a Library Committee of Bonnyrigg Town Council but in 1921 Midlothian Education Authority took over the administration of the lending library. Funding was always limited and a billiards room was introduced to supplement income. A Council report in 1945 described the library as ‘a somewhat dingy unprogressive appearance’. Bonnyrigg library was soon incorporated into the new Midlothian County Council Library Scheme.

The current library in Bonnyrigg opened on 16 April 1974 but in 1989 the old library was pressed into service because of building work in the new library.  

Since 1909, many other public libraries have been opened in Midlothian and they continue to provide a valuable free service to the local community

Learning From the Past – Inspiring the Future

East Lothian Cultural Services have now got two new members of staff working on the new John Gray Centre that will be opening early in 2012. Caroline Mathers is the Development Officer for the centre and Helen Bleck is the Heritage Resource Development Officer.

The very glam Caroline (who would only pose for her photograph once she had her glittery eyeshadow on!) gives us a brief run-down of what she will be doing at the JGC .

“Hello everyone, I would like to introduce myself to the Lothian Lives blog. I’m very happy to be able to tell you a bit about the John Gray Centre. The JGC will open in early 2012 and will be situated in the heart of Haddington town. The centre will house the Haddington branch library and the East Lothian archive and local history Service. The centre will also have a museum with a permanent exhibition space as well as a learning space and a temporary gallery for local artists and groups to display their work.

I am part of the archive team and my focus will be working with different communities to promote the use of the John Gray Centre through developing innovative learning programmes and activities that highlight the wealth of our collections. I’ve been in post for nearly three months now and in that time I’ve been able to see the great work all the services are doing which has helped me when thinking about the kinds of programmes I would like develop.  I’ll be working with other council services such as learning and development and the arts service as well as independent organisations working locally.

At the moment I’m developing an archive project for schools to introduce children to the concept of collecting. Through school visits we will ask P6 and 7 children what they think an archive collects and what we should collect for the future. Classes will be encouraged to start their own small archive, collecting things over the year that they can look back on. We can then display some of the class archives in the JGC, making the project more real for the children involved. There are 32 primary schools in East Lothian and we would like to give every school the opportunity to visit the archive. Investing time and energy in primary school children now will pay off in the future. When young people have an understanding of what archives are and how they could be relevant to their lives they are more likely to use these services in the future and feel comfortable visiting and accessing information. We have to start early!

In my short time working with the archive team I’ve seen a lot of things from the collection. Some amazing, like a soldier’s autograph book from WW1; some that made me stop and think, like a register of deaths documenting suicides and some beautiful things like the illustration we are using for our new Facebook page – check it out at: http://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/pages/East-Lothian-Council-Archives-Local-History/121137911289662

I am looking forward to learning more and helping to make these inspiring collections accessible for the future.

Caroline

An artist’s daughter

Some of William McTaggart's children with Betty (right)

William McTaggart (1835-1910) is recognised as one of the great Scottish artists. He is famous for his paintings of the sea and the countryside although he considered himself primarily as a portrait painter. He was especially interested in children and often included them in his work.              

In 1890 William McTaggart moved to a house called Dean Park in Bonnyrigg, Midlothian where he lived until his death in 1910. There is a family tradition that he moved away from Edinburgh to escape hostile gossip about his second marriage to Marjory Henderson, who was 21 years younger than him.              

William and Marjory McTaggart had nine children together, three of whom died young. Their fifth daughter Eliza or ‘Betty’ was born in 1896.              

Betty McTaggart never married and lived most of her life in Bonnyrigg before moving to a house called Davaar in Longniddry, East Lothian. She died in an Edinburgh nursing home on 10 October 1986. Sometime after her death her nephew, Neil McTaggart presented a collection of McTaggart family papers to the Bonnyrigg and Lasswade Local History Society. These papers are now held by Midlothian Local Studies on behalf of the History Society.              

Betty McTaggart inherited some of her father’s talent and was an accomplished artist in her own right. She obtained a DA degree and held exhibitions of her work.              

Amongst the McTaggart family papers there are a large number of sketchbooks of Betty McTaggart’s work. Many of her sketches feature children.              

Children from Cowgate Nursery School (with Betty McTaggart?)

 

At some time in her life, possibly in the 1940s, Betty McTaggart seems to have worked at Cowgate nursery school in Edinburgh. In 1937, the Church of Scotland opened a Free Breakfast Mission in Fishmarket Close to provide meals to local children. The school was designed to help the children of poor families living in and around the Cowgate area of Edinburgh, then a notoriously deprived part of the city. In 1942 the school moved to a new site at Guthrie Street. It was taken over by the Edinburgh Corporation in 1959 and rebuilt in the early 1960s.              

This photograph is thought to show Betty McTaggart (centre) with children from Cowgate Nursery School awaiting a royal visitor to Edinburgh

 

During her time at the school, Betty produced many sketches of the pupils, often showing them in the playground or at their lessons. Some of these delightful sketches were drawn literally on the backs of envelopes and scraps of paper.              

Children in Cowgate nursery school playground by Betty McTaggart

 

It is interesting that some the children in the sketches are named:              

Charlie Ainslie  
Joan Cairns
Anna Conway
Peter Daly
Nancy Day
David Elder
Catherine Gardiner
Sandra Huggan
Isaac McCallum
Martha McEwan
 Joe McGlyn
Josephine McGlyn
Alec McGregor
Robert Marshall
Linda Milne   
Catherine Mooney
Jimmy Moore
Janette Niven
Mary Niven
Maureen O’Connor
George O’Donnel
Maureen Sandman
James Taylor
Rosemary Watt      

Martha McEwan by Betty McTaggart

 

Linda Milne by Betty McTaggart

 

Cowgate Nursery school children at tea by Betty McTaggart

 

It would be nice to trace some of these children, who now would be in their 70s and 80s, and to reunite them with their sketches. We will be contacting Cowgate nursery school in due course but if anybody has any further information about either Betty McTaggart or Cowgate nursery school then please contact Midlothian Local Studies.              

For further information on William McTaggart and his association with Bonnyrigg and Lasswade please click on this link: Bonnyrigg and Lasswade Local History Society