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Showing posts with the label Scottish Middle March

Dryhope Tower

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Walter Scott of Harden – or Auld Wat to give him his reiver nickname – was married to Mary Scott of Dryhope, a bonny lass known as ‘the flower of Yarrow,’ and they had six sons and six daughters. Auld Wat is famous for his dry line: “Aye, if you had fower legs, you wouldn’t stand there lang,” on passing a large haystack on his way back from one of his raids, while his bugle horn, complete with carved initials, is on display in the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh. He was also one of the chief riders in the rescue of Kinmont Willie Armstrong from Carlisle Castle. The substantial ruins of the tower at Dryhope are still standing beside Dryhope farm near Saint Mary’s Loch, surrounded by the beautiful green hills just off the Southern Upland Way, and can be visited.

Mary, Queen of Scots House, Jedburgh

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The crow stepped gables and smart houses of Jedburgh mark it as a typical Border town. But not many others can boast of having an original tower and bastle house where Royalty lived right in the centre. Mary, Queen of Scots, stayed there in 1566 and it’s now lovingly dedicated to her with a grand collection of objects relating to her on display in each themed room. It’s free to visit and open year round. Mary’s lover, then third husband, Lord Bothwell had been stabbed by the reiver Little Jock Elliot of the Park who is famous for the refrain: ‘Wha daur meddle wi me!’ She rode out from the town in miserable weather to where he lay injured at Hermitage. Mary caught pneumonia on the way and it almost killed her, leading the monarch to moan: ‘would that I had died in Jedburgh,’ as her troubles piled up. Jedburgh Castle Jail and museum was built in 1823 on the remains of the original Jedburgh Castle – ironically by an Elliot, whose kinsmen so often occupied the earlier cel...

Smailholm Tower

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Smailholm is probably the classic Scottish pele tower. Made famous as an inspiration to the novelist Sir Walter Scott, the former Pringle stronghold is perched on a rocky outcrop five miles west of Kelso and now belongs to Historic Scotland. The Pringles (originally Hoppringle) were one of the clans of East Teviotdale that signed a bond of manrent to serve Archibald Douglas, 8 th Earl of Angus, in 1576 along with the Taits, Davisons, Youngs, Burns and a Dalgliesh. In the same year they raided a man called Rugley with Sir John Kerr and in 1597 the Pringles were raiding the Ords – including John Ord, the mayor of Berwick – and lifting four score sheep among other plunder. The family were also implicated in the notorious murder of Sir Walter Scott of Branxholme on Edinburgh High Street in 1552 as accomplices of the Kerrs and Humes. Smailholm is open from the 1 st of April to the 30 th of September, from Monday to Sunday, 9.30am to 5.30pm with last entry at 5pm, wh...