#freechurch — Public Fediverse posts
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Educating Newhaven: the thread about the Victoria and other Schools
Since at least he late 16th century, education in the village of Newhaven has been conducted under the auspices of the Society of Free Fishermen. This was the local fraternal society, one which jealously guarded the privilege of maintaining their own poor and providing for the community. Their first known schoolroom in School Close (now called Lamb’s Court) off of the Main Street, the building and teacher paid for by the Society. Its pupils – all boys at the time – paid a fee, which could be waived at the discretion of the Boxmaster; the elected official in charge of the Free Fishermen’s poor box.
Newhaven as depicted on Robinson & Fergus’ 1759 survey of Edinburgh. Main Street is easily discernible, with Whale Brae ending at the The Whale inn and the recognisable placename of “Peacocks” at the edge of the village by the Links. The Free Fishermen’s first school was in the range of buildings highlighted blue, to the west of St Andrew’s Square (now Fishmarket Square). Credit Edinburgh City Archives, own photo.By the early 19th century the old schoolroom was dilapidated and so in 1817, under the spiritual guidance of the Rev Dr Ireland of North Leith Parish Church (where Newhaven then worshipped), the foundation stone for a new schoolhouse was laid at the west of Main Street: where the Free Fishermen’s meeting hall would later be built. The Society raised £140 towards the cost, the City of Edinburgh (the notional civic authority) contributed £10, £5 each came from the Duke of Buccleuch and Lord Melville, and twenty cartloads of “best rubble” were donated by the proprietors of Craigleith Quarry. The teacher who was employed was not up to his task however and the Rev Ireland took an ever increasing role in oversight to ensure the children’s literacy was sufficient for them to read their catechism and the bible, thus progress in their religious and moral education. In 1822 the minister instituted the Newhaven Education Society, which the following year took over complete control of the school. By 1825 girls and infants (aged three to seven) were being admitted, the latter being unusual at the time and of great value in a community where the menfolk were away at sea much of the time and the women and older girls daily worked far from the village.
“Newhaven Minstrels” by Keeley Halswelle, 1866. Black and white facsimile from a sale at Sotheby’s of the original oil painting depicting children of Newhaven singing. Halswelle painted a number of evocative, romantic scenes of Newhaven folk around this time. Credit Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British ArtIn 1828 the charge of North Leith Parish was taken up by Rev Dr James Buchanan at which time the school had one hundred and sixty pupils. The new minister began to conduct mid-week services at the schoolhouse for the benefit of the elderly and infirm, which grew in popularity to such an extent to make the case of building a church in the village itself (its previous – Catholic – chapel had fallen out of use after the Reformation in 1560). In October 1836 a new Chapel of Ease was opened on the New Cut (the northern extension of Craighall Road) as a mission of North Leith under Buchanan. Newspaper reports note that the undercroft was to house a school, but whether this was a day school or a Sabbath school is not clear. In 1838 the church was raised to the status of a Quoad Sacra Parish (that is one in only an ecclesiastical sense, without the civic functions of a civil parish) under its own minister, the Rev James Fairbairn.
The Rev Dr James Fairbairn (seated) preaches to Bessy Crombie, Mary Combe, Margaret Lyell and two other Newhaven Fishwives, while James Gall of the Carrubbers Close Mission listens on. The scene is staged for the camera outside the Rock Villa studio of David Octavius Hill & Robert Adamson on Calton Hill. Collection of the National Galleries of ScotlandThe Rev Buchanan left North Leith for the High Kirk of Edinburgh in 1840 but had likely instituted a committee before his departure to try and acquire a feu of land to build a new village school. These plans came at a turbulent time in the religious life of Newhaven (and Scotland in general): at The Disruption of 1843 the majority of the parishioners followed their minister and walked out of the Established Church of Scotland (the Kirk) and into the new Free Kirk. In this case the walk-out was figurative as well as literal – the Free Kirk congregation refused to give up the use of the parish church until they were removed by legal action in 1849 (allegedly the communion silverware mysteriously “disappeared” at this time). In the midst of this upheaval the site for a new school was secured at the east of the village on Newhaven Links from the City of Edinburgh. This spot was at that time home to a dilapidated boat shed called the Life House, which housed a lifeboat eschewed by the fishermen who preferred and trusted their own boats for mercy missions and never used it. The map below shows that this school’s boundary wall was on the high spring tide mark.
1852 Ordnance Survey Town Plan of Edinburgh showing the Victoria School at the west of the Links. A single room, single storey affair with tiered seating at one end and other bench seats around the walls and in the centre of the floor. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of ScotlandThe foundation stone was laid in 1844 and it is likely that the Free Kirk was involved in the establishment as they maintained privileges of using the premises as a Sunday School and it served as a temporary home while their new church was erected on Pier Place. It was however not a denominational school: the Ordnance Survey Name Book of 1853 records it was superintended by ministers of both village kirks. The building was a simple affair; a single storey, single room, Gothic-style affair by the architect John Lessels. The Building Stones of Edinburgh lists its stone as coming from Grange Quarry in Burntisland, which corresponds with anecdotal evidence that the steeple of the Free Kirk had its stones brought across the Forth from Fife in the fishermen’s boats. The Caledonian Mercury in February 1846 refers to it as the New Schoolhouse however it would soon acquire the name of Victoria School in honour of the monarch, confirmed in the aforementioned Name Book:
A neat and substantially built schoolhouse in the Village of Newhaven, it was erected in 1835 and is under the superintendence of the Ministers of Established & Free Churches, the attendance is about 80 scholars and the schoolmaster’s salary consisting of school fees and other amendments amounts to about £50
Ordnance Survey Name Book for Midlothian, entry for Victoria School. Vol. 76 (North Leith Parish) page 81, 1852. OS1/11/76The date of erection given above – 1835 – cannot be correct, however it may suggest that the school had its origins in an earlier establishment before it removed to the 1844 building; perhaps it is that mentioned as being held in the undercroft of the parish church? Naming the new school after the reigning monarch would not have been an unusual thing to do, however Newhaven had a special place in its heart for her on account of a diary entry she made on the occasion of her visit to Edinburgh:
1852 Town Plan of Edinburgh, centred on Newhaven, showing the Quoad Sacra parish church on the left (green), the Free Kirk on Pier Place in blue and three red buildings, from left to right these are; the 1817 school of the Newhaven Education Society, the original Free Fishermen’s school on School Close and the 1843 Victoria School. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of Scotland…the fishwomen are the most striking-looking people, and are generally young and pretty women – very clean and very Dutch-looking, with their white caps and bright-coloured petticoats.
Queen Victoria’s diary entry regarding Newhaven Fishwives, 3rd September 1842The Victoria School operated alongside the old Free Fishermen’s school for a time, however by the dawn of the 1860s the latter was no longer up to its task and so in June 1861 factional differences were put to one side and both village ministers jointly presided over the laying of the foundation stone of another new school. £1,100 had been raised towards this locally and it was to be located on ground behind the parish church on the New Cut, although was to be non-denominational. Unfortunately work was brought to a stop by the untimely death of a key promoter – Dr Robertson, Professor of Church History at the University of Edinburgh – that caused that the organising committee to overlook applying for the necessary government grant, leaving half the required funds wanting. The building was therefore only partially completed when it opened in 1862 for its first 200 scholars and a great fund-raising effort took place across Edinburgh to help finish it, which took place in 1863 with the aid of funds from the trust of the late Dr Andrew Bell (see also Dr Bell’s School). For this latter reason it became known as the Madras School as it adopted Bell’s Madras System of monitorial education, i.e. where a single, large, multi-age class was presided over by a teacher whose instruction was relayed to the pupils by monitors; older children more advanced in their studies. The 1861 census recorded 605 children of school age in Newhaven at that time, 300 of which could be taught in this new school.
The Madras School behind the former Newhaven-on-Forth Parish Church, outlined amber. The two-storey addition to the left was a house for the schoolmaster. After its school use it became the church hall, and latterly the church building was converted to housing and the congregation now worships in the hall.Alterations were also made to Victoria by Lessels in 1861 and its school role increased to a point where infant classes had to be moved back to the old Free Fishermen’s School; probably what is referred to as St John’s Infant School in some newspaper mentions. Newhaven continued to provide for the education of its own children in this manner for the next decade or so, until everything changed with the passing of the Education (Scotland) Act 1872, which both made education compulsory for children between the ages of five and thirteen and also formed School Boards (largely along parish or burgh boundaries) to organise it. Newhaven was placed within the new Leith School Board, who surveyed the state of affairs in the village and found there were 291 children in the Madras School, 110 at Victoria, 141 in the infant school and 53 in the Free Kirk’s school; a total of 595. There were also children attending a school to the west on Lower Granton Road but this had been allocated to Cramond School Board who could not come to terms with the Leith Board and so they were unceremoniously barred from the former. At this time the Board found 22% of all children of school age in their district were not in education so their immediate priority was to find capacity for accommodating this absent fifth of scholars.
Former Granton School, hard to spot in the terrace of cottages on Lower Granton Road, look for the small ventilator cowl on the roof and the changed spacing of the doors.Looking at Newhaven’s schools, the Board found it could not acquire the Madras School as it was built on land vested in perpetuity to the Church, so they left it to continue to be run under its existing management and instead took over the Victoria School in 1874. At this time they extended the building and to this end 705 square metres of Newhaven Links were acquired from the Leith Dock Commissioners on very favourable terms. The Board’s architect George Craig added a new wing to the rear bringing capacity up to about 300, with associated entrance vestibules and toilets to bring the place up to the required standards of the Scotch Education Department (grants towards funding were dependent on the Boards meeting the standards for buildings set out in the Department’s Scotch Code). At this time the playground was also expanded and divided into separate spaces for boys and girls.
1876 Town Plan of Edinburgh, showing the footprint of the Victoria School after its 1874 extension by the Board, with the original outline and boundary of the 1844 schoolhouse shown in red. The plot size was almost doubled by this time, new entrance vestibules added and a new wing built to the rear but it remained single storey. Playgrounds for girls and boys were now separated. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of ScotlandBy 1879 the roll at Victoria was 294 with an average attendance of 257: at 12% the absence rate was the lowest across the Leith district, which averaged 18%. With the school reaching capacity in 1884 the Board spent £2,854 to expand it again, increasing accommodation to 503 pupils. No additional land was available for the expansion so architect George Craig had to build up, adding an additional storey. This required three external stair towers to access the upper floor, segregated for boys and girls, as the original building lacked an internal stairwell. Infants and juniors would remain on the ground floor, the senior children going upstairs. Particular attention was paid to ventilation – an obsession to Victorian school designers – with inlet vents added at floor levels, patent fanlights at the tops of all classroom windows and a large fleche-style ventilation cupola on the roof crossing, in which a gas burner created a through draught to extract classroom air through vents in all the classroom ceilings. At this time a small belfry was added above the west stair tower for the school bell and a hot water heating system was installed, the boiler located in a basement at the rear.
1893 Town Plan of Edinburgh, showing the footprint of Victoria School after its 1885 extension by the Board highlighted orange, the original 1844 building in red and the 1874 additions in blue. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of ScotlandTo raise the height of the building the original decorative buttresses on the south elevation had to be expanded to take on a practical function and support the facade of the upper storey. Craig kept the additions in the Collegiate Gothic style that was then in vogue for school architecture and added carved date panels which read: 1843 VICTORIA 1885, LEITH SCHOOL BOARD. At the formal re-opening on Monday March 2nd 1885 the Chairman of the School Board, Dr Mitchell, delivered a rather patronising address to parents along the lines of the new school being bigger than the village deserved and they should therefore “second the efforts of the Board by seeing that their children attended.“
Tablets added on the rebuilt south façade of the school during the 1884-85 extension commemorating the laying of the foundation stone in 1843 and Leith School Board’s extension. “G. Craig, Archt.” can just be made out in small letters below the right hand panel. Photo © SelfIn his assertion the Chairman would very soon be proven wrong: within a year the managing committee of the Madras School wrote to the Board informing them of their intention to close down for want of funds. The Government inspector had condemned their building as below standard and with the founding endowment almost exhausted there was no money to bring it up to code, which would result in the loss of state grants. If the Madras school were to close its two to three hundred students would suddenly become the Board’s responsibility to house and educate, but they were reluctant to simply take over its running as they too would have to expend money bringing it up to standard while trying to find a long term solution. Ultimately, the Board dithered during which time the roll at Victoria grew: to 623 in 1887. This was well in excess of the nominal capacity and was kept manageable only by a high absence rate of 35%, meaning average attendance was only 406. This was result of a severe outbreak of measles in the village, one which would take over two years to bring under control.
Victoria after the 1885 extension, south façade. Credit: Edinburgh & Scottish Collection, Edinburgh City LibrariesFrustrated at the Board’s lack of action – and possibly pushed by the parish church wanting to get their hands on the building – Madras’ management brought matters to a head and announced that with only £100 remaining the school would shut at the end of summer term 1888. A consequence of this would be £50 of the remaining funds would have to be returned to Dr Bell’s Trust as it was originally granted as a loan for which time the school remained opened. The Board now had no option but to temporarily take on the lease of the school and make what improvements they could, representations were made to the Education Department who agreed to maintain the grant temporarily on condition that a plan was submitted in writing. Things didn’t start well for the Board’s when their appointed headmistress, Miss Menzies, turned the job down! The school was therefore temporarily supervised by the headmaster at Bonnington Road Public School for the start of the 1888-89 term, at which time its roll stood at 248 (but with the high absence rate, average attendance was only 151).
Photograph of primary 4-aged class (seven to eight years old) at Victoria School in 1907, the girl in the back row second from the right named as Maggie Crawford and the teacher as Miss Don. Collection of City of Edinburgh Museums & Galleries, NH.2010.7Leith School Board had bought itself time to plan for the future and its preferred solution was a grand new public school on Craighall Road with a capacity of 1,600 pupils, which would be more than sufficient to absorb the excess from Newhaven and other local schools But before these plans could be advanced an even greater crisis landed in the Board’s in-tray: the Local Government (Scotland) Act 1889, which was preparing for state-provided education being made free (under the 1872 most children were still charged a nominal fee, unless in receipt of poor relief) and in doing so altered the arrangements for state-aid for endowed schools (those supported financially by a founding bequest).
A notice issued by Leith School Board regarding the relief of school fees per the Code issued by the Scotch Education Department, exhibited in the Heritage Museum at the former Victoria School.Such schools included those of Dr Bell’s Trust, of which there were two examples in Leith; on Great Junction Street and South Fort Street. At a stroke the changes meant these schools ceased to be financially viable and the trustees sought to wind them up – making them too the problem of the School Board. The Board closed South Fort Street, its pupils transferred to a very crowded North Fort Street Public School. Reluctantly Great Junction Street was adopted by the Board, which they would enlarged into Junction Place Public School, universally remembered locally as just Dr Bell’s. This issue, while while not directly impacting Newhaven, distracted the attention and stretched the finances of the Board for a good while.
Statue and memorial tablets for the Rev Dr Andrew Bell on the gable of former Dr Bell’s School on Junction Place, marking its establishment by his endowment and according to his “Madras System” educational principles in 1839. Picture copyright HES, via Trove.Scot SC2648345The foundation stone of the new Craighall Road Public School was as a result not laid until July 1891 and it would not open for business until 4th September 1893, by which time there was a capacity crisis in Newhaven such that 100 children were not able to get a school place. Despite the Board’s hopes, the new school provided no answer as many parents shunned it: it was felt to be too far from the village and more importantly it charged fees (Boards were allowed to charge fees in a small number of their schools after 1890). With North Fort Street full and the Madras School closing imminently the state of affairs in Newhaven was only going to get more acute. Once more, the Board felt it had no option but to once again ask George Craig to draw up plans to expand the Victoria School.
Craighall Road Public School in 1893, the year it opened. This building is now part of Trinity Academy. Notice the lamplighter (Leerie) up his ladder on the left. Photograph by Alexander Adam Inglis, Edinburgh and Scottish Collection. Edinburgh City LibrariesBy good fortune in 1892 the Leith Dock Commissioners had obtained parliamentary authority to make improvements to Newhaven harbour that included land reclamation around the Links. The Board therefore negotiated with the Commissioners for a feu on some of this reclaimed land around the school, allowing the size to be almost tripled to 2,670 square metres. In 1896 work commenced at a cost of £5,064 to add 288 more places to the school, bringing the roll up to 800. On the enlarged plot a new three-storey extension was added to the east, with the rear of the 1885 extension being increased in height to three storeys too. Further extensions were added to the rear and the enlarged playgrounds had playsheds to give children some shelter from inclement weather; the despite the land reclamation the school still backed onto the Forth coast.
1893 Town Plan of Edinburgh, showing the footprint of the Victoria School on Newhaven Links after the 1897 extension which is shown in teal: the outline and boundary of the 1844 schoolhouse is red, the 1874 extensions are blue and 1885 is orange. By this time further extensions had been added to the rear. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of ScotlandWhile the Board’s preferred solution for Newhaven would have been a new build school to the west of the Village, for economic reasons this was never possible and Craig’s repeated expansions to the school over three decades made the best economic use of a small site. Because the same architect underook all this work it was possible to maintain a coherence to the building which can make it difficult for modern eyes to unpick the multiple layers and additions: one might easily assume that the various tiers, cupolas, stair towers and projections were done intentionally, rather than just as a practicality.
The three principal phases of expanding the Victoria School, with the original and 1874 school in red, the 1885 enlargement in orange and the 1897 expansion in teal. George Craig cleverly used the existing stair tower on the south facade to access the third storey by extending its height and changing its orientation half way up – this explains the notch cut out of the building, which means the original windows still provide (some) light into the stairwell.The school is very efficiently conducted, and discipline and general tone are excellent. In the junior section the results of examination were on the whole highly creditable, the only notable weakness being in the written work of the lower division of the third class. In the senior section, both oral and written work of the fourth and fifth classes were very good, with the exception of the the fifth class, which was not more than very fair. The class work of the sixth class leaves room for improvement: reading and recitation were too hurried, and history and nature knowledge were not strong.
Leith School Board’s annual appraisal of Victoria School, reported in the Leith Burghs Pilot, Saturday October 6th 1900Leith School Board ceased to exist as a result of the Education (Scotland) Act 1918, which abolished these bodies and merged them into a smaller number of Education Authorities; for Leith this was the Edinburgh Education Authority. The rest of the municipal functions of Leith, and by extension Newhaven, soon followed and were amalgamated (seized against their will, generations of Leithers will tell you) into Edinburgh in 1920. In 1925 the girls of the school won the accolade of “Overhead Ball Champions of Leith“. This was a relatively new game that was very popular with girls. The basic premise was akin to a form of Rounders played with a football and with the participants arranged into a “batting” and a “fielding” team. The batting team stood in a line and its leader would hit the ball by hand in a random direction at which point the leader began to run rings around their line. It was the job of the fielders to get the ball, arrange themselves in a line behind whomever had the ball and quickly pass it back, hand over head, to the back of the line at which point the umpire blew their whistle. The fielders scored a run for each circuit of the line that their leader had run.
Victoria School’s champion Overhead Ball Game team of 1925. Edinburgh Evening News, July 17th 1925The Education Authorities were a transitional body, and as a result of further local government re-organisation in 1927 it became the Education Committee of the Corporation of the City of Edinburgh. George Craig’s additions served Victoria School well, until 1930 by which point updated accommodation was needed – the convenor of the Corporation’s Property and Works Committee labelled it as the “worst” in Edinburgh “in regard to size, light and intercommunication“: it was “very difficult to get into… and more difficult to get out“. And so yet again an expansion was planned on land reclaimed from the sea, which would take the plot size up to 2,650 square metres; some seven and a half times that of the original 1844 school. In 1932 a new infant department for 200 children was opened at a cost of £14,471 in the east of the enlarged playground. This new structure was a break with the Victorian “Barracks” of the School Board era and instead what emerged was a low, wide, single-storey L-plan structure that sought to make the best use of natural light and ventilation.
1975 photograph of the Infant Department extension, added 1932, demolished 1980s. HES, via Trove.Scot SC1646779This addition coincided with a tipping point for the village’s fortunes: after a very good 1924 season the inshore fisheries were set on an irreversible path of decline due to overfishing. The larger, more modern and mechanised trawlers that were needed to fish ever further out to sea passed Newhaven by and headed instead for Granton which displaced it as the principal fishing port in the locality. The village’s prosperity had always followed that of the herring and the sprats, and the oysters before them, and after four centuries began to dwindle. In July 1935 Dr Sym of the Corporation’s Education Committee provoked outrage when he proposed its school needed special classes for “backward children” on account of seventy percent of its pupils being “normally slow“. His colleague Councillor Allan said this was due to “inter-marrying” by which he implied inbreeding. Newhaven folk had largely always wed other Newhaven folk but this was a practicality; Marriages were as much a business union as one of love and the inherited skills of fisherman and fishwife were mutually complementing but only acquired by growing up into them. Public protest meetings were convened in the Free Fishermen’s Hall, on the site of the 1817 school, to demand an apology to which representatives of the Committee were invited. Councillor Allan attended and apologised, Dr Sym declined to do so.
The school remained open during World War II, although some children were evacuated in 1939 to Fort William. In 1944 its centenary was marked with the unveiling of a wooden copy of the “Armada Stone” presented by Leith shipyard proprietor Henry Robb, unveiled by Lord Provost William Y. Darling. The original stone can be found in the wall of the flats nearby at Auchinleck Court and a metal copy is on the school’s south gable as a war memorial.
The wooden copy of the Armada or Newhaven Stone presented to the school by shipyward proprietor Henry Robb to celebrate its centenry in 1944. It is located in the small museum on the ground floor of the old school, a metal copy is on the outside wall on the south gable as a war memorial tablet. Own photo.A pageant was held in the Usher Hall retelling the history of the village since its foundation by King James IV in the 16th century; the children dressed in period costumes and many of the girls wore their Fishwives’ Braws, the boys their knitted fishing Ganseys. The children raised £2,000 through their own efforts for Leith Hospital, sufficient to endow three cots in the Children’s Ward.
Centenary pageant in 1944, CC-by-NC-SA, Thelma via Edinburgh Collected, donor 0301-071As Newhaven’s fortunes continued to decline post war, the City Corporation hastened its demise by designating the village a Comprehensive Development Area (CDA) in 1959, giving itself powers of compulsory purchase over most of the village in order to demolish most of the old houses (which it had deemed “unfit” and constituting slums) and rebuild them. Like many such schemes done with good intention from a far off desk in City Chambers, ultimately it lost sight of the fact that a community is much more than just its buildings and by dispersing its people to new housing elsewhere it irreversibly altered the character of the place. Families with children were given priority for re-housing and this meant those left behind were frequently the elderly: as a result the population of school age children in the village went into a steep, and what seemed like terminal, decline.
1949 class portrait at Victoria School, CC-by-NC-SA, Thelma via Edinburgh Collected, donor 0407-001The work of the CDA in “improving” Newhaven continued into the 1970s with a new bypass road built to the north of the village in an attempt to reduce traffic along Main Street. Originally this was called Newhaven Place but is now an extension of Lindsay Road and required the school boundary to be moved a few metres south. To compensate for this loss, a portion of land to the east of the school was incorporated into the playground. Unfortunately the heavy traffic – much of it lorries from Granton or Leith Docks – now passed close behind the school buildings and damaged the foundations of the 1930 Infant Department to such an extent that it had to be demolished in the late 1970s or early 1980s. By this time the school’s declining roll no longer required the space, but it did mean its most modern facilities were lost.
An existential threat to the school came in February 1983 when closure was mooted by the Conservative-led administration of Lothian Regional Council, its pupils would have been split between Wardie and Trinity primary schools. This proposal was voted down by the joint Labour and Liberal Alliance opposition but did nothing to reverse the decline in the school’s fortunes, which declined with the spirit of the village of Newhaven. As the old ways began to fade into memory, an awareness of heritage began to flourish locally and concerted efforts were made to reverse the decline. The traditional galas were revived in 1985, with pupils playing an important part performing songs and dances, the girls in their traditional Braws costumes. A small museum was put together in the school by pupils in 1986 to showcase various exhibits of local historic interest to the public which had accumulated in the building over the years.
Exhibits in the school’s museum include an old cast school bell (which I am informed is *not* the Victoria bell, but is local).The school celebrated its 150th anniversary in 1994, but its future was still anything but assured. By 1997 the roll was just 131 children and ten years later it dipped below 100. This might have been the end, but salvation came from the sea – or rather by the reclamation of it. Mass house building had been taking place behind the sea wall of Western Harbour since 2003 and as families moved in and children became of school age after 2007 the roll at Victoria began to increase for the first time in decades. It has never looked back; back above 100 in 2008, in 2012 it passed 150 meaning a return to “full stream” – having seven individual classes, one for each age group. The increase was helped by the closure of nearby Fort Primary School in 2010 – a rather short-sighted cost-cutting move, which very quickly precipitated accommodation crises at both Victoria and Trinity Primary Schools!
School roll figures for Victoria Primary, published by the City of Edinburgh Council in a consultation document.As a short term solution four new classrooms were added in a modern building in the playground in 2014 and in 2016 the Council decided to build an entirely new and much larger replacement school. As had always been the case, they looked to reclaimed land for space. The speculative residential development of Western Harbour had largely stalled after the 2008 financial crisis and there was plenty land available and so the new building, on Windrush Drive, is sited on a very generous 14,750 square metre plot – five and a half times that of the old school and over forty times that of the 1844 school! It has a capacity to grow to “three streams” (three primary classes in each of the seven age groups) and is forecast to reach its capacity of 500 within a decade. When the old building closed in 2022 it was by far and away the oldest still in educational use by the city (the next oldest were all 1875 School Board builds).
Artist’s impression of the new Victoria Primary School in Western Harbour.Often the future of the old school buildings in Edinburgh is uncertain and they are either left to the vandals or turned over to housing developers. However the old Victoria had a very different prospect when it closed and was taken over by Community Asset Transfer by the Heart of Newhaven Community CIC, funded by the Scottish Land Fund. This preserved the Victorian building and converted it into a mixed-use community centre and base for artists and small businesses. Heritage is one of the Heart of Newhaven’s key founding aims and to this end it maintains the old school museum and houses the History of Education Centre and its Victorian School Room.
The Victorian Classroom in Victoria School, presided over by the eponymous monarch. Via https://www.histedcentre.org.uk who are now based in the building.If you are interested in seeing inside this very interesting old building and its numerous heritage exhibits, there are tours each week that I can highly recommend.
The Heart of Newhaven Community Centre in 2026 on a Saturday open day.Note to readers: unfortunately in April 2026, a third-party plug-in more than exceeded its authority and broke many of the image links on this site. No images were lost but I will have to restore them page-by-page, which may take some time. In the meantime please bear with me while I go about rectifying this issue.
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An experiment in local self-improvement: the thread about Thomas Chalmers and the West Port Territorial Free Church
This site likes to indulge in occasional posts to answer the question of “why did the Victorians build so many churches and why should we care?” Well, this is another such post! The Chalmers Territorial Free Church and its associated school was established in 1844 in the early days of the Free Kirk as a Territorial church; that is, a church with its own defined territory to serve, but not one that had a legally defined parish. “Rapid urbanisation left many city communities entirely un-churched. Limitations on how churches and parishes were authorised hampered “planting” churches… So Territorial churches were established to meet the need.” (my thanks to Neil Macleod for keeping me right on this subject).
Chalmers was Thomas Chalmers (1780-1847); minister, theologian, moral philosopher, political economist and reformer. Born in the Fife village of Anstruther, he found himself at different times as moderator of both the Kirk (the Church of Scotland) and Free Kirk. Ministering in Glasgow after 1815, he was acutely aware of the lack of churches in urban, industrial communities and therefore the social security services they provided to people, particularly the urban poor. He made a survey of his parish (the Tron) and found of 10,000 people, there were fewer than 100 boys in Sabbath school. To remedy this he sought to establish such schools but was not content to just wait for people to come to his schools, he saw the task as akin mission work and “they must go forth to the population inhabiting [the] territory“. And so he recruited 4 Sabbath school teachers but instead of spreading them amongst the entire parish, he assigned each a neighbourhood containing 30 families and instructed them to concentrate on trying to encourage as much of their “territory” into Sunday education as possible. The scheme was a success and drew recruits to it; he soon had 44 teachers.
Thomas Chalmers by John Faed, 1847Chalmers believed that communities should be assisted to help themselves at a local scale; financially, socially and morally; rather than just exist on charitable or state support (or with neither!). And he of course believed that the church could – no, should – be at the centre of such a self-improving community; this was his concept of Territorial ministry. Back in Edinburgh and as head of the Free Kirk (which went its own way in The Disruption of 1843), the West Port district was selected by him as an ideal community to test his ideas, and the Territorial Church was established in 1844.
The West Port in 1850 by William Channing. A densely packed, run-down neighbourhood of ancient dwellings and hostelries mixed amongst tanneries and slaughterhouses. © Edinburgh City LibrariesHe called this scheme an Experimentum Crucis; an experiment of the Cross. This would go on to serve a territory that encompassed the districts of the West Port, Grassmarket, part of the Lawnmarket and upper Cowgate; however he was clear that to be a success the scheme would have to start small, and local, and grow from there.
The eventual West Port Territory, drawn after MSS. CHA 5.13.318. Base map is 1832 “Great Reform Act” town plan of Edinburgh. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of ScotlandChalmers’ first school in the Territory (which doubled as a preaching hall on Sundays) was established in November 1844 in a disused tannery in the West Port, until more permanent premises were constructed. It was “rather repulsive in character” entered “by a close, which is so low that people are obliged to stoop to make their way through it“. This school, in Chalmers’ words, should show a preference to “one and all of the families of [the] district, where the great object is that the school should be filled from among the families of the district“. This may seem a sensible concept to those of us brought up in a system of school catchments, but these did not exist at the time. His idea was that a community school, serving the community, would increase the education of the community as a whole; not just distribute it thinly across the city to where its scholars were drawn from. The school charged a token 2d per week per child, to “[teach] people that education was worthy of its price“. It began with fewer than 60 scholars but soon had 280. Entrance was strictly for families of the Territory.
The first minister for the Territory was the Rev. William Tasker. Tasker’s task would not be easy, and he initially reported:
We remember of having the seventh successive door slapped in our face ere we had time to tell our message, and of then going to another tenement and entering house by house only to find men and women rolling on the floor of a desolate dwelling in indiscriminate drunkenness; whilst mingling with their curses and their blasphemies, the heart-piercing looks and cries of their infant children assailed us with irresistible appeals for bread to allay the cutting pangs of hunger.
Rev. William Tasker, quoted from New College Library Blog.The permanent church (that in the illustration at the top of this post) was established in 1845 thanks to a bequest of £300 from Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne. It had seats for 600 worshippers, included a purpose-built school room and also had a washing house, drying green and playground for the children, “so that they have a great step in advance towards the completion of their parochial economy“.
1849 OS Town Plan centred on Chalmers Territorial Free Church and School. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of ScotlandThe Experiment would go on to include the schools and church, a savings bank and a library. While the local population paid for these services, the church provided an enthusiastic corps of visitors, teachers and improvers to attend to the needs of the Territory. It should be noted that the latter “do-gooders” were not always welcomed with open arms.
The first building of the Chalmers Territorial Free Church, further down the West Port than the 1884 church. 1846 print by F. Schenck. © Edinburgh City LibrariesThomas Chalmers died in 1847, 176 years ago tomorrow (at the time of writing). He went to bed after working on a report for the General Assembly of the Free Kirk, and never woke up. His photograph was taken by Hill and Adamson in 1845 as part of their grand photography project for Painting the Disruption.
Thomas Chalmers, photograph, c. 1845 by David Octavius Hill and Robert AdamsonBy the 1880s the Territorial congregation had outgrown its initial, humble premises. In 1884 a new, grander church, 50% larger than its predecessor, was built up the road on the corner of a widened Lady Lawson Street. The old church was retained as a mission hall. Its minister was the Rev. James Jolly, who had served the community here since 1872.
The new church, with the old church retained as a mission hall. 1893 OS Town Plan, Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of ScotlandThis 1914 photo by the Edinburgh Photographic Society shows the new church of 1884, by which time it was in the United Free Church following the merger of (most of) the Free Kirk and the United Presbyterian (U.P.) Church.
Chalmers Territorial Free Church, a photograph by a member of the Edinburgh Photographic Society. © Edinburgh City LibrariesIn 1929 the majority of the United Free Church merged into the Church of Scotland and so too did the Territorial. The old church buildings was by now surplus to requirements and was sold in 1930. It became a store and commercial premises. The below photo is also an Edinburgh Photographic Society one from 1914, the close-up of the painted sign in the window of the neighbouring restaurant is fascinating. FISH & TRIPE. SUPPERS. HOT PIES.
West Port – south side – old Chalmer’s Territorial Church, a photograph by a member of the Edinburgh Photographic Society. © Edinburgh City LibrariesA new church hall was built, adjoining the 1884 church, with the proceeds of the sale of the first church, The Chalmers Hall, seen in this 1972 photo by S. G. Jackman.
West Port looking towards the Grassmarket, S. G. Jackman, 1972, © Edinburgh City LibrariesThe effects of post-war decline in church attendance and the depopulation of the Grassmarket and West Port (which had been taking place since 1920s) meant that there were just too many churches in this part of town – particularly now that nearly all of them were together in the Church of Scotland. And so in 1958 the Territorial merged with Lauriston Church just 150m away. From 1959, both church premises were used on alternate Sundays. In 1965 the Territorial building was sold to the Art School and Lauriston became the sole home. This combined Lauriston-Chalmers congregation would merge with, and moved to, Barclay Church at Bruntsfield in 1980, leaving not one, not two, but three vacant churches in the district.
Lauriston Place – south side, United Free Church at north west corner of Lauriston Gardens a photograph by a member of the Edinburgh Photographic Society, 1914 © Edinburgh City LibrariesNeither of these churches fared well. The Lauriston was sold to the YWCA in 1980 and on to the Arab Social League in 1981, who were never able to fund any work to convert it into a cultural centre and it slowly fell into disrepair. After almost 30 years of neglect, fire damage, vandalism and the toll of the elements and owner absenteeism, it was sold to new owners and slowly has come back to life as the Darul Arqam Masjid and Muslim Community Centre. The original Territorial church, later the mission hall, lay abandoned for decades. It was finally demolished in 1987 and a six-storey block of flats was built in its place in a mock-vernacular style. The Art School had the second Territorial pulled down and used it as little more than a car park. The site of the Territorial and adjacent derelict former Post Office tower block, eventually got the glass and synthetic stone office box redevelopment treatment so prevalent of noughties Edinburgh. The bombastically named Evolution House lay embarrassingly empty for a number of years however as occupants fell through, until the College of Art took it over and moved in. Which was an ironic end to things considering they had singularly failed to do anything meaningful with the plot or the predecessor building for the previous 40-odd years!
“Evolition House” (left).Note to readers: unfortunately in April 2026, a third-party plug-in more than exceeded its authority and broke many of the image links on this site. No images were lost but I will have to restore them page-by-page, which may take some time. In the meantime please bear with me while I go about rectifying this issue.
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Escaping “a gulf of sin and misery”: the thread about the Edinburgh Emigration Home for Destitute Children
Looking up something else in a Post Office Directory, my eye was caught by a rather sad sounding listing for the Canadian Home for Friendless Girls in Lauriston Lane, Edinburgh; a street long since built over. The Home was formed at a public meeting in December 1871 in Queen Street Hall which was organised by the Reverend and Mrs Blaikie. Its goal was establishing a mission to send “poor homeless and destitute girls” to the “rescue homes” in Canada of a Miss Macpherson. Annie Macpherson was an evangelical Scottish Quaker who, moved by the poverty she saw in the East End of London in the late 1860s, had set up the Home of Industry in Spitalfield. She organised a scheme of assisted emigration for destitute children from London to new and better lives in Canada. After education and training they would be placed with a suitably Christian host family as a domestic servant. To this end she set up “reception” and “distribution” homes in Canada and made arrangements with a network of children’s homes back in Britain and Ireland who would provide the “recruits“.
Annie Macpherson, “a friend of neglected children”.Annie Macpherson addressed the meeting in Edinburgh to testify to the success of the scheme; 800 children had already sent abroad to Canada. The Reverend William Garden Blaikie stated that premises had already been secured for the new venture in Edinburgh and a matron – Miss Tait – appointed. Margaret Blaikie, the minister’s wife, was to be secretary of the society and it was she who was the driving force behind the Home in Edinburgh. A Temperance advocate and long-time president of the Scottish Christian Union (a women’s Temperance society), it was during a visit to Canada in 1870 that she had met Annie. She was so impressed with the work that she resolved to get involved when she returned home. Finding that there was no existing organisation in Edinburgh to become involved through, she decided to set one up of her own and invited Annie back to Scotland to speak in public at its formation.
Margaret Blaikie in 1895The Home in Edinburgh took in “young women who have fallen from virtue and desire to redeem their character” or “young girls who have lost one or both parents or have living parents… of loose character.” (Boys were sent to Mr. Muir’s homes in either Yardheads in Leith or Musselburgh). Those girls admitted to the Home would be “clothed and taught and cared for” and “brought up in the ways of godliness and industry“. Ultimately they would be sent, suitably reformed and trained, to be placed in domestic service in Canada.
We are therefore as thoroughly convinced as ever that our scheme presents a merciful opening for many destitute children who would not otherwise escape the gulf of sin and misery on whose borders they have been born and reared.
Margaret Blaikie, writing to the North British Agriculturalist, May 1875The name of the Home had quickly been changed to the Edinburgh Emigration Home for Destitute Children. In 1874 it reported that it had 16 girls resident, awaiting the journey to Canada. In 1875 it was 31. It was run by voluntary donation and fund-raising; Margaret Blaikie made it a point of founding principle to never make public appeal for funds. It obviously prospered as in 1880 the Home bought its premises at Lauriston Lane, and briefly closed them to refurbish and enlarge them, adding an additional wing with 4 extra bedrooms. It reopened in November 1881.
The Home was in a villa at 6 Lauriston Lane, built over first by the Royal Infirmary and then subsequent redevelopment when the hospital moved to the edge of the City.In its 20-or-so years of existence, some 700 children were removed from the homes of destitute and drunken families, and some 300 were “assisted” to emigrate, others were adopted or found relatives or positions in Scotland. Most of the girls sent from Edinburgh went to Annie Macpherson’s Marchmont Distribution Home in Belleville, Ontario,
The Marchmont Distribution Home. © Community Archives of Belleville and Hastings CountyAn 1892 publication noted that of the girls sent to Canada from Edinburgh, “at least ninety five percent have done well, and less than five percent have been unsatisfactory“. Its success was put down to distributing the girls widely over the country in family homes, rather than keeping them massed together in a central institution. The expansion of the Royal Infirmary in 1889 saw a compulsory purchase impending for the Home; advancing in age and noting that there were now larger organisations in Scotland carrying out work such as her own (in particular Quarrier’s Orphan Homes of Scotland), she decided it best to wind up her institution and retire. The proceeds of the sale and the remaining funds of the Home were gifted to the Society for the Protection of Children.
It was while minister of the Pilrig congregation of the Free Kirk that the Rev. Blaikie had commissioned both the original church building (the second purpose-built church for that Kirk) and its replacement by a more lavish and permanent building on the opposite corner. It remains a landmark to this day on Leith Walk, even though it has long since been within the established Church of Scotland.
The second Pilrig Free Church, now Pilrig St. Paul’s Church of Scotland. CC-by-SA 2.0 G LairdMargaret publicly wrote that she and her husband had become “total abstainers” in the 1870s and “always worked in conjunction with [eachother].” As well as sharing a zeal for Temperance with his wife the Rev. Blaikie was also a prolific writer and pamphleteer and advocate of improving conditions for working people. He formed a society which commissioned the Pilrig Model Buildings to provide model workers housing, one of the first such instances in Edinburgh. They are now known as Shaw’s Buildings or Shaw’s Street / Terrace / Place and were a sort of progenitor of the later Colonies housing.
Pilrig Model BuildingsAround the same time that Mrs Blaikie stepped back from her work with the Home, the Reverend resigned as minister at Pilrig and took up a chair in theology with the Free Church’s New College, rising to become Professor of Divinity. He resigned in 1897, aged 77, and the couple retired to North Berwick where he would die in 1899 and Margaret in 1915, aged 92. Annie Macpherson died in 1904.
Note to readers: unfortunately in April 2026, a third-party plug-in more than exceeded its authority and broke many of the image links on this site. No images were lost but I will have to restore them page-by-page, which may take some time. In the meantime please bear with me while I go about rectifying this issue.
If you have found this site useful, informative or amusing then you can help contribute towards its running costs by supporting me on ko-fi. This includes my commitment to keeping it 100% advert and AI free for all time coming, and in helping to find further unusual stories to bring you by acquiring books and paying for research.
Or please do just share this post on social media or amongst friends and like-minded people, sites like this thrive on being shared.Explore Threadinburgh by map:
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The Disruption: the thread about a religious schism that was a pivotal moment in the development of photography
Happy Disruption Day to all who celebrate! (that’s the 18th of May if you happen to be reading this at any other time). In case you aren’t too familiar with it, The Disruption of 1843 was a rather very seismic event in the civic and religious life of 19th century Scotland, whereby 121 ministers and 73 elders of the established Church of Scotland (“the Kirk”) walked out of the General Assembly and set up their very own church; the Free Church of Scotland (“the Free Kirk“). The walk-out was not just literary symbolism, those involved quite literally walked out of one Church (that of Saint Andrew on George Street, now the New Town Church) and down the hill to Tanfield Hall in Canonmills where they held a meeting creating their own. This became known as The Disruption Assembly.
St Andrew’s Church on George Street, looking towards St Andrew Square. Thomas Hosmer Shepherd sketch of 1828. National Galleries of Scotland.Five days after the walkout, the breakaway assembly re-convened at Tanfield and signed an Act of Separation from the Kirk. Around 474 ministers, almost one third of the establishment of the Kirk, left to join the breakway institution. Their appointed Moderator, Thomas Chalmers declared:
Tanfield Hall, a converted gasworks, 1849 painting by William Bonnar, which probably represents the union of the Relief Church and Secession Church a few years after the Distruption. © Edinburgh City LibrariesThough we quit the Establishment, we go out on the Establishment principle; we quit a vitiated Establishment but would rejoice in returning to a pure one. We are advocates for a national recognition of religion – and we are not voluntaries
The artist David Octavius Hill’s huge painting at the top of this page – it is 12 feet wide and 4.75 feet tall – records that momentous second meeting of the Disruption in Tanfield. My learned acquaintance Neil MacLeod has put the reason behind the Disruption into words better than I ever could;
Key to the Disruption was the interference of the State into matters within the jurisdiction of the Church. This is seen most clearly in the court cases of the “10 Years Conflict” leading up to 1843. In essence the point at dispute was who could choose the minister of a congregation? The landowner of where the church building was, or the congregation? Those who formed the Free Church said it was the congregation.
There is a plaque at Tanfield marking the occassion, which reads:
TANFIELD HALL
The First Assembly of the
Free Church of Scotland
Was Held Here on 18th May 1843
And in the Same Hall the
Union of the Secession and
Relief Churches was
Consummated 13th May 1847Note the old building in the background is not the Tanfield Hall; it’s a former wool storage warehouse that wasn’t built until 10-20 years after the Disruption.
Tanfield Hall plaque. Credit: GnomonicMany notable worthies of 1840s Scottish life joined the Free Kirk and there are all sorts of very interesting stories to tell about the likes of Thomas Guthrie, James Begg, Thomas Chalmers and the phrenologist David Welsh; but those are stories for another day.
Alexander Murray-Dunlop and David Welsh, by Hill & AdamsonDavid Octavius Hill was himself present at The Disruption. A son of Perth, he was well established as an artist in Edinburgh’s New Town at this time and was encouraged to paint a fittingly epic picture of the momentous occasion.
D. O. Hill, calotype by Hill & AdamsonSomeone who was also there was the physicist Sir David Brewster; the inventor of the binocular camera and the Kaleidoscope, he had an interest in optics and photography and also suggested to Hill that he might try out this new-fangled technique to help in the mammoth task of taking likenesses of all the ministers involved.
Sir David BrewsterBrewster introduced Hill to a protégé, Robert Adamson, a chemist who was showing promise as a photographer and had just set up a studio at Rock House on Calton Hill. Adamson’s brother had produced the first Calotype photograph in Scotland in 1841.
Robert Adamson, by Hill & AdamsonHill and Adamson hit it off and got straight to work. There was something special about the combination of Hill’s artistic eye for his subjects and composition and Adamson’s scientific approach and skill with the processes of photography and developing. As a result, the end product was far greater than the sum of its parts. In all, they captured the likenesses of over 450 ministers of the Free Kirk on calotypes, most posed at the Rock House studio in small groups. Hill then took these and painstakingly painted them onto the enormous canvas; it would take him over 23 years! By the time he was nearing completion, many of his subjects had passed away and others had aged; he went back over their hair and whiskers with the white paint to age them accordingly. Robert Adamson would die tragically young in 1848, aged just 26, many years before the work was completed.
The Disruption Assembly by David Octavius Hill, 1843-66However brief it was, the partnership of Hill and Adamson – the artist and the scientist – produced a remarkable and groundbreaking body of work in terms of both their chosen subject matter; their artistic nature; and the volume and quality of output. Their depictions of the Fisher Folk of Newhaven and street scenes are quite incredible. You can lose yourself for weeks in early Victorian Edinburgh and east Scotland in Hill & Adamson’s work on the National Galleries site.
His Faither’s Breeks, a Newhaven fisher lad poses infront of a boat and leaning on an oyster creelThere are some nice little “easter eggs” hidden in The Disruption painting; Robert Adamson (red arrow) is peering into his camera viewfinder. Behind him (blue arrow), David Octavius Hill is scribbling on his sketchbook.
Hill and Adamson, by Hill and AdamsonLurking in a doorway at the back is Thomas Annan, a printer and photographer, who would would pioneer the recording of social conditions using photography. Annan purchased the Rock House studio and its contents off of Hill and would go on to print some of the work by the process of photogravury. In a nice squaring of the circle, it was Hill’s intention that the painting, once completed, would be photographed and printed by Thomas Annan for sale to the public.
Thomas AnnanHill and Adamson may also have unwittingly invented an early version of Where’s Wally as you can look at their original photos of posed ministers and try and match them up on the big painting.
Ministers of the Dumbarton Presbytery, by Hill & Adamson.The also managed to take the first known photograph of beer being drunk, in a lighthearted moment that shows these serious men, at serious work, could also have a bit of a giggle. Robert Adamson took the photo, and it shows (left to right) writer and stained glass artist James Ballantine; social reformer Dr. George Bell; and David Octavius Hill himself on the right, there is a glass of beer for all three, Younger’s Edinburgh Ale was notoriously strong. It is a very impressive photograph considering just how long they would have to have sat perfectly still in their mirthsome poses to make the necessary long exposure time.
Edinburgh Ale by Hill & Adamson, 1844The Free Kirk didn’t mess about; they had to set up parallel structures to the established Kirk – this meant churches in which to worship, manses and stipends for ministers and their families, schools (the parish had responsibility for education at this time), a college for training ministers, an overarching administration, missions… It took some quite impressive fund-raising activity to finance all of this (which was not without further controversy in itself at the time, and to this day, as a not insignificant amount of money was raised by sympathetic American Presbyterians who were also slave owners).
The Free Church held on to the blood-stained money, and continued to justify itself in its position — and of course to apologize for slavery — and does so till this day. She lost a glorious opportunity for giving her voice, her vote, and her example to the cause of humanity ; and to-day she is staggering under the curse of the enslaved, whose blood is in her skirts.
Frederick Douglass, “My Bondage and My Freedom”, 1855In all, some 1,400 churches, manses and schools would be built across Scotland. One of the more unusual of these new churches was the Strontian Iron Church (Gaelic: Eaglais Iaruinn). The landowner, Sir James Riddell, refused to allow a Free Church on his land – if you recall, landowner influence over the Church and their patronage was one of the conflicts which had led to the Disruption in the first place. This led the inventive Free Kirk to commission a floating church with seats for 700 people, built on an iron pontoon, and they had it towed to Loch Sunart.
The Iron Church arrives in Loch Sunart by tugboatThe Eaglais Iaruinn was built in Glasgow with £1,400 raised in the Strontian community and launched in 1846. Two steam tugs, the Gulliver and the Conqueror towed it down the Clyde and up the west coast to Loch Sunart in Ardnastang Bay. It was 24 metres long and 7m wide and had an upper gallery and a pulpit. In the bow was the vestry, which doubled as a bunk for the Minister. The below sketches of the interior of the Iron Church and people on their way to worship there are from Am Baile, the Highlands History & Culture Archive.
The floating Iron Church at Strontian – exteriorThe floating Iron Church at Strontian – exteriorThe floating Iron Church at Strontian – interiorThe floating Iron Church at Strontian – interiorThe church was anchored 150 yards from the shore, outside the landowner’s reach and yet prominently in sight of him. A line was fixed along which the congregation pulled themselves in row boats to and from the service (see the top left image in the above panel). Attendance varied depending on the popularity of the visiting minster. It was said that when Dr Beith from Stirling visited to preach, he did three sittings on a Sunday, two in Gaelic and “the church was never so deep in the water;” people would travel very far in those days to make sure they could hear a service in their own language. This situation was ended by a storm in September 1847 that drove the church from its moorings and onto the shore. The reluctant landowner relented somewhat and agreed to help fund its repair and it was used where it had come to rest on the shore (see the top right image in the panel above) until a permanent church was built in 1873.
The Free Church of Scotland was the result of the largest religious schism in Scotland since the Reformation itself back in 1560, but was one of many seemingly the interminable splits and unions within the Scottish Presbyterian churches. It’s one of the things you always need to bear in mind when asking yourself the question “why did Victorian Scotland build so many churches?” It has also given us one of the most elegantly pleasing diagrams on Wikipedia:
Schisms and unions in the Scottish churches, 1560-presentNote to readers: unfortunately in April 2026, a third-party plug-in more than exceeded its authority and broke many of the image links on this site. No images were lost but I will have to restore them page-by-page, which may take some time. In the meantime please bear with me while I go about rectifying this issue.
If you have found this site useful, informative or amusing then you can help contribute towards its running costs by supporting me on ko-fi. This includes my commitment to keeping it 100% advert and AI free for all time coming, and in helping to find further unusual stories to bring you by acquiring books and paying for research.
Or please do just share this post on social media or amongst friends and like-minded people, sites like this thrive on being shared.Explore Threadinburgh by map:
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Erse Houses: the thread about Edinburgh’s Gaelic churches and the spiritual wanderings of the city’s Gaels
It’s been a while since I made a “Now And Then” animated image transition, so have yourselves one showing the “new” (then) Gaelic chapel at the top of what was Horse Wynd, now slap bang in the middle of Chambers Street.
Animated transition of the old “New Gaelic Chapel” relative to its position on modern day Chambers Street. Original image CC by NC from National Galleries ScotlandThis is one of a pair of images in the National Galleries of Scotland collection made by the photographer Archibald Burns about 1868 or 9. The image used in the transition animation is the first below. The second, below it, is taken looking the other way along what is now Chambers Street, but which at that time was a narrow street giving access bettwen North College Street and Argyle Square. Horse Wynd is running downhill to the right of the horse and cart. It ran steeply downhill downhill to the Cowgate from the Potter Row and was one of the principal routes into old Edinburgh from the south, and about the only one really suitable for horse traffic, hence its name.
Gaelic Church from Minto House Grounds, Archibald Burns, c. 1869. CC-by-NC National Galleries ScotlandGaelic Church, Archibald Burns, c. 1869. CC-by-NC National Galleries ScotlandWe can see from these pictures that the chapel was relatively plain and roughly finished, a 2-storey, 5-bay building with its better face onto the street. An Edinburgh Improvement Act 1867 bill, defaced by a Temperance movement fly poster, gives the clue about what is going on here. This act saw the creation of Chambers Street from the series of narrow lanes and squares that existed at this time.
At the centre of these improvements, Chambers Street was a broad new boulevard to link the South Bridge with George IV bridge. In doing so ploughed its way through Argyll’s Square, Brown’s Square (he who gave his name to George Square), the Society, Minto House, the Trades Maiden Hospital,
Edgar’s Town Plan of Edinburgh, 1765. The building marked “I” is Minto House, in whose garden Archibald Burns was standing to photograph the chapel. Horse Wynd is just to its right. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of ScotlandThis was not the first Gaelic chapel or meeting house in the city however, the first was at the top of Castle Wynd, off the Grassmarket. It’s shown in 1784 (Galick, sic), 1804 (Earse, or Erse, a lowland Scots phrase for Gaelic), 1817 and up to 1849, when only its former site is recorded.
Kincaid, 1784. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of ScotlandAinslie, 1804. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of ScotlandKirkwood, 1817. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of ScotlandOrdnance Survey, 1849. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of ScotlandDuring the 17th century, the population of Gaelic speakers in the city had increased to such an extent that in 1704 the General Assembly of the Kirk agreed to provide a place of worship for them “to hear service in their own tongue“. Highlanders were drawn to the city by socio-economic factors. They long supplied the city with “certain classes of its population; the town Guard, the caddies, the linkmen, the hewers of wood and drawers of water generally were from the glens“. There was no progress on the Gaelic chapel (at this time it was a Chapel of Ease, somewhere handier to reach your place of worship in what could be enormous parishes and not a distinct parish Church) until 1766-67, when the building on Castle Wynd began to be erected.
The new chapel opened in 1769, oddly with financial assistance from the Society in Scotland for Propagating Christian Knowledge, a lowland organisation to “civilise” the Highlands and keep out Catholicism through religious education. Civilising of course meant protestant, although the SSPCK leaned towards Anglicanism, rather than the Presbyterianism of lowland Scotland. (I say oddly because the SSPCK is better known for being virulently against “that barbarity and the Irish language” and made concerted efforts to stamp it out in the Highlands. So it was somewhat odd that it was actively spreading it in Edinburgh.) The minister of the new church on opening was by the name of Macgregor and he was something of a not-too-closeted Jacobite.
Mr Macgregor, “The Highland Minister”. By J. Jenkins in the style of John Kay, late 18th century. CC-BY-4.0 National Library ScotlandThis was in direct contrast to the previous Gaelic-speaking minister in Edinburgh, Neil McVicar of the West Kirk (now St. Cuthberts). The appropriately named McVicar was trusted with the “charge of the Highlanders of the City” and preached strenuously against the 1715 and 1745 uprisings. Indeed, when Charles Edward Stuart (Bonnie Prince Charlie) entered the city after his victory at the Battle of Prestonpans, McVicar preached openly “In regard to the young man who has recently come among us in search of an earthly crown, may he soon obtain what is far better, a heavenly one.” McVicar, they said, “never knew fear“. One day, out on a promenade in Comely Bank, he was challenged by the Laird of Inverleith (Sir Francis Kinloch of Gilmerton, 3rd Baronet) who was aggrieved at the public humiliation of being put under Kirk discipline by McVicar. The laird arrogantly threatened the Minister “But for the coat you wear, I should have taught you a lesson today!” In an instant, McVicar whipped off his long and solemn black Minister’s coat, threw it to the ground and with the thunderous delivery honed by preachering retorted “There lies the minister of St. Cuthbert’s, and here stands Neil McVicar, and by yea, and by nay, sir, come on!” Prudence got the better of the laird, who beat a hasty retreat with his tail between his legs less he found himself fighting the fearless man of the Kirk.
A Victorian illustration of Charles Edward Stuart “reading a dispatch” in full Highland garb. CC BY-NC-SA 4.0, The Trustees of the British MuseumBack to the Gaelic chapel, it issued its own communion tokens with a verse from Corinthians on the back. The New International Bible gives this verse as “Let a person examine himself, then, and so eat of the bread and drink of the cup. For anyone who eats and drinks without discerning the body eats and drinks judgment on himself.” The date of 1775 most likely refers to the appointment of the minister.
1775 Edinburgh Gaelic Chapel communion tokenIn 1807, a new minister, John MacDonald, was appointed. John Kay helpfully made a caricature and biography of him in his book of Edinburgh notables. McDonald was very highly thought of in the city and was quite the megapreacher. He kept getting himself into trouble by wandering uninvited into other minister’s parishes and preaching to anyone who would listen. He went uninvited into their kirks, or preached outside them or even in dissenting churches. He later devoted himself to bettering “the religious and moral conditions of St. Kilda.” He made numerous visits to that distant archipelago, ingratiated himself with the locals and helped arrange for a permanent Church and minister. His are some of the first detailed accounts of the place.
The Reverend McDonald, by John Kay, 1813Before all that though, in Edinburgh, a combination of the rising Gaelic-speaking population and his popularity as a preacher saw his flock out-grow the meeting house on Castle Wynd and he sought to obtain adjoining ground to have it extended. There is no known image of the first meeting house, but there’s an outside chance this is it below, in this Joseph Farington sketch of 1788, before the north side of the Grassmarket was really built up at its eastern end.
Green arrow highlighting the possible building that is the Gaelic meeting house on Castle Wynd. From a picture by Joseph Farringdon, 1788. CC-BY-NC National Galleries ScotlandThe SSPCK was again approached for assistance, but at the same time there were other plans afoot to provide a second chapel. However this was to be a Gaelic and English Chapel of Ease, with services in Gaelic but other instruction given in English for the “benefit” of children. With the financial assistance of the Edinburgh Corporation and the Writers to the Signet, the site at the head of Horse Wynd was acquired and the new chapel with seats for 1,100 was built at a cost of £3,000. It is one of my favourite features of the 1849 Town Plan that the surveyors and draughtsmen troubled to record in the basic internal layouts of public buildings and recorded the capacity of churches. I think in this instance “Free” means seats not reserved to a particular member of the congregation, rather than the Free Church.
OS Town Plan showing the Gaelic “Quoad Sacra” Chapel, 1849. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of ScotlandThe new chapel opened in 1813 but that it was both Gaelic and English I think caused a bit of a schism in the congregation, thus the old chapel briefly remained in the Gaelic language alone until the departure of Reverend Macdonald. This schism seems to have been resolved largely by the practicalities of financial matters; the congregation could not support both the old chapel and the debts of constructing the new one. Both chapels were without minister and common sense prevailed to close and sell the old one, transfer its financial trust to the new chapel and recruit a single new minister. The congregations agreed to merge and this did so in 1815 under the Rev. John Munro. The Kirk issued regulations that “Service ought to be performed in the Gaelic language at the ordinary meetings for public worship… of every lord’s Day, but with leave to the Minister to have an additional service in English in the evening or at any other time during the week.” In 1832 the then Minister, Duncan McCaig, was found guilty of stealing books from the library of the Faculty of Advocates and was sentenced to transportation to the prison colony of Port Arthur in Tasmania.
In 1834 the Kirk passed the Chapels Act which converted the Chapel of Ease into a Parish Church Quoad Sacra, that is an ecclesiastical parish but not an administrative one. The Gaelic Chapel thus became a Church, but with no specific parish boundary. This meant that it now had its own Session (governing committee) and the office bearers were thus recorded – the Gaelic church elders included a writer (lawyer), excise officer, grocer, stonemason, cow-feeders, marble cutter, tavern keeper and coach hirer. Church life was impacted by The Disruption of 1843 when a significant part of the etablished Church of Scotland walked out and set up its own Church, the Free Church in protest. The Gaelic Church was no exception to this, however the building on Horse Wynd and its contents was legally the property of the established Kirk. The majority of the Gaelic congregation and the Minister had joined the Free Church but stayed on in the building and so the Kirk moved them on. The Gaelic Free Church settled in another temporary Free Church on Cambridge Street before building its own home; Free St. Columbas. Here it stayed as a Gaelic church until 1948. The Traverse Theatre later moved in, before clearing it for their modern building .
The former St. Columba’s Free Church on Cambridge Street being used as the Traverse Theatre. The Usher Hall peeks out on the right.The small remnant of the Gaelic Church that stayed behind in the Church of Scotland took a long time to rebuild itself, having lost its minister and all its elders. This rebuilding was rudely disrupted in 1867 by the compulsory purchase order for its home by the Improvement Scheme. The Church got £6,000 and leave to remain until the bulldozers moved in. They spent some time after this moving around until the Catholic Apostolic Church on Broughton Street came on the market when the latter moved down the road to what is now the Mansfield Tracquair Centre.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/davids_leicas/14752650390
The new Church was much smaller, but the Gaelic-speaking population of the city was declining overall and much of it was in the Free Church, so this probably wasn’t an issue. The congregation moved in during 1815 with the first service on October 15th 1876 under the minister Donald Masson. The 5-bay classical building was officially given the name St. Oran’s in 1900. The congregation stayed here until 1948 when declining membership and the death of the minister, MacDonald, saw both it and St. Columbas (by now back in the Church of Scotland via the United Free Church of Scotland) closed, despite merger plans. A continuing St. Columbas congregation remained in the Free Church, where some Gaelic services are still held – in a building originally built as St. John’s Free Church at the top of Johnston Terrace. Remember what I have said before about Victorian Scotland building a mindboggling number of churches?
This thread was only made possibly by some (lots) help from Neil Macleod who patiently answered my questions and kindly sent some scans of the relevant books! Thanks Neil! Thanks also to Fraser MacDonald for assistance in accessing relevant academic papers.
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#OTD in 1846
A Free Church congregation in Strontian, Ardnamurchan, launched their floating church.The local laird refused them permission to build a church on his land, so they "crowdfunded" £1,400 to get a Clyde shipbuilder to make a floating church. The church was moored in Loch Sunart & was 80ft long & 24ft wide. It could hold a congregation of 400.