Part of a thesis on early corrugated iron buildings by Nick Thomson (Skye).
Extract from MSc Thesis about 19th and early 20th century corrugated iron buildings in the Highlands and Islands, like the Reading Room (now An Iodhlann). By Nick Thomson (of Skye) in 2004.
Manuscript (booklet) for a play ‘Beitidh’ by Mary A MacKinnon (1888-1980), Heylipol, ca 1916. Written in aid of the Tiree Memorial Fund.
Màiri Anna Theònaidh was the daughter of John MacKinnon, the ground officer. At thirteen, Mary Ann moved from the estate house in Heylipol to Glasgow, where she trained as a teacher. In 1924, she married Captain Alasdair Campbell, who had the misfortune to be torpedoed three times in his naval career. Mary Ann Campbell (or MacKinnon) was the first published female Gaelic playwright. The first of three published dramas was the 1916 Beitidh / Betty:
“[Campbell’s] eponymous Beitidh ends up winning a doctor in Glasgow who is also a Gaelic-speaker. This is a rather neat solution that serves also to teach Beitidh not to be ashamed of her Gaelic (a reprise of the ‘don’t forget your Gaelic’ trope). This is the main theme of the play which is bilingual: the action is in Gaelic when set in Tiree and in English when in a Kelvinside drawing room. The women in the play are strikingly independent and full of character. Beitidh’s mother is quite happy to state that the men would be nothing without their women. Her English-speaking friend Rosie is very quick-witted and likes to shock, principally by smoking.”
The Stornoway Gazette praised the play, concluding: “It is probably impossible to-day to show any series of events of Highland life significant enough to dramatise apart from English influence.” As if in response to this, her next play Clann nan Gàidheal ri Guailibh a Chèile ‘Children of the Gaels, Shoulder to Shoulder’, was set against the backdrop of the Great War. Mary Ann Campbell was an early member of the Tiree Association in Glasgow, and produced the First World War Roll of Honour for the island. She retired to ‘Caladh’ in Balevullin.
Photocopy of text describing archaeological sites on Tiree: (1) Inner Hebrides Archaeological Project – Hough, Tiree by Darko Maricevic, (2) 8 Kilkenneth, Tiree by Clare Ellis, (3) Kilkenneth Chapel, Tiree by Susan Ovenden.
Copy of Article about John Campbell, Chamberlain to the 7th & 8th Dukes of Argyll by R.K Campbell
Biographical article by Robin Campbell for Journal of the Clan Campbell Society, Number 31, 2004, pp.11-13, about his great-great-grandfather John Campbell or Am Bàillidh Mòr. Gifted to An Iodhlann by the author.
Paper titled `Gaelic in the Bruce` by Archie MacKinnon of Guelph.
Paper by Archie MacKinnon of Guelph, then Dean of Education at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, about the Gaelic heritage in Bruce Counry, Ontario.
Inner Hebrides Archaeological Project, Report No. 3, January 2006.
Report on chipped stone from various sites on Tiree, a preliminary evaluation of the pottery found on Tiree, a catalogue of the metal objects in the Holleyman collection and the results of geophysical surveys of the stone circles at Hough, the Kirkapol chapels and archaeological sites in the Balephuil area.
Inner Hebrides Archaeological Project, Report No. 4, March 2007.
Reports on the Bishop Collection at the Hunterian Museum, pottery sherds from Salum Bay and a geophysical survey of the site, and geophysical surveys of the stone circles at Hough and St Patrick`s Chapel on Kennavara.