Audio cassette and booklet `Gaelic Palms from Lewis`, Scottish Tradition No. 6.
Gaelic Psalms from Lewis recorded by the School of Scottish Studies. Accompanying booklet on Bookshelves `Music`.
De-accessioned 2.3.26.
Audio cassette and booklet `Gaelic Palms from Lewis`, Scottish Tradition No. 6.
Gaelic Psalms from Lewis recorded by the School of Scottish Studies. Accompanying booklet on Bookshelves `Music`.
De-accessioned 2.3.26.
Photocopied feu contract between the Duke of Argyll and the Trustees of the Kirkapol Free Church dated 1882.
Feu contract between the Duke of Argyll and the Trustees of the Kirkapol Free Church dated 1882. (Bundle 2501)
Photocopied assignation dated 1880 by the Trustees of Baptist Church of Tiree in favour of the Baptist Home Missionary Society of Scotland.
Assignation dated 1880 by the Trustees of Baptist Church of Tiree of the tack at Baugh in favour of the Baptist Home Missionary Society of Scotland.
Photocopied specification of repairs to be done to Tiree Parish Church, dated 1892.
Specification of repairs to be done to Tiree Parish Church, 1892. (Bundle 2505)
Heylipol Church in 1900
Transcription of a letter from the Rev. Dugald MacLean to the Duke of Argyll about the condition of Heylipol Church in 1900.
Courtesy of His Grace the Duke of Argyll
In medieval times Tiree was divided in two parishes, Kirkapol in the east under the Bishop of the Isles and Soroby in the west under the Abbot of Iona. In 1618 the two parishes were united with Coll. In 1865 Coll was severed from Tiree and ten years later Soroby was severed from Kirkapol.
A church at Heylipol had been built in 1839 to serve the west of the island where the greater part of the population lived. In this letter of 1900, the Rev. Dugald MacLean describes the dangerous and dilapidated state of the church despite many repairs carried out over the previous twenty years.
A new church designed by William Mackenzie was erected on the site in 1902. Of cruciform Gothic design with a bell tower over the entrance porch and large enough to accommodate 365 worshippers, the church is still in current use.
Photocopied letter dated 22/10/1900 from Heylipol manse to the Duke of Argyll.
Letter dated 22/10/1900 from the Rev Dugald MacLean to the Duke of Argyll informing him that the report on the condition of Heylipol Church omits the decayed state of the windows and suggesting that it might be cheaper to build a new church than to repair the existing one. (Bundle 2504)
Copied extract from `History of the Baptists in Scotland` edited by Rev. George Yule, pp118-9.
Short history of the Baptists in Tiree from around 1820 to 1930, with a photograph of the church on Tiree..