Tag Archives: kirkapol

2014.15.1

Photograph of Tiree District Nurses ca 1995

Colour photograph of the Tiree District Nurses at a dinner at the Lodge Hotel around 1995. L-R: Mairi MacLean, Flora MacKinnon, Jane Williams, Cairin MacLeod, Anne MacKinnon, Kate Brown, Storm Kemp, Sylvia Pearson, Netty MacKinnon (seated).

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2013.152.2

Copied pages from the 1792 census of Tiree

Printed photographs of a selection of pages from the original 1792 census of Tiree people held in the archives of Inveraray Castle, including total numbers of inhabitants for each township and lists of inhabitants’ names for Caoles, Salum, Kirkapol and Ruaig. “Total inhabitants [in Tiree] 1881; increase 583” since 1779 census. Subsection “Caoles-Ardeas” photographed during a visit to Inveraray by Glenda Franklin in 2013 (probably contains duplicates). Digital copies stored on An Iodhlann computer.

2013.152.3

Copies of pages from the 1792 census of Tiree inhabitants

Printed photographs of a selection of pages from the original 1792 census held in the archives at Inverary Castle including total numbers of inhabitants for each township and lists of inhabitants’ names for Caoles, Salum, Kirkapol and Ruaig. “Total inhabitants [in Tiree] 1881; increase 583” since 1779 census. Subsection “more 1792 census”, photographed during a visit by Glenda Franklin in 2013 (probably contains duplicates of 2013.152.2). Digital copies stored on An Iodhlann computer.

2013.136.1

Photograph of the stonemason`s benchmark on Kirkapol Church

Colour photograph of the stonemason`s benchmark etched into a foundation stone of Kirkapol Church. Although eroded and difficult to see, the upward-pointing arrow is in the centre of the photograph. The benchmark is exactly where the Ordnance Survey map of 1878 puts it.

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2013.137.1

Information about the provenance of the Kirkapol Church bell

Emailed information about the provenance of the Kirkapol Church bell, from Gordon Scott. “I`ve been in touch with an expert on church bells. He is stymied about who could have cast our bell. Interestingly, He feels it is of a design which predates the opening of the Kirkapol Church. It is very possible this bell came from an older church, probably cast sometime in the late 18th – early 19th century.”