Maryburgh Folk

Attribution: S. Fraser (Maryburgh Primary School March 2015)

Angus Mackenzie

This picture was taken at the time of the Paris Olympics 1924 and the laying of a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior. The piper standing closest to the then Prince of Wales (later Edward VIII and even later the Duke of Windsor) is Angus Mackenzie of Maryburgh.
The British Olympic team in the background is the team that many years later inspired the famous film Chariots of Fire.

Angus Mackenzie of Maryburgh, piper

Attribution: [Photograph courtesy of Bill and Joan Mackenzie]

Mrs Margaret Mackay

Margaret Mackay was born on 3 October 1914 and brought up in Lochinver where she had her primary education prior to attending Golspie High School. When the Second World War broke out, Margaret joined the WRNS, being stationed at first at Evanton. Later, as an officer, she served at Admiralty Headquarters and also at Machrihanish.

Following war service, Margaret married William Mackay, who was a railway employee and finally station master at Conon Bridge until the station closed in 1960. Then Margaret and William lived in Invergordon for a time but moved to Maryburgh where Margaret took an active part in village life, being a regular attender at Maryburgh Free Church. She lived an independent life into her 90s, including daily visits to the local shop and helping with the annual checking of Blythswood shoeboxes in the Free Church hall. Unfortunately, in January 2014 she suffered a fall, had a spell in hospital and then moved to residential care in Wyvis House.

Good genes are obviously in Margaret’s family because her grandfather, a crofter near Lochinver, lived to 103 years!

Mrs Margaret Mackay on 3 October 2014, celebrating her 100th birthday

Mrs Margaret Mackay on 3 October 2014, celebrating her 100th birthday with family and friends in Wyvis House, Dingwall, and showing her congratulatory card from HM The Queen.
Attribution: unknown

Mary Gordon Ross (later Menzies)

FIRST MEMBER OF THE A.T.S. TO ENTER GERMANY

The first member of the A.T.S. to enter Germany, was Junior Commander Mary Gordon Ross, of Culbokie, Ross-shire, who, since February, has been Catering Adviser to a British General Hospital of the Rhone.

She arrived at the hospital only 24 hours after it opened with 300 beds, she heard guns not many miles away. Within the first week 1,400 new patients were admitted, but this Scots girl, who was trained at a London catering establishment before the war, was not flustered, and both wounded men and staff got all the food they needed.

Junior Commander Ross started her A.T.S. career as a cook, and worked her way through the ranks to sergeant major before being commissioned. She later ran an A.T.S. cookery school in the West of England and was also messing for a time to a unit of the Seaforth Highlanders. She still wears her skirt of Seaforth Tartan with her uniform when off duty.

Now that the war in Europe is over, she continues to cater for anything from 500 to 1,500 people of all nationalities, including allied wounded, German prisoners of war and hundreds of “displaced persons” as well as the hospital staff.

She wants to stay on in the A.T.S., but her chief ambition is to do the same sort of job for a military hospital in the Far East.

Please visit the photo album below to see more photographs of Mary and the official documents showing her commendation.

Mary Gordon Ross (later Menzies)

Mary Gordon Ross (later Menzies) 248962 J/Cmdr ATS Catering Pool, Army School Cookery, Aldershot. Left 28 September 1945. BEM. Mentioned in Dispatches.
Attribution: unknown

View further photographs of Maryburgh Folk

Click on photo album to view thumbnails and then click thumbnail to see the full size images 
Maryburgh » Maryburgh Places » Maryburgh Residential
Grant Crescent.
Grant Crescent.
The Macrae Estate. This is a large estate of 100-plus houses, mostly detached, built by Macrae in 1968-72. There are four streets in the estate: Rosshill Drive, Grant Crescent, Stuarthill Drive and Muirden Road.
Aerial photograph of Maryburgh taken on 16 August 1963
Aerial photograph of Maryburgh taken on 16 August 1963
This aerial photograph shows Maryburgh in the early 1960s before any housing had been built on what became the Macrae estate, Wrightfield Park, the riverside field adjacent to Wrightfield farm, and Mackenzie Place.. Proby Place houses have been built but not the Amenities Centre. The former A9 winds its way across the Telford bridge and the railway line across the adjacent bridge. The trees on 'the Avenue' have all been cut down, so perhaps Wrightfield Park was contemplated? [Photo courtesy of Mrs Rosemary Henderson]
Map of Maryburgh in 1972
Map of Maryburgh in 1972
Map of Maryburgh in 1972 (Courtesy of Mrs Rosemary Henderson)
Laburnum
Laburnum
Seaforth Place
Seaforth Place
Seaforth Place is a crescent containing mainly traditional red sandstone cottages with a few wooden clad Swedish style houses built in the 1950s.
The wooden clad Swedish style houses.
The wooden clad Swedish style houses.
Drewellis (at one time the village inn)
Drewellis (at one time the village inn)
Peartree Cottage (1824) the oldest house in the village.
Peartree Cottage (1824) the oldest house in the village.
Sunnyholm (1828)
Sunnyholm (1828)
The Tollhouse.
The Tollhouse.
The Tollhouse. This octagonal building is situated at the Maryburgh end of Thomas Telford's bridge (demolished and replaced by the "new" bridge) and was extended in the 1960s by its then owner, Robert Dougal, using stone from the demolished ice house adjacent to the property.
Birch Drive
Birch Drive
Birch Drive has been developed in stages. The entrance to the estate is at the top of Hood Street, past the football field.
Birch Drive
Birch Drive
Birch Drive has been developed in stages. The entrance to the estate is at the top of Hood Street, past the football field.
Grant Crescent.
Grant Crescent.
Hood Street looking up the hill from Proby Street.
Hood Street looking up the hill from Proby Street.
The entrance to Mackenzie Place.
The entrance to Mackenzie Place.
Some of the 30-plus houses in Mackenzie Place
Some of the 30-plus houses in Mackenzie Place
Ussie Mills
Ussie Mills
Proby Place is a small row of houses leading off from Proby Street.
Proby Place is a small row of houses leading off from Proby Street.
Proby Street looking east from entrance to Seaforth Place.
Proby Street looking east from entrance to Seaforth Place.
Proby Street looking west from Albert Place.
Proby Street looking west from Albert Place.
Rosshill Drive.
Rosshill Drive.
The Macrae Estate. This is a large estate of 100-plus houses, mostly detached, built by Macrae in 1968-72. There are four streets in the estate: Rosshill Drive, Grant Crescent, Stuarthill Drive and Muirden Road.
Winter view from Dunglass Road.
Winter view from Dunglass Road.
Some of the Wrightfield Park houses showing the landscaped bank between the houses and the main road.
Some of the Wrightfield Park houses showing the landscaped bank between the houses and the main road.
Wrightfield Park is an estate of 50 houses built at the western end of the village between the railway bridge and the Conon bridge. The design of the estate won architectural awards at the time of construction.
The west end of Wrightfield Park after crossing the Conon bridge.
The west end of Wrightfield Park after crossing the Conon bridge.
Wrightfield Park is an estate of 50 houses built at the western end of the village between the railway bridge and the Conon bridge. The design of the estate won architectural awards at the time of construction.
Farm steading on Hood Street (adjacent to Peartree Cottage)
Farm steading on Hood Street (adjacent to Peartree Cottage)
Albert Place
Albert Place
Albert Place is a small row of terraced cottages at the entrance to the village from the direction of Dingwall. The white gable end is that of the "other" village shop (now a private dwelling). The yellow sign on the building is a result of a community campaign against the building of a land raising "superdump" at Tollie. This was the R.A.T.S. (Ross-Shire Against Tollie Superdump) campaign. the campaign was successful and the council voted against allowing the superdump to proceed.
Next to Glencanisp is Hermanville, outside which stood the village pump where residents would gather to fill buckets and have a "bleather".
Next to Glencanisp is Hermanville, outside which stood the village pump where residents would gather to fill buckets and have a "bleather".
Glencanisp
Glencanisp
SeaforthPl02.jpg
SeaforthPl02.jpg

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