Tag Archives: New Cumnock

Kirkyard Clean-Up

Auld Kirk Clean-up

Auld Kirk Clean-up

We will soon be tendering for the work to be carried out on the Auld Kirk ruins and five family lairs.  With the current spell of decent weather we are looking for volunteers to help with a clean-up of the kirkyard through picking up litter and the sweeping up leaves.Litter graspers, gloves and bags will be provided.

If you have some spare time and would like to help we intend (weather permitting) of having the following clean-up sessions

  • Wednesday 19th June 7pm-8:30pm
  • Thursday 20th June 7pm-8:30pm
  • Saturday 22nd Jun 11am-4pm
  • Sunday 23rd June 11am-4pm

So please if you spare 30 minutes or more or just passing by during a walk over the Knockshinnoch Lagoons then call in, we would be delighted to see you.

School (trail) blazers

Primary 6 at the New Cumnock Mural

Primary 6 at the New Cumnock Mural

New Cumnock Primary School blazed a trail for other schools outwith the Kilmarnock area with a visit to the marvellous Burns Monument Centre (BMC). Heritage Services officer Ross McGregor said: “It’s the first time a school outside the Kilmarnock area has travelled to visit the BMC. The children have been able to look into our archives and handle very old texts, maps and photos in this wonderful setting”.

Follow their fantastic day on the Burns Monument Centre here

School on the Discovery Trail

As part of the ‘Auld Kirk and Village Heritage Trail’ project pupils from Primary 6 of New Cumnock Primary School began their research into ten family lairs in the Auld Kirkyard. Class teacher Allison Smith, two parent helpers and twenty-four pupils along with project leader Bobby Guthrie headed along the Castle to the kirkyard.

On our way along the Castle

On our way along the Castle

Up and down the Castehill

Up and down the Castehill

Altogether in the Auld Kirkyard

Altogether in the Auld Kirkyard

  • The pupils were divided into ten teams and each assigned with a Lair Number, a map of the lairs and a record sheet to note names, dates, places and occupations.
Organising research teams

Organising research teams

  • Having found their lair, and checked it was the correct one, teamwork took over as information was read out and recorded.

aa_collage01

  • After a much needed snack( in the biting cold wind!) each team in turn shared the information they had recorded with the others teams as we went from lair to lair. Great teamwork again as everyone took a turn and supported each other. Bobby also shared other information he knew about the families.
Sharing our Findings

Sharing our Findings

  • Here are the families we researched
Our ten families

Our ten families

Visiting sites

Visiting sites

  • On the way back to school we noted points of interests associated with the families we selected. Above, we went over the bridge that crossed the mill-lead which run from the Old Mill where the McKnight family. Below, we stopped at the Mural which shows farmers and miners at work, as well as Robert Burns who included a verse in one of his poems about the Reverend James Young .
New Cumnock Mural

New Cumnock Mural

  • Back to School , where Bobby was back in the same Primary 6 classroom he was in  many years ago, when Mrs MacSween was his teacher!
Back to School

Back to School

  •  You can find more photos of our trip here

WHAT NEXT?

  • In early May the class will visit the Burns Monument Centre Kilmarnock to continue our research into the family trees  the our ten families. We’ll keep you posted!

Headstone Hunting

With the snow and its accompanying biting wind of recent weeks abating this bright Sunday afternoon proved to be a perfect time to visit the Auld Kirkyard. Members of the New Cumnock Parish Church , New Cumnock History Club and New Cumnock Liaison Group joined together in their mission to seek out the headstones of ministers and soldiers resting or remembered here. Our ‘Time Team’s’ activity soon attracted the attention of a passer-bye out enjoying one of the many lovely local walks and soon we had another pair of hands and eyes to help us in our cause.

Time Team

Time Team

We split into three groups, each one armed with a sketch map of numbered lairs and set off to locate the headstones, note their condition and photograph them.

Planning the route

Planning the route

Off we go

Off we go

Taking note

Taking note

soldiersministers4

Who have we here?

Are you sure this is the right one?

Our minister with two of her predecessors

Our minister with two of her predecessors

Far flung corners

Far flung corners

Getting there

Successful conclusion

Successful conclusion

We successfully tracked down the headstones of six ministers and sixteen soldiers, somequicker than others. Many were legible while some were damaged or overturned but each made us stop and think.

Why we are here

Why we are here

During our search, other headstones caught the eye, carrying the surname or a farm name that whetted our appetite for further visits to our Auld Kirkyard.

Living Kirkyard Event

heritagepngThe Clyde and Avon Valley Landscape Partnership (CAVLP) is a new Heritage Lottery funded project which aims to conserve, enhance and celebrate the unique landscape and cultural heritage of the Clyde and Avon Valleys.

Living Kirkyard Event

  • Saturday 20th April 1pm to 3pm
  • Paterson Church, Lawrie Street, Stonehaven, ML9 3LN

The CAVLP are hosting a Living Kirkyard Event and invite people to come along and find out about the burial grounds of the Clyde Valley, what makes them special and how we might conserve them for the future.

Local Footnote: Now working with CAVLP is Sarah Sall, who of course until recently worked with East Ayrshire Coalfield Environment Initiative and was actively involved in the fantastic work on the New Cumnock Path Network.

On the trail of our heritage

The New Cumnock Liaison Group (NCLG) meeting kicked off with an update presentation on the New Cumnock Auld Kirkyard and Village Heritage Trail project.

The proposed route of the trail showing selected sites for interpretation panels was shown and the meeting concluded with volunteers assigned to each site / topic.  Vounteers will create profiles for each site in preparation for working with a professional on the design of the interpretation panels.

New Cumnock Village Heritage Trail - Interpretation Sites

New Cumnock Village Heritage Trail – Interpretation Sites

Sites / Topics.

1. Auld Kirk

2. Parish of New Cumnock

3. Cumnock Castle

4. Castle Merchants

5. Miners Memorial / Mural

6. Mill / Shilling hill

7. Comunn achadh/Pier Point

8. Glenafton Athletic

Capital meeting at HLF

heritagepngThe Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) hosted a start-up meeting at their office in Edinburgh today for organisations that had recently been successful in their applications for funding and fittingly began by offering their congratulations to all new grant holders.

The informal afternoon kicked off with an inspirational presentation from a past grantee, Helena Anderson Wright, Project Director of the three year Enlightened Burns project. Helena shared experiences from the project , successes and lessons learned as well as giving a fantastic illustration of how surprises can emerge unexpectedly  ….. more here.

A key outcome of the project was connecting young people with Burns. After hearing that our project would include school children researching Reverend James Young, buried in the Auld Kirkyard and featured in Burns’ “The Kirk’s Alarm” , Helena was kind enough to wish us every success.

heritagepngHelena remarked how throughout the life of their project HLF very much took on the role of enablers. Grants Officer Sara Wright began that process for the new grantees by taking us through the important aspects of ‘Managing Our Grant’ including start-up,  progress reports, managing invoices and final evaluation against the aims of the project.  Grants Officer Bobbi Campbell gave an overview of ‘Communications’ and shared examples of how grantees can deliver their commitment to publicly acknowledging HLF’s support of their projects.

heritagepngAttendees then split into small groups to consider the ”challenges that lay ahead’, ‘what they were looking forward to most’ and to ‘reflect on how their views on heritage had changed’. Although the range of projects was diverse the themes that emerged from the discussions were very similar, something from which we all took heart.

On a personal note my own view on heritage has evolved from something that was a personal interest to a firm belief that it has a key part to play in regenerating our village, and importantly through involving the community in that regeneration.

The day concluded with the opportunity to discuss elements of our project with our own HLF Grants Officer Catriona Macpherson and looking forward together to a successful outcome.

Challenges ahead

Rev Thomas Hunter

Reverend Thomas Hunter and family

One of the many challenges of the project is making repairs and cleaning up five family lairs, the resting place of parishioners that have left their own mark on the history of New Cumnock.

The New Cumnock Liaison Group is currently in the process of completing a Statutory Declaration to enable the remedial work to be carried out.

If you are a descendant of any of these families then please get in touch and we would be delighted to hear from you.

Learning from Mauchline Burns Club

Burns' House Museum, Mauchline

Burns’ House Museum, Mauchline

Andrew Bell and Ian Lyell of the Mauchline Burns Club were kind enough to invite Ian Howat (chair of New Cumnock Liaison Group) and Bobby Guthrie ( New Cumnock Auld Kirk and Village Heritage Trail project leader) to the Robert Burns House Museum, Mauchline to share their experiences on the wonderful work undertaken at Mauchline Kirkyard, where many of Burns’ contemporaries rest.

Mauchline Kirkyard plan

Ian Lyell, Ian Howat and Bobby Guthrie with the Mauchline Kirkyard plan

Although a native of Mauchline, Mr Lyell will be well known to many New Cumnockians having taught in schools there for many years. Here he is showing the location plan of notable headstones in the kirkyard.

Andy Bell, Ian Howat and Ian Lyell

Andy Bell, Ian Howat and Ian Lyell

Ian Lyell points out a headstone of interest to Ian Howat, while Andy Bell looks over the resting place of Willie Fisher ‘Holy Willie’ .

Gavin Hamilton's resting place

Gavin Hamilton’s resting place

Gavin Hamilton’s resting place illustrates the use of the grave markers detailing name, year of birth to year of death, significance to Burns and the coding letter ‘U’ for use on the location map. The cobbles round the headstone have been place there purposefully to prevent damage from strimmers or chemical sprays used in the maintenance of the kirkyard.  ( Check out Gavin Hamilton’s link with New Cumnock here ).

Gravemarkers

Gravemarkers

The use of gravemarkers is well illustrated and ties in well with the theme of ‘blue plaques‘ in the Mauchline Burns Club Trail in the village.

A big thank you to Andy and Ian and the Mauchline Burns’ Club

Mauchline_burnsclubThen let us pray that come it may,
(As come it will for a’ that,)
That Sense and Worth, o’er a’ the earth,
Shall bear the gree, an’ a’ that.
For a’ that, an’, a’ that,
It’s coming yet for a’ that,
That Man to Man, the world o’er,
Shall brothers be for a’ that.