Showing posts with label New Deer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Deer. Show all posts

26 August 2018

Leases at Cairnbanno, New Deer

FARM and GROUND at CAIRNBANNO,
TO BE LET.

To be Let, for such number of years as can be agreed on, entry immediately.

THE FARM of ABBOTSHAUGH, and Park of ASLEED, as lately possessed by the deceased Robert Maitland.  The Farm consists of nearly 43 acres, the greater part is inclosed, and the whole, with the exception of a proportion in turnip, is laid out in grass.  ALSO,

A PENDICLE on AUCHMUNZIEL, adjoining the Farm possessed by Mr John Webster, consisting of upwards of 18 acres.

Offers will be received by the Proprietor at Cairnbanno, or George Yeats, Advocate, Aberdeen.

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 26th August 1818.

29 April 2018

Aberdeenshire farm leases

FARMS TO BE LET.

THE FARM of BRACCO, in the parish of Aberdour, and in the immediate neighbourhood of the village of Strichen, as at present possessed by William Wallace; also, that FARM on SOUTH SHEVADO, in New Deer, possessed by Robert Ironside, are to be Let for 19 years.  Entry at Whitsunday next.

For particulars, apply to Alexander Crombie, Advocate in Aberdeen.

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 29th April 1818.

4 June 2017

John Birnie, Brucklay

NOTICE.

SUCH of the Creditors of JOHN BIRNIE, late in Brucklay, now in New Pitsligo, as have not lodged their Claims against him, are requested to do so, before the 24th June next, with Messrs. Robert Jamieson, Atherb, or Alex. Forrest, Brucklay, Trustees for his creditors; otherwise they will receive no share of the funds already realized, which are to be divided by the trustees on that day.

And such of the said John Birnie's Debtors as have not yet paid the amount due by them, are requested to do so to the said trustees, before said day, otherwise prosecutions will immediately hereafter be raised against them.

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 4th June 1817.

14 May 2017

Cairnbanno

FARM AND GROUND ON CAIRNBANNO,
TO BE LET.

To be let for such number of years as can be agreed on, entry immediately.

THE FARM of ABBOTSHAUGH and PARK of ASLEED, as presently possessed by Robert and James Maitland.  The Farm is of considerable extent, and the greater part enclosed.

Offers will be received by the Proprietor, at Cairnbanno; or George Yeats, Advocate in Aberdeen.

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 14th May 1817.

1 January 2017

Roup at Greecyhill

SALE of EFFECTS,
AND NOTICE TO CREDITORS.

THE whole EFFECTS belonging to ALEXANDER RANNIE, in Greecyhill of Brucklay,... consisting of Corn and Fodder, Cattle, a Work Mare, Implements of Husbandry, and Household Furniture, ... will be sold by public roup, by his Trustees, for behoof of his Creditors, at Greecyhill, on Tuesday the 7th curt. at 11 o'clock forenoon.  Credit on security will be given.

Those Creditors who have not already lodged their claims, are requested to do so, with William Gamack, writer in Peterhead without delay.

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 1st January 1817.

4 December 2016

Cairnbanno croft

CROFT TO LET.
To Let, entry immediately,

THAT Possession on the Lands of CAIRNBANNO lately occupied by the deceased ALEX. BRUCE, consisting of about 10 Acres, to which more Ground contiguous can be added, if wanted.  

The ground is of good soil, in excellent heart, and the situation is very desirable for a tradesman, or a person wishing a small possession.

Offers may be made to Mr Wilson, the Proprietor; or George Yeats, Advocate, Aberdeen, on or before the 13th current, when the possession will be Let at Cairnbanno-house.

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 4th December 1816.

27 November 2016

Alexander Muirden, Greenbrae

SALE OF GOODS AT GREENBRAE,
IN THE PARISH OF OLD DEER; And
NOTICE to DEBTORS and CREDITORS.

Upon Tuesday the 10th day of December next, there will be sold by public roup at Greenbrae,

THE whole stock of goods, belonging to Alexander Muirden, Merchant at Greenbrae, consisting of Clothiery, Grocery, and Hardware, and also his Household Furniture.  The roup will begin precisely at 10 o'clock forenoon, on account of the shortness of the day.

All those having Claims against the said Alexander Muirden, are requested to lodge the same with Alexander Webster, Advocate in Aberdeen, agent for his Trustees; and those indebted to the said Alexander Muirden, are desired to pay the sums due by them, to the said Alexander Webster, or to John Brodie, Merchant in New Deer, within one month from this date to prevent expences.

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 27th November 1816.

14 August 2016

James Finnie, Bonnykelly

MEETING OF CREDITORS.

THE whole Creditors of JAMES FINNIE, Farmer in Headiton of Bonnykelly, parish of New Deer, are desired to meet at Mr Hendry's Inn, New Pitsligo, upon Tuesday the 27th of August, by eleven o'clock A.M. to concert the most proper measures for winding up the said concern.

Not to be repeated.
Strichen, 10th August, 1816.

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 14th August 1816.

31 July 2015

Margaret the missionary

Antananarivo
July 31st 1865

My dear Sir,

It is with feelings of deep thankfulness to God for His persevering care both by sea and land that I now write to you from the capital of Madagascar.  We have been mercifully preserved amid many dangers and difficulties and here we would seek to raise another Ebeneezer and consecrate ourselves anew to the service of God.

So begins the letter composed by Margaret Milne to officials of the London Missionary Society, after a journey of almost five months.  A native of New Pitsligo, she was just twenty-three years old when she left Britain in February 1865.  For the final leg of the voyage she was accompanied by another missionary from the neighbouring Aberdeenshire parish of New Deer.  Margaret Ironside had been married barely two years when her husband Alexander Irvine died en route to a posting in the Loyalty Islands and a rendezvous was arranged in Mauritius for the two Margarets, who continued to Madagascar together.  Having grown up within a few miles of each other, they were already well acquainted.


Female company must have been very welcome to the young male missionaries who had already spent three years in Antananarivo.  By the end of November, the Society's printer John Parrett was writing home to report:

My dear Sir,

I have much pleasure in writing to you by this mail, and informing you that I was married to Miss M. Milne on the 1st of this month.

In fact two weddings were conducted on that day at the British Consulate in Tamatave, since romance had blossomed between Margaret Irvine (née Ironside) and the Rev. Joseph Pearse, who had also been widowed.  In the course of time the British community was considerably augmented by the arrival of young Parretts and Pearses.



Having set up a printing press and taken on native apprentices, John Parrett was kept busy supporting the work of his missionary colleagues.  However, his correspondence to the Society's officers in London illustrates the problems which arose as a result of unreliable communications and interruptions in the supply of paper.  The activities of French missionaries also caused frustration, as revealed in his letter of December 1879:

The Jesuits have flooded the country with Popish prints, and we can hardly enter a native house (in the country especially) without seeing pictures of the Virgin, Saints &c on the walls.  The missionaries generally are anxious to check the spread of these pernicious and objectionable prints...

Missionary children received their early education in local schools but as they grew up, arrangements were made for them to attend boarding schools in the UK, whole families returning together on furlough.  In her memoirs written in 1949, Elizabeth Parrett describes the first stage of the ten day journey from Antananarivo to Tamatave undertaken in 1873 by the Parrett and Pearse families, with four and five children respectively:

We all went in palanquins carried on men's shoulders.  At night we stopped at a native village, commandeered a good hut (...), put up the camp beds and mosquito curtains and, after a meal of rice and chicken, slept soundly till early morning. (...)  It was quite a cavalcade as each palanquin had 6 or 8 bearers, 4 at a time with 2 or 4 to relieve at short intervals.  Then there were the cooking utensils, bedding, food, clothes and luggage.  


The prolonged stay in Britain provided the children with an ideal opportunity to get to know their grandparents and other relatives and to adapt to the British climate.  A winter visit to Aberdeenshire left a lasting impression on eight year old Elizabeth Parrett:

Going home for Christmas, there was a heavy fall of snow and as the railroad stopped at Strichen, four miles from New Pitsligo, we had to go the remainder of the journey in a gig.  We got into a drift and were half frozen when we reached my grandmother's.  I can remember now, sitting on her lap in front of a blazing fire, while she took off my socks and chafed my feet.

When the period of furlough came to an end in 1875, both couples returned to Madagascar to resume their duties, leaving their children behind in the UK to pursue their education.   The 1881 UK census (RG11, Piece 0730, Folio 83, Page 15) shows Edward Parrett at the age of thirteen as a boarder at the school for sons of missionaries at Blackheath in Kent, where Alexander Pearse aged twelve and his ten year old brother James were also pupils.   Meanwhile the Parrett girls, Elizabeth aged fourteen and Maggie aged eleven, were attending Marsh Street Mission School in Walthamstow, Essex (RG11, Piece 1730, Folio 83, Page 54).   They had familiar company, since the Pearce girls (Annie aged fourteen, Margaret, thirteen, and nine year old Rosa) were also scholars in the same establishment. Charles Parrett, who was just eight years of age, was staying many hundreds of miles away with his Milne grandparents in New Pitsligo (RD 227B, ED 2, Page 26).

Following another period of furlough for John and Margaret Parrett, they returned to Madagascar in 1888 with their daughters, while their sons continued their schooling in the UK.  By this time John had resigned from his missionary work and had accepted a position in the service of the Malgasy government.  Teaching a group of local schoolchildren occupied some of Elizabeth's time, but the family had sufficient leisure to enjoy a varied social life.  An interesting account of the annual Fandroana festival is given in Elizabeth's memoirs:

In the north-east corner of the big palace a corner was screened off by scarlet curtains and here water was heated for the Queen's bath (...).  Then she retired behind the curtains and had her bath.  She emerged resplendent in a crimson velvet dress with much gold embroidery and with a crown on her head - the ceremonial one with the seven "fingers" in front.  The Prime Minister carried a pannikan of the bath water and the Queen dipped her fingers in it and sprinkled all those she passed on her way to the great door.  There she sprinkled the soldiers and the cannons were fired and everyone lit a small bonfire in their yards and on the hillsides.



This way of life came to an abrupt end in 1895 with the French occupation of Madagascar and the exile of Queen Ranavolona III .  The Parrett family, acknowledging that they had no further role in the country's government, sought a new future elsewhere and eventually settled in Tasmania, where John and Margaret ended their days.  Despite increasing difficulties and dangers, Joseph and Margaret Pearse remained working alongside other LMS missionaries in Madagascar until 1904 and spent their final years in rural England.
 
Archival material relating to the London Missionary Society and other British missionary organisations is held at the   School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London .




2 March 2014

Touxhill Farm, New Deer

PARISH OF NEW DEER
-----
SALE OF HORSES, CATTLE, CORN, AND BEAR,
WITH FODDER, HAY, FARMING UTENSILS,
AND HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE

There will be exposed to Sale, by public roup, at Touxhill of 
New Deer, on Tuesday the 8th day of March 1914,

THE Whole STOCKING and EFFECTS on the Farm of TOUXHILL, which belonged to the deceased James Cruickshank, consisting of,

1st, LIVE STOCK, viz. - 2 Work-horses, one of which is an animal of superior strength; a Poney; 4 Work-oxen; 5 Stots rising 3 years, 3 ditto rising 2 years; 7 Cows in calf; and 6 Calves.

2d, CROP, viz. - From 20 to 30 bolls Bear, with fodder, and 10 bolls without fodder; 30 bolls Corn, with fodder, and 20 bolls, without fodder; and upwards of 1000 stones of Hay.  And

3d,  The deceased's whole HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, and IMPLEMENTS of HUSBANDRY, comprehending every thing necessary for the Farmer.

The Roup to begin at 9 o'clock in the morning, and to continue till all is sold off.  Nine months credit, on security, will be given.

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 2nd March 1814.

19 January 2014

James Sangster, New Deer

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

A DIVIDEND of the whole proceeds of the subjects which belonged to JAMES SANGSTER, Shoemaker in Rumblinpots, parish of New Deer, will be made on Monday the 31st of January inst. within the house of Mr Stewart, vintner, Mormond Village, by 10 o'clock forenoon.  And such of his Creditors as have not lodged their claims, are desired to lodge them, with affidavit thereon, with John Woodman, at Old-manse, Strichen, previous to said day; and such as fail to comply with this intimation, will not be entitled to any share of the proceeds of the said James Sangster's subjects. - [Not to be repeated.]
Strichen, 14th Jan. 1814.

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 19th January 1814.

17 February 2013

William Hay, Stuartfield

WILLIAM HAY,
DYER IN STUARTFIELD,

BEGS leave to return his most sincere thanks to his friends, and the public in general, for the very liberal encouragement he has hitherto experienced in the line of his business; and at the same time requests a continuance of their favours, which they may be assured it will be his constant study to merit.

W.H. continues to be at FORDMOUTH on the first Tuesday of every month, to take in Cloth, Yarn, &c.

Messrs. Hope Peterkin, Cruden Bleachfield; John Gray, Hawkhillock; John Milne, merchant, Longside and John Hay, Culsh, New Deer; likewise take in work for him, in their respective corners; and all articles sent by carriers will be returned carriage-free from whatever distance.

N.B. - AN APPRENTICE Wanted.
February 9th, 1813.

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 17th February 1813.

29 April 2012

William Stephen, New Deer, deceased

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

THE CREDITORS of the late WILLIAM STEPHEN, Farmer in Honneynook, parish of New Deer, are requested to meet within the house of Widow Reid, vintner there, upon Friday the 8th of May, in order to bring matters to a final settlement.

[Not to be repeated.]

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 29th April, 1812.

30 October 2011

Over Oldwhat Farm, New Deer

EXTENSIVE FARM TO BE LET.

THE Farm of OVER OLDWHAT of BRUCKLAY, in the parish of New Deer, as at present possessed by James Mackie, is to be let at Mr Lawa's in New Deer on Tuesday the 26th November next, at 12 o'clock noon.

This Farm contains 23A. 1R 37F. of Old Infield; 70A. 2R. 30F. of Outfield; 15A. 3R 6F. of Green Pasture; and 388A. 1R. 24F. of Muir, capable of being cultivated at a small expence.

The lands extend along the high-road from Peterhead to Banff, are in the neighbourhood of several Limestone Quarries, and not distant from Shell Sand.  Allowance will be given for Building and Enclosing.

For particulars, enquire at Alexander Crombie, Advocate in Aberdeen.  James Greig, at Mill of Brucklay, will shew the marches.

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 30th  October, 1811.

3 April 2011

ROUP AT GREENS, MONQUHITTER

ROUP AT GREENS.
In the Parish of MONQUHITTER,
AND HOUSE AND FARM TO BE LET.

There will be exposed to public roup, on Thursday 11th of April curt.
THE whole HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, CATTLE, HORSES, and LABOURING UTENSILS, that belonged to the lately deceased JOHN COUTTS, Esq. of Asleed.  Credit will be given on security.

And on Thursday the 18th, at 12 o'clock noon, there will be Let, for a lease of Five Years, entry at Whitsunday first, at Mr Law's, vintner in New Deer, the HOUSE and GROUND, lately occupied by the said John Coutts, Esq.  The House consists of two floors, is slated, and in good condition.  The Barn, Stable, and Cart-House are lately built.  The Ground is mostly in-field, and measures about 23 acres.  It is a desirable situation for a private family.

Published in the Aberdeen Journal, Wednesday 3rd April, 1811.