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Saltcoats History
SALTCOATS " Scotland's Quaintest Burgh " It's Lost Links and Landmarks Restored The following has been extracted from the book of the above name written by P. Charles Carragher in 1909.
Introduction
The
fact that Saltcoats has not played any romantic part in the Scottish history
book, or "contributed to the stirring annals of conflict and the deeds of
kings," does not disqualify it from proper recognition in the chronicles of
history-haunted Ayrshire. In the
past its glory has suffered an undeserved abridgement by reason of its
geographical position between the two towns which, resting upon on its wings are
yet absolutely dissociated from it in character, quaintness and charm. The
present volume claims to be the first to do justice to the town's picturesque
individuality, or to give to its fascinating story the exclusive treatment it
has so long demanded Historical
features, hitherto undealt with, are introduced; and many old landmarks are
drawn from obscurity to light for the first time. The book covers, in brief
compass the long period of the town's transformation from moorland to barley
rigs; from pasture to pavement; the
unique und old-fashioned features of Saltcoats being emphasised with the object
of justifying the designation, of which it cannot readily be dispossessed, “
Scotland's quaintest Burgh." The
wonderful memories of old townspeople, and the remarkable retrospective vision
of John Welsh,
Scotland's oldest postman, have greatly aided the writer in giving glimpses of
features and folk half a century ago. Who
can say that Saltcoats is arid literary soil or unworthy of such a compendium? The
town which gave birth to a lady skipper; which was the native place of the Clyde
captains and their crews ; which produced the Allans
of the Allan Line; the Smiths
of the City Line; the
Workmans
who went to Belfast to extend the linen and flax trade: the
Ritchies,
with Robert Rankine Ritchie
at their head, who sent sloops and schooners to the herring industries;
which was the fons et
origo of the Scottish
Temperance movement; and which has
sent forth a host of distinguished men in the ranks of commerce, of literature,
of navigation, renders any apology for its chronicle unnecessary. And
what town in the kingdom can claim to have given tine equerry of an Emperor? Alexander
Gamble, who rode through
the barricades behind Napoleon Third; who
was all but torn from his horse when the gates of the Tuileries were about to be
closed on the excited crowds; who
was in the thick of Magenta and
Solferine :who held the champing horses of ''the little Emperer " when the
treaty of Villa Franca was being signed; and who watched him die at Chiselhurst,
first saw the light in Saltcoats in 1817. The
author has endeavored to clarify for posterity what had hitherto been vague
impressions of the pre-Reformation foundations of Saltcoats. He could (had it fallen within his scope) have made extended
reference to the remains of the town's Convent
at Holmbyres, between the Caaf
Water and the Monoch or Cuddell Burn;
to the "Nunnery Croft"
and other ancient vestiges, and the graveyard
on Ardrossan Hill where the
early villagers of Saltcoats lie. Although Stevenston
can claim the cell of its patron, St
Monoch, Saltcoats is blest with no
particular sanctification any more than Ardrossan -
none, at all events, that is authorised in the Canonical calendar. It has
not even the visible distinction at its neighbour, Ardrossan,
the mark of the devil's hoof, or a red ruin upon which
in could have been implanted. The
Harbour reef, so far as protruding beyond the ancient
Quay, has certainly the
impression or pre-historic feet; but the monastic records of the West point to
these being the prints of saints, not devils. No
better prelude for this book could be found than the words of Miss
Muir, of Kilmarnock,
authoress of lyrics and poems, whose people belonged to Saltcoats, and who
penned this tribute to its charms;
"
A song for the old, old town With
quaint in old buildings worn and brown, Scattered with scarce a care, Gable
and frontage mingling there, But
the seaport town, with its clusters brown, For
a spirit haunts the town Where
seamen once strode up and down, Where'er
our lot is cast, Sending their echoes of the past And
the quiet quay where they float so free
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