Hi Juli
I admire your command of the English
Language. I don`t have it, but I appreciate it in others.
I have lived in Saskatoon,SK Canada for
many years.
A page on the website will have all the
information I have so far, on my Sinclair`s. (next week)
Yours Aye
Ken
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, March 24, 1999 12:08
PM
Subject: RE: Dalmally
Hi
Ken -
I
only wish I had the words to truly capture the magnificent beauty of
Scotland. If she was a woman I would be first in line to admire
not only her beauty but her dignity and strength as
well.
While
I visiting my gran this trip she told me that a Robert Sinclair son of
Archibald and Harriet (nee Laing) had two sons who are living in
Perthshire. Previously I had thought that Robert had died without
children. I haven't yet searched for them but may try so that I could
make some contact on my trip over this summer.
I
have only been to Perth when I was a young girl. Have to see if I can
ask my mother for some pictures to jog my memory about where we went and what
we did.
Where
are you located now?
Have
a wonderful day.
Ready
Aye Ready,
Juli
Princeton, NJ but Forever Argyll
Hi Juli
Its awesome to read your description of
Dalmally and area. I closed my eyes, and I could smell and feel the
air.
My Sinclair`s came from Perthshire, which I
know nothing about yet.
Ken W Sinclair
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, March 24, 1999 7:39 AM
Subject: Dalmally
> >Hi Donald and Friends - > >Dalmally
Church is beautiful. The square shaped clock tower with
the >attached octagonal church is very unusual but beautifully
positioned on its >small rise of land. > >My gran and I
parked in the parking lot of the church and had a wonderful >lunch of
Scotch broth and soft rolls in the car as we watched the sheep in >the
adjourning field. After lunch I scrambled up the hill and through
the >gate in the stone wall to enter the cemetery. I only walked
through the old >section - closest to the church. > >My
first impression of the church and cemetery is difficult to
describe. >Immediately I felt overwhelming excitement and yet even
more pronounced was >the deep sense of peace or balance that washed
over me. Somehow I knew I >had "come home." > >The
air in Dalmally, to quote my gran, "is sweet" and combined with the
soft >Scottish mist that was falling created an almost theatrical
atmosphere. >February is a wonderful time to visit the Highlands if
you are interested in >capturing a feeling of what it might have been
like years past. The stark >form of the bare trees against the
low hanging gray sky, the intense green >of the grass, the mounds of
rust colored dead bracken and everything around >you water logged all
combine with the beautiful clear air. Time stops. >Your senses
are overcome with the rugged beauty of the land. I wanted
to >taste the rain, listen to the "squish" of my shoes in the soft
ground, touch >the moss covered stones, fill my lungs to capacity with
the fresh cool air >and photograph all that I saw and do this all
simultaneously. > >Dalmally Church and cemetery is beautifully
kept. Dunoon cemetery struggles >with an outrageous level of
vandalism (and an apparent apathy to it.) There >was no evidence
of such a problem in Dalmally. > >The high gloss red double door
is very welcoming. > >Donald, all the stones in the old section
face East - do you know why? I >have heard tales of "The Gates
of Heaven always being open in the East." >Some stones would be easier
to view if they were inscribed on the other >side. It is
difficult to squeeze between the stone and the side of the >church
when the stone is 6 inches from the building to read the
inscription. >So there must be a very important reason for
this. > >For anyone visiting Scotland - Argyll is worth the
visit. I thoroughly >enjoyed the Loch Awe area. Kilchurn
Castle, at times described as gloomy, >has become my favorite piece of
real estate. It is currently up for sale - >asking price - bids
over 150,000 pounds. Worth every penny as far as I
am >concerned. A group of Germans were looking at it while I was
there. >Wordsworth was also impress with Kilchurn and wrote the
following: > > "Child of a loud-throated war, the mountain
stream > Roars in thy hearing; but thy hour of rest > Is come,
and thou art silent in thy age, > Save when the winds sweep
by... > >Personally I think Kilchurn and Loch Awe deserve a
little more exciting >poetry - but hey I'm not
Wordsworth. > >Time to get on. > >Have a great
day. > >Juli > >[ This is the Sinclair family
discussion list, sinclair@jump.net. >[ To get off
or on the list, see http://www.mids.org/sinclair/list.html
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