Happy #StPatricksDay2023 from St Patrick's Square, Edinburgh, 1914☘️In the background below the spire, the original row of 18th c. tenements of St Patrick Street, for which the square is named. But why was a street in Presbyterian Edinburgh named for the Irish patron saint? 🧵👇
Well the simple answer is it probably wasn't. It was most likely named for Patrick Tod, a local merchant and landowner. It wouldn't be the first or second saintly Edinburgh placename to have a strictly civic root; see also St. James's Square and St. Ann Street 😇
Those original tenements - demolished in the 1930s - had been built in 1782 by the late James Carfrae, the proprietor of a suburban house and garden known as Cabbagehall.
In the mid-18th centurty, Cabbagehall was one of a number of "feus" (a portion of land that had been split up from a larger one under the Scottish system of land tenure) to the south of the city that formed an early suburb, outwith the confines of the City Walls
Most of these suburbs were houses with portions of market garden. The feuars here clearly had a practical sense of naming; other plots included Gairnshall, Huntershall, Summerhall, Orangehall and Turniphall
Cabbagehall was built in the garden of David Stevenson in 1734, and he lived there with his wife and daughter. He took the unusual step of conveying it to his daughter, to provide her with an income from which she could maintain her father and stepmother in their dotage.
The daughter - Elizabeth - was a widow, but remarried a preacher called James Robertson, who attempted (and failed) to run some sort of mission from Cabbagehall, pompously referring to himself as "Minister of the Gospel at the Collegehall".
In the 1780s, Cabbagehall was the location of the public sale of municipal "street dung". Those old tenements of St. Patrick Street were built on part of the Cabbagehall Garden in 1782.
The end tenement of the square, above the pend through to Buccleuch Place, was demolished in the 1970s. It is reputed to have been the final lodging place of Robert Burns during his time in the city.
There were other Cabbagehalls; in Inveresk (near Musselburgh) and also an estate in Fife near Leslie, where there was a Laird of Cabbagehall. Turniphall may have been unique. It was closer to the Pleasance and tenements were built on it in 1758, also by Carfrae.
Part of the Turniphall grounds were sold in 1786. The Nicholson referred to here is from the family who were the ancient landowners, and thus gave their name to Nicholson Street, Square etc. further to the north.
It was pushing Nicholson Street south in 1777 as a grand new road into the city that had cut through the land of Cabbagehall and led to it being progressively sub-fued to build new tenements. This planned road shown in Edgar's 1765 Town Plan.
Kincaid's Town Plan of 1784 shows that St. Patrick Square was not the original plan for this area. But by 1804, Ainslie's Plan shows the garden had been formed and the early 19th century wing of tenements on the west and south sides was planned.
If you want something *actually* named for St. Patrick in Edinburgh, then you need to go to St. Patrick's Catholic Church on the Cowgate. But it wasn't always so, it started life as an Episcopalian Chapel (the "English Chapel" as it was known) in 1770
By 1821 it was occupied by the Relief Church (an organisation that split off the Kirk in Fife in 1763 as the “Presbytery of Relief” for the “Relief of Christians oppressed in their Christian privileges”), and later the United Presbyterian Church
The Catholic Church bought the chapel, with a 50% contribution by local public subscription, and it was consecrated and opened for Mass in 1856. This reflected the swelling number of Irish immigrant Catholics in the Cowgate at this time.
Up until 1918, the RC Church controlled RC schooling, after which St. Patricks' School became the local Catholic primary school for the Cowgate and Dumbiedykes area, moving to a building on St. John's Hill.
Because it's topical, let's have a very brief thread on some history of that Scottish culinary staple, the morning roll. 🧵👇
Back to basics. What is a roll even? Well a roll is a literal descriptive term for how bakers first began to make small, individual bits of bread for sale. They rolled or doubled a piece of dough over, shaped it and baked it.
The books of the Incorporation of Baxters (Bakers) of St. Andrews refers to rolls in 1631: "That na baxter shall sell any banknokis, baikis, nor rollis in his buith, except these he gettis in service". (That no baker shall sell any bannocks, biscuits or rolls in his shop...)
Heads up. Twitter seems to be defaulting to the useless, algorithm -driven "For You" timeline whenever you press the home (house) icon. You want to go to "Following" timeline to see your actual Twitter.
(At least this is my experience as of this afternoon )
Imagine laying off most of your workforce and not getting rid of the department that relentlessly and underhandedly persists with the least-wanted feature on your whole stinking app
It's with trepidation that you're all invited to my talk for @EdinburghWH (in person or online) where I'll show you some of mid-18th c. Edinburgh as Paul Sandby saw it.
📆 - Wed 29 Mar, 6PM
⛪ - St. Mark's Unitarian Church
🎟️ - details in the 🔗 ewh.org.uk/get-involved/e…
Aged just 16, Paul Sandby came to Edinburgh in 1747 as an unknown English draughtsman to draw maps for the military; a budding, prolific and talented artist, he left 4 years later and would become the “Father of English Watercolour”.
During his time in Edinburgh, Sandby painted and sketched the urban landscape and all classes of its people, like nobody before him. He brought it to life in watercolour. His surveyor’s discipline and artist’s eye captured a Georgian city on the cusp of changing forever.
I am currently waiting in a bus shelter, outside a council shed, in the depths of west Edinburgh, in the snow, in my shorts and I'm rather excited... But it's all for a good reason. What is that reason? Well you'll just have to wait and see.
If anyone's looking for the Portobello Power Station coat of arms, we found it
If anyone's looking for the Pilrig Muddle cable tramway pulley wheels, we found them too
"Drawn at The Execution of John Young in the Grass Market, Edinbr., 1751" The description says "a crowd... in the foreground, beyond them the gallows officers with the condemned man on a platform". Except that's not *quite* what's going on here... Let's find out more! 🧵👇
The image is by the hand of Paul Sandby, the young English draughtsman who came to Edinburgh in the aftermath of the 1745 Jacobite Rebellion to turn the triangulations of William Roy's survey of Scotland into the incredible illustrated map. Sandby proved to be quite the artist
With his gang of esteemed friends, in his free time he would sketch the street scenes of the city. But this isn't a thread about Paul Sandby, it's a thread about the scene he drew, and how not is quite what meets the eye.
The registers of Canongate Kirk record on 17th Feb 1819 a 22 year old man was interred, having died 3 days earlier from fever. What they do not say is that he was far from the land of his birth and that he was a truly remarkable man. He was John Sakeouse and this is his story🧵👇
John was well known in Edinburgh and Leith, infact it was fair to say he was something of a celebrity, for he was a unique character in the port and in the city; he was a Kalaaleq , an Inuk from West Greenland, and was the first of his people to travel to Scotland.
He was born around 1797 in Disko Bay, west Greenland at a latitude of 69° N. We do not know his name in his native language, Danish missionaries had Christined him with the biblical names Johannes Zakaeus; John Sackhouse, or Saccheuse, but he signed himself Sakeouse)