Mossdale
Mossdale maps (1 available)
Map of Kirkcudbrightshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Kirkcudbrightshire
Mossdale books (7 available)
Mossdale memories
Be the first to add a memory of Mossdale.
You can also read memories of nearby places in Kirkcudbrightshire below.
Kirkcudbrightshire memories
THE BOMB
WHO KNOWS ANYTHING ABOUT A BOMB DROPPED FROM AN UNKNOWN
AIRCRAFT AND WAS FOUND BURIED IN A HEDGE ADJACENT TO THE -PARK HEAD PUB----.IF IT HAD EXPLODED __NO PUB__.
A memory of Thornhill contributed by john walker
salmon fishing
Does anyone remember the catching of a 26lb salmon by les walker in the rock dub
one sunday morning.Taking from 9 30 until 12 30 to get out in the waddle hole .
RIVER EHEN. THORNHILL CUMBRIA .
A memory of Thornhill contributed by john walker
Parochial School
I have fond memories of walking from High Bentham to my primary school - Low Bentham Church of England Parochial School. Teacher Miss Robinson, pupils, Eva Clay, Carol Hinds, Joyce Thornber, snow in the playground, piles of coke, hallway with rows of coats, Junket !!
Francis Hardy-Birt
A memory of Lower Bentham contributed by Francis Hardy-Birt
High Bentham..looking for info on relatives
Julie CoatesRoyal Palm Beach, Florida, USA
I am trying to find some information about my great gradfather. He was the postman in High Bentham for many years. His last name was Coates. I don't know his first name.He had a son (William Dabbot Coates) and three daughters Annie, Ethel and Gertie.
A memory of High Bentham contributed by Julie Coates
Extracts From Mossdale & Kirkcudbrightshire books
KING ATHELWOLD of England dies, leaving
his baby daughter, Goldborough. The appointed
King, Godrich, Earl of Cornwall, takes care of
Goldborough, and promises to fulfil the dead
King’s wish - to marry Goldborough to the
strongest man in England when she is of age.
Meanwhile, King Birkabeyn of Denmark dies,
and Earl Godard is given the job of caring for the
baby Havelock and his two sisters. But Godard,
wishing to rule, kills the King’s daughters and
instructs a local warrior and fisherman, Grim, to
drown Havelock at sea. Grim tries to follow the
Earl’s instructions, but he cannot face killing the
baby; he takes him from the water and goes home.
Grim and his wife decide to bring the baby up as
one of their own.
That night they see a ray of light shining out of
the baby’s mouth as he sleeps, and they discover
a royal birthmark on his shoulder. Realising the
baby’s royal heritage and the danger they may
be in, Grim and his family pack their belongings
and set sail for England. When they land on
British soil they found the town of Grimsby.
Havelock grows up and goes to work in Lincoln.
While there, he wins a shot-put competition.
(The stone he threw still lies within the walls of
Lincoln Castle). Havelock gains the reputation
of being the strongest man in England.
Godrich, Earl of Cornwall hears of Havelock,
and introduces Goldborough to him to keep the
dead King’s wish. Goldborough and Havelock
marry in Lincoln and return home to Grimsby.
That night, Goldborough dreams about Havelock
becoming King and sees the light shining from his
mouth in slumber. The next day Grim confirms
Havelock’s birthright and Havelock returns to
Denmark to claim his throne. Havelock returns
in victory, and he and Goldborough become
King and Queen of Denmark and England. They
have fifteen children and reign happily together
for 60 years.
A copy of the 13th-century text of ‘The Lay of
Havelock the Dane’, a 3001-line rhyming poem
telling the legend, can be found in Grimsby
public library.
An extract from from"Humberside Photographic Memories".
Tourism seems to be taking over now. There is a stone marker on the weedy green, in the foreground. It is a reminder of a famous battle in 1066 when King Harold of England defeated Harald of Norway. It has always been overshadowed by a more famous battle that took place north of Hastings.
An extract from from"Humberside Photographic Memories".
A herd of Shorthorn cattle is driven down the main street of West Witton, which stands at the eastern entrance to Wensleydale. West Witton lies in the shadow of Pen Hill on the southern side of the dale. In the distance on the extreme right we can just see the 16th-century tower of the parish church of St Bartholomew.
An extract from from"North Yorkshire Living Memories".
The centrepiece of West Burton’s village green in Wensleydale is this stepped obelisk, dated 1802. In this photograph, a group of people all carrying walking sticks (perhaps they were ramblers?) take a rest on the steps, as the greystone cottages, now part of a Conservation Area, cluster around the greensward in the background.
An extract from from"North Yorkshire Living Memories".
Another market day, this time in Skipton, the ancient gateway town to the eastern Dales. Note the Dales farmers and their wives sitting lined up to the right of the statue, perhaps waiting for a bus. The pinnacled Perpendicular tower of the parish church of the Holy Trinity fills the background, with the war memorial on the right.
An extract from from"North Yorkshire Living Memories".






