Auldhame

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Auldhame
East Lothian
Auldhame House - geograph.org.uk - 921212.jpg
Auldhame House
Location
Grid reference: NT593843
Location: 56°3’4"N, 2°39’7"W
Data
Post town: North Berwick
Postcode: EH39
Dialling code: 01620
Local Government
Council: East Lothian
Parliamentary
constituency:
East Lothian

Auldhame is a hamlet in close to the coast in East Lothian. It is close to North Berwick and the village of Whitekirk.

Saint Baldred's legacy

Auldhame Castle

It is said that the 8th century Christian missionary St Baldred]] had one of his bases at Auldhame,[1] and through his influence the parish of Auldhame had significant influence in the development of Christianity in Scotland. He also founded a church at Scoughall and several local geographical features are named after him. His name also lives on in St Baldred's Church and St Baldred's Road in North Berwick.

Following Baldred's death there was a dispute between the parishes of Auldhame, Tyninghame, and Prestonkirk, as to which should have his body. The story goes that by the advice of a Holy Man, they spent the night in prayer. In the morning three bodies were found, in all respects alike, each in its winding sheet, prepared for burial. To this day all three churches maintain Saint Baldred was buried within their walls.

In 2005 skeletal and archaeological remains, thought to be a church, were discovered in a field at Auldhame. Initial estimates that the church dated from the Mediæval period were later proved wrong, and it was established that the find may even date from the time of St Baldred himself.[2]

In the sixteenth century Auldhame belonged to the Otterburn family.

Today

Today there is little in the area except farming. The houses at Auldhame are given little thought by those driving to North Berwick or visiting nearby Seacliff or Tantallon Castle. Indeed, such visitors are likely to be gazing towards the Bass Rock rather than considering the scattered houses and cottages at the roadside.

Link to Robert Louis Stevenson

In 1919, John Robert Dale bought the estate of Seacliff, Scoughall and Auldhame after being tenant farmer of Scoughall since 1848, and Auldhame since 1834. The three estates remain to this day in the ownership of the Dale family. The novelist Robert Louis Stevenson was related to John Robert Dale and spent several boyhood holidays at Scoughall. It was here in front of the farmhouse fire that the young Stevenson first heard the story of how folks in these parts on dark stormy nights, when winds used to lash the coast, lured sailing ships onto the rocks by displaying misleading lantern lights.

The 'Pagans of Scoughall' had the worst of reputations. They were said to tie a horse's neck to its knee and attach a lantern to the rope, then drive the horse slowly along the cliffs, so that a vessel out at sea would think it a ship riding at anchor, and come in, only to be wrecked on the rocky reef known as the Great Car and be plundered by the ghoulish people. These tales gave Stevenson the idea for his story 'The Wreckers'. Stevenson also wrote in his novel 'Catriona' (sequel to Kidnapped) of the 'lights of Scoughall' and purposely put 'Tam Dale' in charge of the prisoners on the Bass Rock.

Outside links

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about Auldhame)

References

  1. Yeoman, Peter (1999). Pilgrimage in Mediæval Scotland. London & Edinburgh: B T Batsford & Historic Scotland. 
  2. Springer, Will (2007-05-25). "Ruins may have links to St Baldred". The Scotsman. http://heritage.scotsman.com/places.cfm?id=573232005. Retrieved 2007-07-01. 
  • The Churches of Saint Baldred, by A.E.Ritchie, Edinburgh, 1880.
  • North Berwick, Gullane, Aberlady, East Linton & District, by R.P. Phillimore,1913.
  • North Berwick History