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Iain Donald Campbell was born on 20 September 1963 on the Isle of Lewis to John Norman Campbell and his wife Lily Maciver (née Mackenzie). Campbell had two sisters, Margaret and Alma. [ 4 ] Campbell attended the Nicolson Institute , a school on Lewis , before studying at the University of Glasgow , where he graduated with First Class Honours ...
The two hospitals are supported by visiting consultants from Western Isles Hospital in Stornoway, and mainland health boards. Map. Travelling from Barra to Stornoway involves:
Stornoway Town Hall. The town was founded by Vikings in the early 9th century, [8] with the Old Norse name Stjórnavágr.The settlement grew up around a sheltered natural harbour and became a hub for people from all over the island, who travelled to Stornoway either by family boat or by horse-drawn coach, for onward travel to and trade with the rest of Scotland and further afield.
Donald MacLeod ("Wee Donald") was born in Stornoway on the Isle of Lewis on 14 August 1916. [1] Macleod was mentored and tutored by John Morrison, who took him to his first Northern Meeting. [2] He was also tutored by Willie Ross, and every week for 27 years by John MacDonald of Inverness. [3]
NHS Western Isles said its new temporary site serving Stornoway's Western Isles Hospital was the first of its kind to be put in place following last year's review.
Louisa's mother, Mary Mackenzie, painted by Thomas Lawrence Louisa Caroline Stewart-Mackenzie was born on 5 March 1827 at Seaforth Lodge, Stornoway, on the Isle of Lewis, Scotland, the youngest daughter and sixth child of James Alexander Stewart-Mackenzie (1784–1843), a Scottish politician and British colonial administrator, and his wife Mary Elizabeth Frederica Mackenzie (1783–1862 ...
The Stornoway Gazette is a local newspaper reporting on local issues in the Western Isles of Scotland, specifically Stornoway and the Outer Hebrides.
She was born in Loanhead, near Edinburgh on 14 March 1941, and adopted by the weaver and Royal Naval Reserve seaman Allan MacIver and his wife Christina MacIver; both were natives of Broker, Isle of Lewis. When she was 12, she moved with her family to Stornoway, the Island's capital, where she attended the Nicolson Institute. [4]