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The Inverness Courier for 25 September 1833 records the presentation to him of a piece of plate, inscribed "by admirers of his public conduct and private character, residing in Inverness and neighbourhood; in acknowledgment of his strenuous and valuable services in support of popular rights during Earl Grey’s administration, a period of the ...
The Inverness Courier is a local, bi-weekly newspaper, published each Tuesday and Friday in Inverness, Scotland. [3] It reports on issues in Inverness and the Highlands and Islands of Scotland. It is the longest, continually running local newspaper covering the area.
East Fife Mail – tabloid weekly sister paper of Fife Free Press for the Levenmouth area; Fife Free Press – weekly tabloid newspaper for the Kirkcaldy area; Fife Herald; Glenrothes Gazette (Leslie and Markinch News) – tabloid sister weekly paper of Fife Free Press; St Andrews Citizen
The newspaper was owned by the Chalmers family throughout the nineteenth century, and edited by members of the family until 1849, when William Forsyth became editor. Its political position was Conservative. [4] In November 1922, the paper was renamed The Aberdeen Press and Journal when its parent firm joined forces with the Free Press.
Mike Edwards was a journalist for 40 years, beginning his career as a trainee reporter for the Inverness Courier in 1986. He later switched to radio and worked for Radio Forth, Radio Tay and Moray Firth Radio before returning to press journalism as a sports correspondent for The Press and Journal in Inverness.
A later member of the family, Robert Cumming, 13th of Altyre, married Lucy, daughter of Sir Ludovic Gordon of Gordonstoun. Their great-grandson was the first Baronet, who assumed the additional surname of Gordon on succeeding to the Gordon of Gordonstoun estates. The second Baronet sat as Member of Parliament for Elgin Burghs. He changed the ...
The legend of the Loch Ness Monster was born when the Inverness Courier, a newspaper in the nearby Scottish city, published a story entitled "Strange Spectacle on Loch Ness". [2] As the Courier began reporting more sightings, other newspapers picked up the story, with international reporters coming to the Loch by October. [3]
Siol Eachairn [7] was written by Rev. Dugald MacEchern in 1933. Siol Eachairn draws upon the original research published 30 years prior by Rev A. Maclean Sinclair. [2] The document outlines the known theories on the origins of the people and the name; it then goes on to give a genealogical account of the three main branches of the family.