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  2. Christie Cleek - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christie_Cleek

    According to folklore, his real name was Andrew Christie, a Perth butcher. During a severe famine in the mid-fourteenth century (Hector Boece records floods, murrain, and plagues of "myce and ratonis" throughout Scotland in 1340), Christie joined a group of scavengers in the foothills of the Grampians. When one of the party died of starvation ...

  3. Macsween (butcher) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macsween_(butcher)

    Macsween of Edinburgh is a Scottish company, known for making haggis. [1] Macsween is a family company [2] established as a butchers shop in Bruntsfield in Edinburgh, opened by Charlie and Jean Macsween in the 1950s. [3] [4] Their eldest son John Macsween took over and expanded the business with his wife Kate after Charlie died in 1975.

  4. John Macsween (entrepreneur) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Macsween_(entrepreneur)

    Macsween came from a family of butchers in Edinburgh, where he noted the popularity of haggis among English rugby fans attending international matches at Murrayfield Stadium. [1] After taking over the family business in 1975, the subsequent popularity of their haggis led to his opening the world's first purpose-built haggis factory, and the ...

  5. Lowland Clearances - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lowland_Clearances

    Thousands of cottars and tenant farmers from the southern counties (Lowlands) of Scotland migrated from farms and small holdings they had occupied to the new industrial centres of Glasgow, Edinburgh and northern England [a] or abroad, or remaining upon land though adapting to the Scottish Agricultural Revolution.

  6. Allens of Mayfair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allens_of_Mayfair

    Allens Scottish beef was bred especially for them in the Cairngorm National Park. All of the pork, beef, lamb, geese and turkey sold came from farms in the UK, and all meat sold could be traced back to the farm. [5] Butchery classes were held weekly around the hexagonal butchers block in the middle of the shop.

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  8. Category:Scottish butchers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Scottish_butchers

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