Some Rynelrich Photos

We visited Rynetrick in 2006. It took a while before we found the ruin – it’s not marked on modern maps. But here it is, a one-bedroom stone ruin set in a small dip in the valley. There was a small stream nearby which would have provided fresh water. I would imagine that the family would have attempted to grow some hardy crops, and keep a few chickens. Beyond this, details are thin.

Abernethy & Kincardine

Historically, Rynelrich is located in this parish.  A parish in Inverness-shire between 1870 until 1975. Before 1870 it was partly in Moray and partly in Inverness-shire. It was a parish for both civil and religious purposes from the sixteenth century until 1975.

James Grassick – Blind Socialist (1871-1926)

James Duncan Grassick was known in Edinburgh as a champion of the working class, and in particular the blind. Born in Leith, he lived most of his life in the poor inner-city area of St. Leonards. This part of Edinburgh was renowned for its poor sanitation and health record. For example, in 1915, 25% of the monies allocated by Edinburgh Council for “civil distress” were spent in this one ward.

St. Leonards was an area that workers aspiring for better things wanted to leave. But James Duncan was blind – as was his first wife Isabella (Bowie) Grassick – and he had little chance at a time when such disabilities were simply accepted as meaning fewer chances in life. Instead, he campaigned on behalf of both the blind and the workers generally. He was chairman of the local ward Labour Party, and in fact stood for election to the council in 1920, losing to the Liberal candidate in a by-election notable for its poor turn-out of 12.5%.

James Duncan was also the Blind Workers Union delegate to Edinburgh Trades Council. Interestingly, his grand-son Harry, and his great-grandson Richard, would both go on to become delegates to their local Trades Council, Harry in Edinburgh and Richard in Darlington.

James’ wife died in a tragic accident in 1907. Blind, she fell down an unattended open manhole belonging to the local Gas Board, who subsequently had to pay around £600 compensation to James, blind and widowed with two small children aged 12 (James Duncan junior) and 10 (Jane McGregor).

Traced back to Rynelrich

Having managed to trace my Grassick line to the parish of Abernethy and Kincardine in Inverness-shire, my wife and I decided to make a trip up there in 2006 to try to get more details. What we found from the parish records was that my ancestors lived in a small croft called Rynelrich, just to the west of the Inverness-shire-Aberdeen-shire border. Here Duncan Grassick lived with his wife Isabella Grant, until his death in November 1875. His son James, born on the last day of 1843, would later head south to Edinburgh, probably around 1860.

The name “Rynelrich” appears on the occasional map. But in most cases, the name has been anglicised to “Rynetrick” or “Rynelrick”. But it seems the original name was indeed Rynelrich.

My Grassick Ancestry

My Scottish ancestry is dominated by the fact that my paternal grand-parents were first cousins. James Duncan Grassick, born in Edinburgh in 1894, was the son of Isabella Bowie, who had married my great grand-father James Duncan (these two forenames keep cropping up in this branch of the family) five months before my grandfather’s birth. Isabella had a sister, Elizabeth. In 1921 my grandfather married Elizabeth’s daughter, Jane McGregor Erskine.

The “disgrace” caused a split the family. My father, an only child born nine months later, seems to have been quite cut off from the extended family. There were two other children, Annie Erskine and John Erskine. But my father was never really in touch with his aunt and uncle. We were told that one of Annie’s children was Bobby Combe, the legendary Hibs footballer of the 1950s who also played for Scotland. But Bobby’s birth certificate says otherwise, his mother being recorded as Margaret Haig. Clearly these stories needed investigating.

For this reason, I have spent some time researching the Bowie line of the family. The Bowies moved from Linlithgow to Edinburgh sometime between 1866 and 1869. James Duncan and Jane McGregor’s grandparents lived on the High Street there, possibly with a shop since he (Thomas) was a shoe-maker and she (Jane) a dress-maker. Jane McGregor’s mother Elizabeth was born in Linlithgow in 1859. James Duncan’s mother Isabella, was born ten years later in Portobello, Edinburgh.

The Grassick line can be traced to James Duncan’s grandfather James, who was born in the parish of Abernethy and Kincardine in Inverness-shire in 1844. It must have been James who moved to Edinburgh, as he married in Leith in 1868. What caused James to leave the Highlands? I often wonder.