Volume contents
- 1 - Crawford etc , Page 1 (start)
- 20 - Crawford etc , Page 20
- 28A - Crawford etc , loose item
- 40 - Crawford etc , Page 40
- 60 - Crawford etc , Page 60
- 73A - Crawford etc , loose map
- 80 - Crawford etc , Page 80
- 100 - Crawford etc , Page 100
- 120 - Crawford etc , Page 120
- 140 - Crawford etc , Page 140
- 160 - Crawford etc , Page 160
- 180 - Crawford etc , Page 180
- 200 - Crawford etc , Page 200
- 220 - Crawford etc , Page 220
- 240 - Crawford etc , Page 240
- 260 - Crawford etc , Page 260
- 280 - Crawford etc , Page 280
- 300 - Crawford etc , Page 300
- 316 - Crawford etc , Page 316 (end)
- 317 - Crawford etc , Title Page
- 318 - Crawford etc , Index
Continued entries/extra info
Gold Scours continued:-
"gold at Long Cleuch as would have maintained three times as many men as he kept royally. From Short Cleuch he removed up the great hill to Long Cleuch Head, to seek gold in solid places; where of he discovered a small spring, but there he wanted a water course to help him. Thus vein had the Sappar stone plentifully in it, which sometimes held natural gold, but the salmoneer stones at Long Cleuch Head held much silver, and may prove a ... mine if followed by such as know the nature of minerals. It is said that vein was po...ed with gold, called small powdered gold. It was a vein and not a bed. The removed from Short Cleuch trial to Long Cleuch Head because the workmen found two pieces of gold there within two feet of the Moss. The one was reported to weight 6 ounces and the other better than five, which was thought to descend from the gold bed. At Long Cleuch head as I heard it reported and saw a piece of the same, was found a piece of brown spar, somewhat like sugar candy, which after it was broken , had in it an ounce of pure gold, which spar as I suppose is called the sappar stone in foreign nations. This brown spar weighed two pounds troy. At Long Cleuch Head Mr. Bulmer made a stamping mill, called abroad , anacanago. Such are used in the West Indies, and in Cornwall, where it is sometimes called a plash mill to dress tin out of stones, in which the eye can discern little or nothing. By the same means Mr. Bulmer used to get much small meally gold at Long Cleuch." (P.148.149). Secretary Davidson's account of the coinage seems to be correct, for a large gold coinage did take place in the reigns of James IV. and James V., but of Mary's reign there was only a coinage of the early year. These coins were popularly known as bonnet pieces, and were always reported to be the produce of Crawford Moor gold nor does there seem to seem to be any reason to discredit the legend." P. 134. The gold rocks of Great Britain and Ireland by J. Calvert.
Ordnance Survey - Lanark county, OS Name Books - Lanark county - Volume 18 - Parish of Crawford and Moffat, OS1/21/18
This volume contains information on place names found in the parish of Crawford and Moffat.
Ordnance Survey - Lanark county
Ordnance Survey was established in the 18th century to create maps, surveys and associated records for the entirety of Great Britain. These records are arranged by county. This entry has been created to enable searching for Ordnance Survey records for the county of Lanark, which is in the west of Scotland. The boundaries of the county were altered by the Boundary Commissioners in 1891.