Grace Notes - Memphis Scottish Society
Transcription
Grace Notes - Memphis Scottish Society
Grace Notes Newsletter of the Memphis Scottish Societ y, Inc. Vol. 31 No. 9 • Se ptember 2015 From the President Memphis Scottish Society, Inc. Board President John Schultz 901 754-2419 [email protected] Vice President Robert Hawks 901 857-1520 [email protected] Treasurer George Malone 901 385-1938 [email protected] Secretary Joe Lyle 901 754-1811 The Memphis Scottish Society was at the Mid-South Renaissance Faire for the first weekend. George Malone and Phyllis Davis where there from opening to closing both days. Also helping were Wes Kirkpatrick, John and Kathy Schultz, Nancy Shields, and Amelia Rose-Tummalipalli and her daughters. It seemed to hit a sweet spot between Highland Games and local city festivals in having a good number of people interested in Scotland who live in the Memphis area. Our Memphis Scottish Country Dancers were also there Saturday morning with two demonstrations of simple dances done to Renaissance era Playford tunes. An interesting event occurred when when one group of the entertainers, “Haggis Rampant” of New Orleans, came by. Upon seeing the Burns Nicht flyer on the table, they launched in to a “Haggis off.” Several of us joined in and matched them verse for verse on Burns’s “To a Haggis.” Too bad nobody got a video of it! September Meeting Melissa Gibson will present the program at the September meeting of the Memphis Scottish Society. The topic is Aspects of Early Celtic Life. As you may remember, Seldon Murray taught a class at Rhodes on Early Celtic Christianity, and he is graciously sharing his notes and pictures from the first few classes. [email protected] Members at Large Kent McAden 901 509-7701 [email protected] Joyce Varner 901 382-3640 [email protected] Debby Sellmansberger 901 465-4739 debby.sellmansberger @memphisscots.com Tennessee Tartan. Created by the Heart of Tennessee Scottish Celebration as a State tartan. Passed by Tennessee Public Acts 1999, Chapter No.82, Senate Bill No. 73. The source of the tartan 2526 was: Bill Bickford of the Tennessee Tartan Committee. Memphis Scottish Society, Inc. Burns Nicht Ticket Order ___ General Admission: $55 ___ Patrons: $75 (Preferential seating, private reception and whisky tasting 6:30-8:30 Jan 15th at the home of Greg and Ellen Koziel, 341 Grandview Street, Memphis) ___ Benefactors: $100 (Patron benefits, plus acknowledgment in program) ___ Table of 8: $400 Name(s): ________________________________ Address: ________________________________ ty fosters education and good City, State, ZIP+4: Tennessee area ________________________________________ ritage and other h matters, Memphis Scottish Scottish Society’s Society’s Memphis 33nd 33nd Annual Annual Burns Nicht Nicht Dinner Dinner Burns Telephone: _____________________________ their Scottish Email: _________________________________ January 23, 23, 2016 2016 January h similar groups in e general public ottish heritage. zations and it of education and ottish heritage. Memphis Scottish Society, Inc. P.O. Box 770028 Memphis, TN 38177-0028 the Memphis Check area or money order, made to Memphis Scotvoted to certain tish Society, Inc., must be received by January 13, , traditions, history, 2016.Mail to: Woodland Hills Hills Event Event Center Center Woodland 10000 Woodland Woodland Hills Hills Dr, Dr, 10000 Cordova, Tennessee Tennessee Cordova, MSSI, 10134 Serenity Dr., Lakeland, TN 38002. Grace Notes Grace Notes is the official publication of the Memphis Scottish Society, Inc. It is published monthly. Like the Society itself, the credo of Grace Notes is “to foster education and promote understanding of things Scottish.” If you have something of interest to readers of this newsletter, please submit a typewritten manuscript to the editorial staff. If the article or notice is very brief (30 words or fewer), e-mail or just use the telephone. Grace Notes will accept and publish good quality photographs. The deadline for all submissions is the fourth week of each month preceding the month of publication. Please include a self-addressed stamped envelope with each submission, if you want the material returned. Editorial Staff Doors open open at at 6:00 6:00 PM PM Doors Program begins begins 7:00 7:00 PM PM Program Melissa Gibson Editor, (901-299-3170) [email protected] Sammy Rich Publisher, (901-496-2193) [email protected] Gavin Anderson Circulation Editor, (901-485-8270) [email protected] Karen English Circulation Editor, (901-396-9134) [email protected] [email protected] 2 to foster education and promote understanding of things Scottish Please address all correspondence to: Grace Notes The Memphis Scottish Society, Inc. [email protected] P. O. Box 770028 Memphis, TN 38177-0028 Thistle Cottage News give you some success stories. Some, of course teach at universities, but some with masters degrees have become the important administrators of Scottish Historical sites. One is the woman who ran Dunfermline’s Abbott House for a while. Some have become the company historians for large corporations like FEDEX in Europe and such; others have become librarians and researchers at archival institutes, two are at the University of St Andrews. Others are simply knowledgable librarians or researchers. One gent works for ancestry.com. These are not positions that offer huge salaries, but they provide comfortable livings. One of the most successful people I know lives next door to my home in Scotland. He is an American lawyer who studied British law, and he is married to one of the Scottish representatives to the European Union, who is his wife. As such, he not only practices Scottish law, but also takes care of the kids whilst mom is in Belgium conducting important business and wrangling over the future of Greece! I am going to start by being quite serious.... Several years ago the MSSI gave me a scholarship to attend the University of Guelph in Canada, which was and still is the only university in North America that offers graduate degrees in Scottish Studies (history, literature, government, law, etc.). These subjects all result in Masters and PhD degrees in Scottish history, and they are examples of the types of focus a student can take. There is a university in the US, namely Old Dominion University, that does offer an undergraduate degree in Scottish History. But that is about all we have on this continent to get young people interested in Scottish history. There are other inroads: architecture, international business, international law, language studies, and so forth. But getting young people interested in “Scottish-ness” is not easy nor is it necessarily profitable for them. One must love what one does and this is how it has worked for me. I am fortunate in that I have a nice pension that allows me to do what I love and still get by. In the end, what I would say is that the most important job qualification is that the person seeking these sorts of positions must have a love for what he or she does. A business course here or there certainly helps, and some beginner law classes are also a must. It is not easy being an American trying to become a part of the Scottish fabric. Sammy asked me how a student becomes interested in or can be encouraged to pursue a degree in Scottish Studies, and I would say that in this day and age of computers and hi-tech jobs that this is difficult, and the monetary potential is fading. Quite honestly, a student must first have a love for things Scottish and how that is achieved is very random. For me it was my father’s love of bagpipe music. He was a businessman, but every project he did in our house was done to the Black Watch pipes and drums. He took me a time or two to see the Black Watch perform at our local venues. But it was not until much later that my interest bloomed. In university I loved history, and at one point wanted to go into law. But the day I graduated, I knew I could not leave history and literature behind. I stayed with “humanities” because I loved them and if you love what you do, I believe you find a way to make it work. So play bagpipes for your kids or grandkids, get them a kilt, moreover... take them to Scotland many times. In some respects this is a call to all who have interest in things Scottish, but it should be said that there are many of us still trodding on to make Scotland’s history its own, outside of England’s history, which it is not. Thanks so much Susan Murray (did you know the name Murray or Murie comes from Moray? There was a famous Murray who had quite a bit to do with William Wallace... see what you find.) That having been said, I want to 3 The Kirking of our Episcopal Church Saint Elisabeth’s Episcopal Church 6033 Old Brownsville Road Bartlett, Tennessee We are going to celebrate our heritage as people of in our borders now than ever before in the history of our nation. Diversity can mean growth and perhaps the Kirkin’ may be a way to bridge by finding our common dedication. The heart of every Kirkin’ o’ the Tartans service is the Presentation of the Tartans of the Clan, Regiment and/or Region.... a constant symbol of the rededication of Scots folk everywhere to the service of our Heavenly Father. Yet, the Kirkin’ o’ the Tartans always serves as an exercise for all peoples, all faiths --- enhanced by such wonderful elements as the singing of the Psalms, the dignity, honor and sacrosanctness of the Presentation, and the close bonds of fellowship shared by those who become a part of this very unique, extremely reverent ceremony. God with a “Kirkin of the Tartans” on Sunday, September 20, 2015 at the 11:00 AM Sunday service. The Reverend Dr. Peter Marshall celebrated the first “Kirkin of the Tartans” on April 27, 1941. The event took place in Washington, DC, at the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church. At the time, Dr. Marshall -himself a native Scotsman, having been born in Glasgow - was pastor and presided at the first Kirkin’ O’ the Tartans in the U.S A. Dr. Marshall was named the very first Chaplain of the United States Senate --- a post he would hold for what proved to be the final three years of his life. One could say the tradition behind what is now known as Kirkin’ O’ the Tartans is neither very long, nor altogether Scottish. While Scottish traditions scan many centuries, this unique service is strictly American. With all of this in mind on Sunday, September 20, we will celebrate our third Kirking of the Tartans at St. Elisabeth’s with the Wolf River Pipes and Drums playing for us. We will have snare drums, a bass drum, and number of bagpipers. For those who have never been around bagpipes, we easily will be heard outside, even with the doors closed. There were more non-Scots than Scots at the first “Kirkin’” in Washington, DC. This is itself a very Scottish thing since the Scots are a mix of peoples: Picts, Angles, and Scots from Ireland, Britons, and Scandinavians, to name a few. So, whether you think of yourself as Scottish or not, the variety of our ethnic origins is symbolic of the mix of peoples that make up Scotland. The church when occupied by people of different origins bespeaks our common standing before the one God in Whom “we live, and move, and have our being.” This is what Dr. Marshall sought through the Kirkin’, to unite not only members of his church but the country as a whole. While the US was not yet in WWII it was apparent to many that it would be forced upon it and unity must prevail. The United States then as now was a diverse lot. More religious, ethnic and racial groups as well as political views exist Samuel Seabury was elected to become the first Bishop in a new church. Of course, the community had been around 177 years and had hundreds of buildings, but the Church of England could not exist in a brand new and free nation. So, after the War of Independence ended, a group of ten priests elected Samuel Seabury to go to England to be consecrated bishop. The only problem was that no English bishops would ordain him unless he swore an oath of allegiance to King George III. Seabury declined to make such a pledge after seven years of war against that particular monarch and made his way north. The Episcopal Church of Scotland (notice the 4 name) had a group of bishops that saw an opportunity. In Aberdeen, Scotland, on November 14, 1784, Samuel Seabury was ordained the first bishop in the American Succession on the condition that the new church would use the Scottish Episcopal communion prayer instead of the Anglican version. In other words, our family tree goes first through Scotland and then to Canterbury. This is why we are the Episcopal Church and not Anglican Church of America, why we have nine white crosses in the shape of St. Andrew’s Cross on a blue field on our shield (the flag of Scotland), and why our service has always been different from the rest of the Anglican Communion. The nine crosses represent the first nine dioceses of our new church. So, we are celebrating this Kirking of the Tartans because our church traces its roots to Aberdeen and because a kirking is always about family. With the permission of our bishop, we will be using that original 1790 Book of Common Prayer and the Scottish Communion Rite. We will have a small army of bagpipers and drums. We will be parading banners and kirking (blessing and praying for) our families, from every corner of the globe, present and absent alike. And for all of those reasons, for history, for fun, and for family, this is going to be loud. Everyone is invited to this wonderful service! We will have extra tartan banners available for people to carry if they do not have one of their own. The Church is at the corner of Billy Maher and Old Brownsville Road in Bartlett. Bartlett Fall Festival The annual Bartlett Fall Festival will be held in Freeman Park on 25 September, from 6:00 to 9:30 pm, and on Saturday, 26 September, from 9:30 am to 5:00 pm. Freeman Park is located on Bartlett Blvd, south of Hwy 64. Set-up will be on Friday, from 8:00 am to 4:00 pm. Enter through the main gate off Bartlett Blvd. and check in with the officials. All moving vehicles must be out by 5:00 pm. Our booth site is #32, located on the right side (north) about halfway down the main paved strip. George Malone will bring the tent, table, and other materials and plans to be at the park at 2:00 pm. Help setting up the tent and booth shouldn’t take very long and will be very much appreciated. On Saturday, those manning the booth will have a parking pass to park for free on the far west side of the park, behind the ball fields. To get there, from Bartlett Blvd., turn west on Magnolia Woods, which is the residential street just south of the main park entrance. Follow it all the way to the back of the neighborhood which will connect you to the park. If you need to drive to our booth to drop something off on Saturday, you must do so before 8:00 am. Although not as strict as the Renaissance Faire, please wear some kind of Scottish attire. Golf shirts or T-shirts with a kilt is sufficient. Those who plan to help man the booth on Saturday, see George Malone at our next regular meeting so he can give you your parking pass. Thanks. George 5 Collierville Teen Shares Talents with the Community Scottish Traditional Music Hall of Fame Dinner 2015 Storytelling has impacted cultures all over the Earth for centuries ranging from dinner-table conversation to public speaking forums. Capturing these tales developed much later as humans progressed, learned, and understood the value of the written word. Collierville resident, Joisinga Noble, began storytelling in the traditional way sharing stories with her family at four years of age. Now at fifteen, Joisinga has written a series of books, leads storytime for area children and has plans to share stories for many years to come. Are you coming? The Scottish Traditional Music Hall of Fame Performers Dinner is on September 11th in Inverness Airport this year. As usual it will be a special celebration of some of Scotland’s finest musicians and singers with music from Rona Lightfoot and students from the Music HNC course at University of the Highlands and Islands. The inductees are: Her series, A Small Mouse with a Diary, chronicles the lives of a family of mice who live in Joisinga’s home. There are currently four books in the series, which she began writing at age ten. The Diary of Martha Mouse, her first book, was a 5,000-word story created for the Young Writers Program with the National Novel Writing Month in 2010. Ossian The Singing Kettle Seonaidh Macmillan Maureen Jelks Violet Tulloch Willie Scott “My other books are better, since I was only ten when I wrote the first one,” said Joisinga. She even converted a couple of her mouse diary books into children’s books with her own illustrations. She has led five story times at the Morton Museum this year and one at the Collierville Library as well. Not only does Joisinga read her stories, she occasionally brings along her guitar. Matt McGinn G.S. McLennan Angus Fitchet Iain Mackintosh If you would like to attend this event you can buy a ticket at the link below. Tickets are £30 and feature a 3 course meal. The meal starts at 7.30pm. “I typically sing a song written to a tune that the children already know. The songs go along with the theme of that storytime,” said Joisinga. Along with guitar, she plays the piano and even the bagpipes. www.blas-festival.com/inverness-airport.html “This is a great chance to promote my band!” she says, “Wolf River Pipe and Drums. We’re made up of all ages and play at lots of different venues and participate in parades.” When asked what she likes to do for fun, Joisinga enjoys it all. She sews, cooks, crafts (she’s been scrapbooking since age three) and even has a blue belt in karate. Not to mention, writing and music are in the fun category as well. “We are very happy to have Joisinga involved in the story times,” commented Morton Museum Director, Ashley Carver. “She is extremely talented and we appreciate Joisinga and her family’s support of the Museum.” Joisinga will be back at the Morton Museum, 196 Main Street in Collierville, on Friday, September 25 from 10:30-11am. She said her theme will most likely be “Animal Habitats” and plans on reading one of her children’s books, Amelia Pied Piper. Her books are also available at the Collierville Library. Thanks to Misty Noble for sharing this with us. 6 Thursdays Wolf River Pipes & Drums, 7:00-9:30 St. Luke’s Lutheran Germantown Pkwy. 753-9494 for info. Sgt.Singleton Pipes & Drums 5:00-7:00 Bartlett Baptist at Yale and Whitten Road Gordon Abernathy - 412-6846 www.sgtwksingletonpipesanddrums.org C a l e n d a r o f E ve n t s Sundays NEAC Pipes&Drums 2:00-4:00 - St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, 531 W. College Jonesboro, AR exit 45 Monday- First and Third MSSI Scottish Country Dancers 7:00 pm All Saints Episcopal 1508 S. White Station Rd. Monday September 14 MSSI Monthly Meeting Jason’s Deli/Poplar/Highland Dinner 6:00 - 7:00 Program 7:00: Aspects of Early Celtic Life Thursday September 24 MSSI Board Meeting 5:30 p.m. - St. Luke’s Lutheran Germantown Pkwy. Scottish - Celtic Radio Shows Sundays, 6-7 p.m. “The Thistle and Shamrock” WKNO-FM 91.1 Saturdays, 10 a.m.-1 p.m.“Strands of the Celtic Knot” Robert Campbell, host WEVL–FM 89.9 Sun and Mon 6 p.m. and Fridays, 7 p.m. “The Thistle & Shamrock,” WMAV–FM 90.3 Sept 6: Harpers Hear innovation on an ancient instrument with harpers William Jackson, Wendy Stewart, Maire Brennan, Grainne Hambly, Savourna Stevenson, and Alan Stivell all feature in an hour dedicated to small harps. Sept 13: The Great Tapestry Follow the great musical migration from Scotland, through Ulster to Appalachia. Maggie MacInnes, Tim O’Brien, Cara Dillon, Jean Ritchie, Sheila Kay Adams and others share songs that tell the story of a remarkable musical diaspora. Sept 20: The Long View Fiona picks a few favorite extended arrangements of traditional tunes, including classic recordings from Kevin Burke and Alan Stivell. Sept 27: Brian McNeill at Swannanoa Join Fiona and the multiinstrumentalist/songwriter/ 7 singer Brian McNeill as they share conversation and music at the Swannanoa Gathering in the North Carolina Mountains. Oct 04: Harlaw Music and song has carried the story of the Battle of Harlaw through six centuries. Fiddler Bonnie Rideout led a gathering of musicians to record ancient music of the battle. Travel back in time with them and music historian John Purser who tells us of this legendary conflict in the age-old struggle between war and peace. Oct 11: Bass Rock Contributions by acoustic and electric bass to Celtic music are subtle, imaginative and, with players like Alain Genty, firmly in the foreground. Publisher’s Pick: I support Sheila Kay Adams for Burns Nicht. Gie an ear on September 13. From Misty Noble’s camera at the Scottish Breakfast I thought I’d submit the picture of the 5 ‘younger’ members from the breakfast (Joisinga, Jordanna, & Josiah Noble, Eleanor and Abigail Gibson. This was the only one that all 5 were close to all looking the same direction - lol. Next Monthly Meeting - Monday, September 14 Jason’s Deli - Poplar and Highland Dinner at 6:00, Program @ 7:00 Regular Board Meeting, September 24 at 5:30 - St. Luke’s Lutheran 2000 N. Germantown Pkwy Grace Notes The Memphis Scottish Society, Inc. P. O. Box 770028 Memphis, TN 38177-0028 www.memphisscots.com
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