An Angus Parish in the Eighteenth Century

Cover An Angus Parish in the Eighteenth Century
An Angus Parish in the Eighteenth Century
W Mason William Mason Inglis
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121 prominent men in the parish. Very few men in the parish, however, ventured except those pressed and threatened by Lord Airlie.
The two battalions comprised about 800 men. It was a typically hardy, sturdy contingent, but in training and military qualities certainly far from efficient. The occupations of those who joined the ranks ^. K. Te varied and interesting. There were county gentlemen, non-jurant clergymen, weavers, workmen, chapmen, farmers, shoemakers, cottars, vintners, masons, coope
...rs, smiths, ground-officers, grooms, sailors, pendiclers, tailors, surgeons, porters, physicians, ploughmen (numerous), porters, carpenters, factors, clerks, writers, gardeners, barbers and wig- makers, Wrights, brewers, silver-smiths, tinkers, innkeepers, coachmen. There were many Ogilvies came out, but not so many as is generally believed. Such Avas the nondescript character of the force, drawn from all ranks and conditions of people in the county ; and their leader, Lord Ogilvie, was but a high-spirited lad of twenty years of age — five years younger than Prince Charlie.

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