ENSPIRE and Ideas from Kilmarnock’s Past

ENSPIRE, Kilmarnock’s first Festival of Ideas, will take place this Sunday at St Joseph’s Academy, 11 – 4. The event has been organised by St Joseph’s pupils and features a cast of speakers covering architecture, culture and creativity, science, disability and education. Here’s the poster -

Enspire poster

Here at the Burns Monument Centre we’re interested in the local history of ideas and how they can be relevant today. Our collections of Kilmarnock’s printed heritage give us an insight into the ideas that shaped the town in the past. Poetic, religious, political and philosophical musings were often published in cheap pamphlet editions for local booksellers to punt for a shilling or sixpence. There were numerous printers, booksellers and stationers in business in the town throughout the 19th century. 

Some pamphlets have had a lasting significance, for example this account of the ‘Public Meeting held at Kilmarnock, on the 7th December 1816′. The pamphlet records the speeches of local people who wanted parliamentary reform. At the time only one person in all of Kilmarnock was eligble to vote.

Copy of Pamphlet title pages 007

Two of the men involved in the meeting and in the printing of the pamphlet, Alexander McLaren and Thomas Baird, were arrested and accused of “wickedly and feloniously printing, selling, publishing and circulating the said tract or statement.” They were imprisoned in the Tollbooth in Edinburgh for 6 months and both died soon after their release. These events and the people involved are remembered at the Reformer’s Monument in the Kay Park.

Other pamphlets have become (almost) lost in obscurity. We know very little about the pamphlet below, written by ‘John Lawrie, Kilmarnock’ and printed and sold in Kilmarnock, Glasgow, Edinburgh and London in the 1830s. The only other record we can find of this pamphlet’s existence is at Yale Universtiy in their holdings on phenomenology. We’d love to know more about the author.

Copy of A Concise View of the Inductive Mode of Investigation

Hopefully the ENSPIRE festival will be spoken of in 200 years time. In the meantime, we’ll keep a copy of the poster in the archive!

An Incident in the Kay Park, 1879

This story is an extract from the The Ayrshire Museum, compiled by William Howie Wylie (Kilmarnock, 1891). This book is a real treasure trove of local history, anecdotes and extracts from the late 19th century.  

An Incident in the Kay Park

It was in the summer of 1879 I had occasion to pay a holiday visit to Kilmarnock. I spent a pleasant evening with some friends, and early in the morning following proceeded to the Kay Park. Many sweet recollections of my boyhood passed through my memory as I traversed the green sward on the brow of the Clerk’s Holm, now one of the portions of the Park, the spot where I used to dig up the drunt root with one eye, and watch the gamekeeper with the other, at times taking a sly glance at the river and looking out for the shortest cut in it to get through if he happened to come on our path. This spot was a great resort of Townhead boys 30 years ago – a vast difference now-a-days when they can go through it with ease of mind if they do that which is proper. I wended my way up to the Monument. I was somewhat intimate with the keeper who held the appointment then, and was very courteously received by him. During our conversation he related an interesting incident that had occured through the week at the Monument. He said that early one morning, on looking over the balustrade, he saw an aged but respectable-looking woman coming up the stairs with a basket over her arm. On reaching the top she addressed him somewhat in this fashion: “Sir,” she said, “I have come from Mauchline this morning to see the poet. I have brought with me his wife, Jean Armour’s, silk shawl. I have one request to make of you, and I hope you will grant it. I wish you to wrap this shawl round the poet’s shoulders.” The keeper willingly did as she wished him – he stepping on the base of the statue – and allowed the shawl to remain for a short period. Many a time this incident has struck me very forcibly since.  I can imagine I see the scene, giving strong proof that the belles of Mauchline still hold our national poet in admiration. The keeper made some enquiry how she came in possession of this relic. She said it had been handed down to her through lineal descent; she, in some way, being connected to Jean Armour. He also asked her if she would not part with it if she got a fair offer for it. She answered him in the negative. She had given it out several times to parties who had been getting married. On the last occasion it was out it was returned to her with a mouse hole in it; and from that date she kept it like the apple of her eye, resolved that no one would get it till she was no more. I think this is a relic that should not be lost sight of for the Burns collection in the Monument.

Townholm Boy

Ayr, 12th July, 1881

Creative Learning at the Burns Monument Centre

We recently participated in East Ayrshire’s Creative Minds Learning Network event, showcasing some of the creative learning opportunities available at the Centre. Our Heritage Arts and Creative Learning CPD event in February attracted a lot of advance attention – we plan to have a fun session where teachers and other education partners can see the kind of resources and activities they can be involved in.

The centrepiece of our showcase was our Kilmarnock Heritage Arts Day, July 2012. This was a partnership between the Centre staff (local history, registration and archive) and the Creative Minds team. It was a fantastic day, which the young people enjoyed immensely. They learned about the history of the Kay Park and used the missing Kay Park Fountain as the basis of their art activity.

Guest visual artist Gemma Coyle worked with the kids to produce this amazing reproduction of the original fountain -

 They also acted out a mock wedding, explored the archive store, and discovered lots of original documents, photographs, letters and newspaper articles from the period of the opening of the Kay Park and Burns Monument in 1879.

 

Heritage Summer School

The Burns Monument Centre is delighted to team up again with East Ayrshire’s Creative Minds team to deliver an event as part of the Heritage Summer School. The Heritage Art Activity Day is on Thursday 18th July, 10.30 – 3 pm and will provide young people with the opportunity to learn about local history and heritage while having fun with a hands-on art activity.

As part of the day, children will learn about the Kay Park’s wonderful vanshing fountain!

Kay Park Fountain c1902, donated by Mrs Crooks of Wallace Bank

Restoring the Lions

When the Burns Monument Centre was being restored in 2008/9, one of the most important tasks was to restore the famous Kay Park lions

 Image