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Messages - Dr_Dave

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Kincardineshire / Re: Munro Gove
« on: Tuesday 01 October 13 22:56 BST (UK)  »
Sorry to be a disappointment, Angus. My grandmother Jessie Stott was born in 1898 on a farm near to Montrose. Perhaps there may be a link somewhere down the line. The Stotts have given me a bit of a headache with my research as there are so many of them and one or two have been problematic. But that's the way of things with family history research (as we all know).

Dave

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Kincardineshire / Re: Munro Gove
« on: Sunday 29 September 13 23:57 BST (UK)  »
Hi Jim.

My grandfather was Thomas Callander and my grandmother was Jessie Stott. They were married at the Crown Hotel in Laurencekirk in July 1928. I said in my post that Liz Spark was bridesmaid but I think it would probably be more accurate to say she was a witness.

My grandparents came down to Glasgow a year or so after they were married and certainly by 1930 as my dad was born in 1930 in Glasgow. They moved back to Laurencekirk in the late 60's and we'd regularly visit Roy and Liz when we were up at Laurencekirk.

The Callander's had the smiddy at Laurencekirk for much of the 20th century although I was a bit disappointed to see the smiddy had been demolished last time I was up.

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Kincardineshire / Re: Munro Gove
« on: Tuesday 13 August 13 23:02 BST (UK)  »
I stumbled across this thread while researching my family tree (although I hasten to add I'm not related to either Munro Gove or Elizabeth Spark).

I don't really have much to add by way of information about Munro Gove other than I met him a few times when I was a nipper. Liz Spark was a bridesmaid at my grandparents wedding and she and Roy were lifelong friends of my grand-parents. Munro was known to me as Roy. I recall visiting them on a number of occasions at their house in Fordoun which was right next to the railway line. I was fascinated by their cuckoo clock. Neither here nor there to us adults now but I was a youngster back in the 60's and being in such close proximity to a railway track and seeing a cuckoo clock were a bit of a novelty back then.

Small world.

Dave

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