Tinkers in Argyll

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    From The Tinkers Cross

    Most people know about The Tinkers Cross, beside the main road at Carraig, near Lochgair, but few people know,perhaps even remember, why it is there. It is in memory of 15-year old Charles Townsley who died on October 28,1914.

    It is said that he had lain down in the ditch to sleep and was drowned by a sudden flood of water from a rain-storm anda month later, on November 28, 1914, a wooden cross with a metal plate, bearing Charles Townsleys name.Charles father, also Charles, was married to Betsy, a MacKenzie.

    The foot of the little cross is surrounded with white quartz pebbles and from time to time people have wedged coins into the arms and post of the cross. Every November too, a red poppy is inserted behind the name-plate, threeTownsleys from Furnace joined The Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders in The Kaisers War and forfeited their lives.

    There is a similar, less well-known cross beside the Burn of Ariskeodnish at Kilmartin, also in memory of a womantinker who drowned in similar circumstances, this time one of the Stewart clan.

    The religion of the tinkers may be easy-going like their manner of life but most are God-fearing and loosely adhere tothe Protestant or Catholic churches - it depends which produces the better results !

    They are quite happy to talk to clergymen of either persuasion, agree with what is said and give the answers which theythink might be wanted ! They appreciate regular visits from the clery and are in favour of their children being properlybaptised, properly married and properly buried and tinker funerals are largely attended by relatives and friends fromacross the counties - The customs may be more of social than religious significance but they are widely followed.

    After World War I I, the traditional camping places were often being ploughed up, planted or fenced in and, thoughArgyll police did not harass the tinkers about their camps, other forces would. Tinkers are reluctant to give uptraditional ways and few relish the idea of settl ing in Council Houses. The majority refuse to give up their itinerantmode of life travelling not for economic reasons but from a deep-rooted habit of nomadism.

    The tinkers go back to remote antiquity but they are not Gypsies though there may be gypsy blood in some familiesthrough inter-marriage.

    The first mention of tinkers appears during the reign of William The Lion (1165-1214) when there is a note of oneJames, tinkler, who held land near Perth.

    A more probable clue to their origin may be found in the descriptions of tinker, tinkler, caird or kaird which havebeen employed for centuries but terms which too often cause offence as they are all too often used as terms ofcontempt.

    Tinker, Scotic Tinkler, means a worker in tin and some of the Argyll tinkers may be traced back as the descendants ofthe migrant artificers who worked in The Crinan Basin and Mid-Argyll generally.

    Tinsmiths were often to be found at Allt na Ceardaich The Burn of The Smithy on Lochfyneside, a favourite placefor adders. Two tents would be pitched at an angle to each other, a fire kindled between them and the smiths, sittingcross-legged in the firelight, their clinking tools echoing in the night, were often to be seen and heard from the far sideof Loch Fyne.

    Before tin became too expensive, the tinkers would used brand new tin from the factory and only later resorted to oldused cans for their wares. Holes in kettles and pans were repaired by screwing two metal discs, known as dams,together and leaks soldered there and then. The expression not worth a tinkers dam refers not to any form ofprofanity but to these small and important metal discs.

    The traditional tinkers tents, known as Bow Tents, were built with bent willow or ash branches some 12-feet longand 1 or 2-inches thick. Many of the canvas tent covers were specially-made by Blacks of Greenock , the well-knowntent-makers who even had one of their camping tent designs called The Tinker. Blacks tinker customers, unlikeothers ( ! ), paid cash up front too and were always put f irst in line for orders !

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    Even today, beside the lorries, pick-ups, buses and caravans, the tinkers still have their tents - by Blacks ofGreenock !

    The Children Act, 1908 (followed by The Children and Young Persons (Scotland) Act, 1937) required that childrenover the age of five had to make two hundred attendances at school between October and March - there was,thankfully for the tinkers, no obligation for the children to attend between April and September and thus they weretheoretically free for the harvests.

    It is wrong to think that tinker children are retarded and backward and tinker children are in many ways often moremature for their years, able to look after themselves, count and handle money carefully and source food from thenatural world on their doorstep.

    Tinkers children are spotlessly clean, even if sometimes a little oddly dressed. Many of the girls are good at f inesewing, the boys good with mechanics and electricity and many are very musical and have good artistic sense and havea particularly perceptive sense of colour. Few, either boys or girls, have much interest in ball-games in which they seelittle value and they will slip quietly away to find something more productive to do.

    Despite there large lack of conventional schooling, many have an insatiable thirst for books and most have veryretentive memories, a gift from their story-telling forebears.

    The tinkers have a distinctive inherited way of life with deep-rooted traditions, standards of value and behaviour andthey are suspicious of outsiders.

    Little importance is placed on appearance, clothes are not a symbol of status. They may wear cast-off clothes but, theywill not wear the clothes of the dead, a dangerous persuasion. They are apprehensive of disease and will leave a houseimmediately if told of any infection.

    Tinkers are polite and expect politeness in return and they regard it as the height of bad manners to ask questions ofpersons whom one does not know intimately.

    If they ask at the door for some cooking salt, they insist on paying at least a penny in exchange for it is otherwiseunlucky for both parties. Too it would be shameful if they failed to offer food or drink to a visitor to their tent.

    Strangers too entered the tinkers ranks at the time of the Highland Clearances and The Famines when former house-holders were forced out and too there was the effect of The Industrial Revolution which created a nomadic and casualagricultural labour force.

    At the same time, particularly in the agricultural communities, inter-marriage between tinkers and non-tinkers - oftenresulting in a family of red-haired offspring - was not uncommon.

    Though the tinkers and their tents may not now be as visible as they once were, the tinker family names live on.

    The MacAlastairs, in Tobermory till 1920 and in Islay till 1925, were well-known for their skills with tin. There werealso itinerant knife-sharpeners travelling the country and the last only disappeared, in Ayrshire and Renfrewshire, in

    the mid-1970s.

    The MacPhees of St. Catherines were of course well known for their basket-work and the Williamsons at Furnace, oneknown as Heather Jock , used to make birch-handled heather besoms and pot brushes. The Stewarts were well-known horse-dealers and the Johnstones in Oban, formerly from Strachur, reared Cairn Terriers for sale.

    The Hays, Bones and Newtons from Lochgilphead were all dealers in pottery and others carved spoons and cups fromhorn, a trade which died out with the death of the last horn-spoon maker in 1889.

    The tinkers were good construction workers but hated settling in any one place for long. When a blasting accidentinjured the foreman at Kilmichael Glassary on September 25, 1951, it was one of the Williamsons who leapt to hisassistance and quickly rendered the proper first aid, using a scarf as a tourniquet, an act for which the foreman was

    ever grateful.

    Some tinkers were scrap-merchants and no tinker would think of lifting a piece of scrap metal from the grass near achurch without first drawing the attention of the minister to it and then making him a formal offer !

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    Some families were hawkers, a term they do not mind, selling round the houses. The Jamesons from Strachur sellinghaberdashery; the Morrens from Islay, household linen and the MacPhees selling carpets and linoleum too and thenthere are the long travellers, from Ireland, still appear each year looking for antiques to take home and sell-on toAmerican tourists.

    The Morrens or Morans came from both Islay and Kintyre; the Kellys from Rannoch now in Ballachulish; theJohnstones from Strachur and now too in Oban and Lochgilphead; the Camerons from Oban; the Stewarts fromDumbarton and Auchterarder; MacDonalds from Crieff and from Skye; Jamesons from Strachur and, of course, the

    MacPhees from St. Catherines.

    Some tinkers are descended from the defeated clans, especially after the 45 and Culloden and some names, once listedas lurking, have now totally disappeared.

    Those with names of Stewart, MacPhee, MacDonald and MacGregor belonged to the Broken Clans and other namessuch as Campbell may have sought shelter under the protection of the stronger clans.

    Then there are the Burkes, many now settled in Greenock, who came from Ettrick Bay in Bute and who had interestsin Islay and had the puffers, Cloch Lass , Cumbrae Lass and Toward Lass , which used to take away all thescrap and rubbish from the American submarine base at The Holy Loch.

    Therein too lies a modern mystery, the secret of the missing puffer - Willie Burke bought the Mell ite from Ross &

    Marshall, the only puffer without a -l ight suffix to her name. She was old, built of iron (not steel), in 1878, as theengineless barge Salisbury . In 1888, she was given a boiler and one of a pair of steam engines which had beenrescued from an old steam yacht built itself around 1840. The Mellite disappeared, broken-up at Dalmuir , wouldmutter old Willie. Strange thing is, nobody ever saw her at Dalmuir and the suspicion is that she was quietly scupperedand sunk somewhere quiet in the upper river, a real piece of Scotlands maritime heritage as Willie well knew !

    Thus the tale(s) of the travelling folk, The Tinkers.