My interest in Kippen stems from the fact my oldest known Blair ancestors,
John Blair and Margaret McLuckie lived in Kippen in the late 1700s. Although we
do not know for certain when John and Margaret were born or who their parents
were, we do know the following:
|
1. According to the Old Parish Records of Kippen, John and Margaret were
married (or posted their marriage banns) on January 15, 1749. |
|
2. According to the Associate Session Church records John and Margaret
had 8 sons and a daughter who were baptised between 1750 and 1764 in
Balfron or Kippen. |
| 3. Six of seven letters written by John to his son
Robert in Barnet VT between 1786 and 1794 indicate that John and
Margaret were living at Arnmore, a farm in Kippen. |
| 4. The 7th letter written by John on May 05, 1799
came from Buchlyvie and informed Robert that his mother was buried 13
weeks ago. |
| 5. A letter written to Robert by family friend Walter
Gibbons, dated March 1800, informed Robert that his father John died in
December 1799 and was buried in the
Buchlyvie churchyard. |
In May 2008 my wife and I returned to my "homeland" and spent 10 days
in Kippen, exploring the local area and doing library and archival research. As
a result of this exploration I created the "Kippen Circle".
The "Kippen Circle" is an area
I define as rough circle of villages and/or parishes within an approximate 10
mile radius of Kippen, Stirlingshire, Scotland. It includes the parishes of
Aberfoyle, Callander, Dunblane, and Port of Menteith in Perthshire and the
parishes of Balfron, Buchanan, Campsie, Denny, Drymen, Fintry, Gargunnock,
Killearn, Kilsyth, Kippen, Saint Ninians, Stirling in Stirlingshire. I consider
any Blair who lived in the “Kippen Circle” to be a potential relative.
The Old Parish Records of the Church of Scotland shows almost 1,200 Blair
births/christening and over 600 marriages within the Kippen Circle.

The rest of this webpage will talk about the places we stayed and the
villages and sites we explored during our ten days in the "Kippen Circle". I've
included a considerable number of pictures of our visit.
Larne Coachhouse: During the first seven nights in Kippen we stayed at
the Larne Coachhouse. This cottage is located on Fore Road, Kippen, an easy walk
to village. The official description reads "Larne Coachhouse is a comfortable,
fully equipped cottage located a short walk from the centre of the picturesque
and fascinating conservation village of Kippen. The cottage can accommodate 2 to
4 people and is furnished and equipped to the highest standard." Everything in
the official description is totally true and if anything an understatement. Not
only was the cottage evrything promised, but the landlord, Roland Howe, and his
wife were extremely friendly and helpful. I would highly recommend the Larne
Coachhouse to anyone visiting Kippen. For more information on the Larne
Coachhouse and other cottages owned by Roland Howe, see
http://www.forthcottages.com/.
Arnmore was one of eleven Baronies or
proberties, belonging to gentlemen entitled to call themselves Barons. There was
also an Arnbeg, Arnprior, Arnfinlay, and Arnmanuel. “Arn” means a section or
divison of land. As most of the lands beginning with Arn lie along the slope of
the hill side and parallel or contiguous to each other, they may have been
portions of a territory which was under the same superior. Arnmore was the
larger portion, Arnbeg was the small portion, and Arnprior was the Prior’s
portion. Arnfinlay and Arnmanuel were probably portions named after individuals.
A close look an Ordinance Survey map shows
Hill of Arnmore and Keir Knowe of Arnmore. Not far away is the Laird's House,
also know as Arnmore House.

Hill of Arnmore: As I mentioned before we know that between
1786 and 1794 John and Margaret were living at Arnmore, a farm in Kippen.
Keir Knowe of Arnmore: A ditch
forms the north and east sides of an enclosure which measures 5Om from east to
west by 30m transversely; the west end has been destroyed by a quarry and the
rest of the site has been damaged by forestry ploughing. No traces of a bank can
now be seen along the inner lip of the ditch or on the crest of the slope to the
south. On the north side, where it is best preserved, the ditch has a maximum
depth of 2'9" below the inner lip and 1' below the outer lip. The appearance of
the work suggests that it is of medieval, rather than prehistoric, date.
(Stirling Council: Sites and Monuments Record)
Arnmore House: This is the ruin of a small,
symmetrically planned, laird's house dating from the turn of the 17th and 18th
centuries. The building is a simple rectangular block lying approximately east
and west. The house originally comprised two main storeys, but at a later period
was reduced to its present height of a single storey and an attic. The masonry
is of rubble and has been harled. The entrance-doorway, centrally placed in the
north facade at ground-floor level, is wrought with an ogival moulding; above,
there is a bolection-moulded surround, evidently intended to contain an armorial
panel but now empty. The lintel of an inserted window in the south front bears
the incised inscription A L 1729 I S. The initials are probably those of
Archibald Leckie who seems to have possessed the property at this period, and of
his wife. (Stirling Council: Sites and Monuments Record)
Kippen: Kippen is a small
village approximately 10 miles west of the city of Stirling, Scotland. It lies
between the Gargunnock and Fintry hills and overlooks the strath of the River
Forth. The village commands views of some of Scotland's finest scenery. Kippen
and the nearby Kippen Muir are steeped in some of Scotland's most colourful
history.
Buchlyvie is a village in the Stirlingshire,
approximately 5 miles west of Kippen, south of Flanders Moss in the
Carse of Forth. The village lies on the A811, which follows the line of an
eighteenth century military road. According to the 2001 census the village's
population was 479.
Buchlyvie was granted Burgh of Barony status in 1672, and by
the eighteenth century was a mining village served by two railway lines.
Buchlyvie Junction formed the intersection of the Forth and Clyde Junction
Railway, which linked Stirling and Balloch, and the Strathendrick and Aberfoyle
Railway which ran north to Aberfoyle. Passenger services closed in 1951, and
the railway itself closed in 1959.
Lake of Menteith or, until the
20th century, the Loch of Menteith, is a loch in Scotland, located on the
Flanders Moss, the flood plain of the upper reaches of the rivers Forth and
Teith, upstream of Stirling.
Inchmahome Priory is situated on
Inchmahome, the largest of three islands in the centre of Lake of Menteith,
close to Aberfoyle, Scotland. The priory was founded in 1238 by the Earl of
Menteith, for a small community of the Augustinian order (the Black Canons). The
priory has a long history of receiving many notable guests. King Robert the
Bruce visited three times, in 1306, 1308 and 1310. In 1358 the future King
Robert II also stayed at the priory. In 1547 the priory served as a refuge for
Mary Queen of Scots, aged four, hidden here for a few weeks following the
disastrous defeat of the Scots army at the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh during the
Rough Wooing.
Port of Menteith
is a village and parish in the Stirlingshire about 8 miles northwest of Kippen.
It is the only significant settlement on the Lake of Menteith. It was
established as a burgh of barony, then named simply Port, in 1457 by King James
III of Scotland. It lay in the former county of Perthshire. The village lies at
the north-eastern edge of the Lake, at the junction of the A81 road with the
B8034 road, which runs south, just to the west of Flanders Moss, to meet the
A811 road at Arnprior.
Balfron, is a village in Stirlingshire, approximately 9 miles west
of Kippen. It is 18 miles west of Stirling and 16 miles north of Glasgow.
Denny is a town in the Falkirk council area, Scotland, and
formerly in the county of Stirlingshire. It located about 17 miles south east of
Kippen.
Drymen is a village in Stirlingshire approximately 12 miles
west of Kippen.