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Tuesday, April 05, 2011
More photos from Tartan Day on Ellis Island
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Special Tartan Exhibit on Ellis Island
Monday, April 09, 2007
Tartan Day at the Tartan Museum
We had lots of kilties visiting from out of town. Below are Ryan Ross and Bisel MacWilliams. These young guys always help us out at the Stone Mountain Highland Games in Atlanta each year. Obviously they decided to dress up in their finest Scottish formal wear for Tartan Day... or not! You can't accuse these guys of taking themselves too seriously. Ryan is wearing the New York City tartan, by the way (box pleated kilt that I made for him) and Bisel is in the ancient Gunn tartan, a kilt he bought from the museum years ago.
Next is a shot of the gift shop, where we had the food tables spread out. Enjoying themselves are a couple of kilties from the X Marks the Scot forum who drove up from SC for the day. John (better known on the forum as MacWages) is wearing a newly completed Carolina tartan kilt that he made himself. He brought with him the infamous "Dreadbelly" whom forum members will instantly recognize. After meeting him, I can truly say he is a mystery wrapped in an enigma, wearing sunglasses! :-)
Wayne Millar (of the Clan Bell Society) also joined us for the day and was even drafted into service as a volunteer tour guide. Thanks, Wayne! I included this picture to show off his new US Army kilt, which he ordered from us last summer. It looks especially sharp pleated to the yellow line, as you can see in this side-shot.
Sunday, April 09, 2006
Happy Tartan Day!
In case you missed it, April 6 was Tartan Day in the United States (and a few other countries, as well). You can read all about it on the official Tartan Day web site, at http://www.tartanday.com/.
Tartan Day became officially recognized in America in 1998 with the adoption of Senate Resolution No. 155, proposed by Senator Trent Lott. (You can read it on the above Tartan Day web site).
The date was chosen to mark the anniversary of the Declaration of Arbroath, signed April 6, 1320. This was the document (composed in Arbroath, Scotland) that was submitted by the assembled Scottish nobility to the Holy Father in Rome, Pope John XXII, asserting Scotland's independance from England in no uncertain terms.
To put the event in some historic context, William Wallace (whom everyone now knows -- though inaccurately -- through the movie Braveheart) was executed in 1305, for using military force to resist the usurpation of the Scottish throne by Edward, King of England.
After Wallace's death, Robert the Bruce was crowned King Robert of Scotland in 1306. The Scots Army, led by King Robert, decisively defeated Edward at Bannockburn in 1314, but Edward continued to claim the Scottish throne as his own.
This story is well known among Scotophiles, but what is perhaps less well known is that Robert the Bruce had been excommunicated by the Pope, and the entire nation of Scotland was under interdiction. An interdiction is like an excommunication, only applied to an entire geographic region, rather than an individual. This effectively denied the sacraments to every citizen of the Scottish kingdom.
Why would the Pope do this? Well, to someone on the outside, it looked as if Edward had a good case. When King Alexander III of Scotland died without an heir in 1284, many men made claims on the Scottish throne. In an attempt to settle the matter, the claims of the competitors for the throne were submitted to King Edward, as their most powerful neighbor to the south. In 1291 they officially sent letter to him, which in so many words acknowledged his soverienty over the Scottish kingdom, asking for his recognition of one of their claims to the throne, and granting his possession of Scotland until he should select a king. Edward decided to back John Balioll, and it was always Edward's position that John held the kingdom of Scotland as a vassal kingdom, subject in every way to Edward's rule.
So when men like Wallace and Robert the Bruce fought against Edward, it seemed to many like the rebellion of a people against their rightful lord, an attempt to usurp a recognized authority and establish a new king through force of arms. Such violence was condemned by the Pope, and thus the interdiction on the Kingdom of Scotland, seen as the agressor.
A key part of Robert the Bruce establishing the legitimacy of his reign over Scotland was to win recogniztion by the Pope. You can read all about that struggle in an article I wrote on the Bruce several years ago.
This is where the Declaration of Arbroath fits in. This letter begins with a short history of the Scottish people, telling of how they conquered the lands they now hold, and how their kings have reigned over that land independently, despite invasions, asserting that “one hundred and thirteen kings. . . have reigned, the line unbroken by a single foreigner.” The letter then goes on to tell of Edward I’s violent invasion of their country while they were weak and without a leader. The authors make mention of his “wrongs, killings, violence, pillage, arson, imprisonment of prelates, burning down of monasteries. . . But from these countless evils we have been set free. . . by our most valiant prince, king and lord, Lord Robert, who, that his people and heritage might be delivered out of the hands of enemies, bore cheerfully toil and fatigue, hunger and danger. . . . Divine providence, the succession to his right according to our laws and customs which we shall maintain to the death, and the due consent and assent of us all, have made him our prince and king."
The Pope was apparantly convinced, and sent a letter immediately to Edward II (who by now was reigning as his father's successor) instructing him to make peace with Scotland. That peace would be a while in coming yet -- not till 1329, one month before the death of Robert the Bruce, would the English and Scots finally have a ratified peace agreement. But the Declaration of Arbroath played a key role in getting the process started.
This is the background to the April 6th celebrations that take place across Canada, the USA, and other nations where Scots have settled. Though Tartan Day honors and celebrates the contributions of Scottish immigrants to the history and culture of our society, it also hearkens back as a tribute to the bloody and hard history of Scotland, a nation that had to fight so long for its independance.
In many places Tartan Day was celebrated over the weekend. New York City, for example, had a whole Tartan Week, with a parade on April 8. In Franklin, NC, at the Scottish Tartans Museum, we didn't have a celebration quite as grand (but perhaps more on the scale of Tartan Day festivities in other small towns). We celebrated on the date of April 6, though it was a Thursday, with an Open House day at the museum. We offered free admission all day to visitors, with guided tours available (kilted tour guides, of course!). The Friends of the Museum and Walkers Shortbread provided refreshments in our gift shop -- Scotch broth soup for lunch, with Oatmeal bread, blueberry scones, empire biscuits and chocolate covered shortbread for dessert.
The picture below is of some of the museum guests enjoying the free lunch. By the way, the man helping himself at the refreshment table is wearing a kilt I made for him in the Cockburn tartan.
And what did I wear for Tartan Day? Not my new solid colored Harris Tweed kilt. No, no, one must wear tartan for Tartan Day! See the picture at the top of this post. I had on my Armstrong tartan kilt (my maternal grandmother's maiden name was Armstrong) -- a four-yard box pleated kilt, of course, made from Lochcarron's Strome weight cloth. The vest is a nineteenth century reproduction I purchased from the Leavy Foundation for Historic Preservation. The sporran is of unknown origin -- I picked it up several years ago from a vendor at a Highland Games with a lot of antiques and British military items. And the Hummel Bonner was made for my by Betty Johnson, who cards, dyes, spins and knits the bonnets herself by hand! (We sell these at the Scottish Tartans Museum gift shop, by the way).
Anyway, I hope one and all had a happy Tartan Day, 2006!