We met Dr. Bruce Irving and drove with him to Carlisle Castle
and tried to imagine what it was like in the 1500s during
the height of the Border Reivers' activities. This area on
the River Eden has long been considered an important one to
fortify against Scots making forays south into England. The
earliest fortifications on this site date from the 1st century
as the Romans kept a garrison for some 300 years at this place
they called Luguvalium. Apparently the Roman fort and
town were still standing when St. Cuthbert, bishop of Lindisfarne,
visited Carlisle in 685. William II of England (William Rufus)
built the 1st timber castle at Carlisle in 1092. His brother
Henry I had a castle and towers built of stone beginning in
1122.
Along with northern counties of England, Carlisle became
part of Scotland during the reign of Scotland's Kind David
I with the castle keep and city walls being completed during
this time period. David died at Carlisle in 1154 and his son,
Malcolm IV (The Maiden), lost Carlisle and this region in
1157 to the English King Henry II. With the castle now back
in English hands, it played a powerful role in subsequent
wars, both Anglo-Scottish and Civil. As headquarters of the
English Warden of the West March and as a fortress prison
it figures in tales of the Reivers of the West March.
One of the most famous tales is that of the rescue of Kinmont
Willie Armstrong from Carlisle Castle prison the night of
April 13, 1596, by a varied group of Armstrongs, Grahams,
Scotts, et al, led by Walter Scott of Buccleugh who also happened
to be the Warden of the Scottish Middle March. It is said
that several Irvines/Irvings also took part in this famous
rescue.
After a climb to the battlements of the Keep, we walked through
a new underground walkway from the castle to Tully House Museum.
This walkway is paved with blocks of stone that bear the names
of the famous Riding/Reiving families including
Irving, Irvine, and Glendenning. There is also a boulder upon
which is printed the famous Monition of Cursing
of the Archbishop of Glasgow.
The days of the reivers were numbered when King James VI
of Scotland succeeded Elizabeth I in 1603, a time called the
union of the crowns. James was especially harsh
on members of reiving families, hanging some without benefit
of trial, shipping many off to Ulster plantation in Ireland
and ultimately dispersing them to American colonies. Many
Scots-Irish-Americans have roots that go back to this time
and place.
Tully House Museum has excellent displays ranging from stone-age
to Roman to an excellent audio-visual program on the life
and times of the Reivers.
After lunch we headed north to the Annandale Museum in Annan
where Bruce showed us an interesting display on the sandstone
industry and its history in Dumfriesshire. We learned that
lower Annandale and the valley of the Kirtle Water are underlain
with a bed of New Red Triassic Sandstone formed in water and
termed 'water lain' and that this newly-quarried sandstone
is soft and much favored by sculptors because it is fine grained
and takes a smooth finish. When it hardens it becomes strong
and weather resistant. Nithsdale and Upper Annandale have
New Red Permian Sandstone that is termed 'dune bedded' because
it was formed under different drier conditions. There are
also other colors of building sandstone in this area. We also
learned that many buildings in Dumfries, Annan, and Lockerbie
as well as Sweetheart Abbey and Caerlaverock have been built
with the sandstone and that the Corsehill Quarry supplied
the beautiful red sandstone used in Albany, New York to make
the Million-dollar staircase in the New York State
Capitol building.
After viewing the exhibit we found ourselves speculating
as to the origin of the sandstone used in construction of
the many buildings, monuments and castles we saw.