82 Years Ago Today.Founder Moses McNeil.

The Moonlighter

Well-Known Member
On the 9th April 1938 our Founder Moses McNeil passed at Townend Hospital Dumbarton. Moses had been visiting a friend in Dumbarton and became unwell. He was the grand age of 82.

Moses was born on the 29th October 1855 at Belmore House which today is part of the Faslane Naval Base. His father John was from Comrie in Perthshire and mother Jane Bain from Downpatrick in Ulster.

He was a natural athlete Powerful and of stocky build, it was said that was also known for his pace.

In the Ibrox trophy room is a cup won by Moses for a half-mile race at the Garelochead Athletic Sports on 1 January, 1876 and it’s the oldest Trophy that the Club has.

Moses played for the club he helped form for ten years, playing in the 1877 and 1879 Scottish Cup Finals.He was also a member of the first Rangers side to lift a trophy, the Glasgow Merchants Charity Cup in 1879.

He was the first Ranger to play for his country when Scotland defeated Wales 4-0 at Hamilton Crescent in Partick in 1876.

Moses led a nomadic lifestyle mainly due to his 20 year employment with the company Langs whose name was synonymous with the famous brand of whisky.

Their premises,which Moses worked from,was at 70 Union Street in Glasgow.

During his time in Glasgow Moses lived at 169 Berkeley Street and 333 Dumbarton Road.

These locations are among many others that we cover during the Founders Trail.

We have a wonderful newspaper report which details Moses and his friend, team-mate and fellow Founder Tom Vallance attending the 1905 Scotish Cup Final as supporters.

Only 9 months after Moses passed Rangers would set their record attendance at Ibrox Park of 118,000 .

It’s a comforting thought that our Founder was sitting in his cottage while the Club that he’d help form and nurture were now one of the biggest in the World.

Moses spent the last few years of his life living with his sister Isabella in Clynder at Craig Cottage.She died in 1935, to be followed by her brother, the last of the siblings, in 1938.

They lie together with their sister Elizabeth and Isabella’s husband, Duncan Gray, in the lovely churchyard at Rosneath.But sadly for the man who gave Rangers their name his own isn’t inscribed on the family headstone.

The late great Sandy Jardine was a supporter of the Founders project and had expressed a wish to have a plaque with Moses name on it placed at the churchyard at Rosneath, this is a project that we completed on Sandy’s behalf on Sunday 28th June 2015.

Our Restoration team cleaned Moses stone and placed an engraved plaque which was purchased after funds were raised via the Rangers support.

Today we remember Moses McNeil.












 
In another 1000 years, the name of Moses McNeil will still be remembered.
 
Is there any more info on his time in Comrie? I stay in Comrie and would love to find out more about his time here.
 
The details that the guys have discovered over the last number of years about the origins of the four young lads and their subsequent life stories, means we're the most knowledgeable generation of Rangers fans to have lived. For example, until Ian and his colleagues came along and the Gallant Pioneers were re-discovered, I'd always misidentified Peter Campbell as our founder Moses McNeil in the famous photo of our 1877 team.

Well, the man who named The Rangers now, even more so than ever before, is rightly remembered and celebrated, for being a founder of Scotland's premier sporting and cultural institution, for the love of the game.






 
The details that the guys have discovered over the last number of years about the origins of the four young lads and their subsequent life stories, means we're the most knowledgeable generation of Rangers fans to have lived. For example, until Ian and his colleagues came along and the Gallant Pioneers were re-discovered, I'd always misidentified Peter Campbell as our founder Moses McNeil in the famous photo of our 1877 team.

Well, the man who named The Rangers now, even more so than ever before, is rightly remembered and celebrated, for being a founder of Scotland's premier sporting and cultural institution, for the love of the game.






The 1877 team picture that hangs at the bottom of the Marble Staircase has a couple of the players wrongly named. This is possibly where your misidentification is coming from my friend.
 
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