Fantastic new book about the history of the Orange Order in Glasgow

These are very interesting booklets and I hope they will prompt others to look at the history of the Order in Scotland.

I have a complaint in that the booklet on the meeting places disregards the influence of the Loyal Orange institution of Great Britain on the Order. Prior to 1876 there were two bodies operating in Scotland. Also located in Candleriggs, at number 20, were the headquarters of the Provincial Grand Lodge of LOIGB a forerunner of the current GOLS and the meeting place of 2 womens and 14 mens Lodges.
There was another of their Lodge which met in the premises of the GPA of Loyal Orangemen of Scotland at number 33.

On looking for references I found this entry in the Post Office Directory:
LOUTITT, Alex., bookseller. Secretary to the Interim Committee of an Association to be called " The North British Protestant Association in aid of the Orangemen of Ireland, and in Defence of Protestant Rights," 90 Houston street
I have no knowledge of this organisation
 
Movers and Shakers - Famous members of the Orange Order in Glasgow
Orangeism has existed in Glasgow since at least 1813, with the first record of an Orange procession being held on 12th July 1821. In our series of newly published leaflets, we explore many fascinating aspects of the Orange Order’s history within the city of Glasgow.
Today, our fourth one focuses on influential members of our Institution from the past.
(Please click on the link below to view the booklet)
https://online.fliphtml5.com/hgtp/wavl/#p=1

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Book arrived within two days of ordering. Just started it but it is beautifully laid out with plenty of coloured photos and text for easy reading. The writer has a very easy prose style and the book is packed with interesting stories I was surprised and fascinated to learn. As I said, just started it but I’m happy to report you won’t be disappointed if you order it.
 
More Movers and Shakers in Glasgow Orangeism
Orangeism has existed in Glasgow since at least 1813, with the first record of an Orange procession being held on 12th July 1821. In our series of newly published leaflets, we explore many fascinating aspects of the Orange Order’s history within the city of Glasgow.
Today, our fifth and final one, focuses on further influential members of our Institution from the past.
(Please click on the link below to view the booklet)
https://online.fliphtml5.com/hgtp/dtny/#p=1

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Fantastic new book about the history of the Orange Order in Glasgow

Author Jon MacDonald has done a great job in this well written and wonderfully illustrated book - starting from the first lodge in Glasgow being formed right up to the modern day. Some 200 years.

It gives a great insight into the reality of lodge life - not the sensationalism so often seen in the press - and the great work and characters the Glasgow Orange has produced.

It’s written in a lively style that doesn’t compromise it’s historical rigour or accuracy - as well as being an insight into the Orange Order in the city it provides a wonderful sidelight to the social history of the city and Scotland as a whole.

I can’t recommend it highly enough.

£9.99 plus £3 postage UK.

PAYPAL SALES LINK FOR THE UK- https://tinyurl.com/GlasgowOrangeHistoryBookUK


New links for overseas postage added.

New links which have separate postage rates for Europe and the Rest of the World.

https://tinyurl.com/GlasgowOrangeBookEurope

https://tinyurl.com/GlasgowOrangeBookROTW






For European or Rest Of The World postage please make a Paypal payment for either £15.99 0r £19.99 to the Paypal account glasgoworangefest@gmail.com

New 100 page perfect bound book on the History of Orangeism in Glasgow titled 'To greet my Glasgow Brethren’ The book is a must read for anyone with an interest in the Institution. The book can be purchased through a number of outlets including Schomberg House in Belfast and also through the County Grand Orange Lodge of Glasgow mobile app.
Authentication code for my paypal payment *1690* B-)
 
Fantastic book, I bought it from the King Billy shop Dec 2019, highly recommend even for people who are not members of the Orange Institution. We are welded into the very fabric of Glasgow history.
 
Conspicuous Gallantry - stories of the men and women of the 8th (County Tyrone) Battalion, Ulster Defence Regiment

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https://www.helion.co.uk/military-h...-tyrone-battalion-ulster-defence-regiment.php

This book is not an easy read. It is well-written, funny at times, informative and very touching. But behind the daring-do of ambushes and car chases there is the reality of 44 men murdered - some of them serving soldiers, some of them former members, almost all of them murdered when off-duty in their homes or places of work.

The 8th Battalion of the Ulster Defence Regiment was recruited in and served in the eastern part of County Tyrone which runs roughly from Aughnacloy in the south, through Dungannon in the centre up to Cookstown. From the shores of Lough Neagh in the East to the Sperrin Mountains.

As such it has an admixture of Protestant and Catholic areas, in many the communities are very mixed. It also spawned a hideous brood of IRA and INLA killers who would take a heavy toll on their Protestant neighbours and members of the security forces.

Throughout this book shines the camaraderie of the UDR, of locals serving together whilst going about their daily business - and they needed that camaraderie to buffer them from the constant attack of murder.

The book gives you a great idea of how the security forces worked - how by their constant patrolling and vigilance they would identify the terrorists, their weapons hides, the cars they used to build up an intelligence picture which would be used to interdict their attacks and catch them fleeing from the scenes of crime.

One patrol group of five men based around Cookstown would see every member subjected to murder attempts and one would loose his life in an attack.

Private John Hardy would be murdered in the meat factory in which he worked - quick thinking by the security forces meant that six members of the murder gang were caught fleeing from the scene, or collecting weapons for hiding thereafter, and charged with his murder. One of his murderers actually worked beside him and had taken the day off to commit the murder. There were two UDR men working at Granville Meats and the killers chose their target by tossing a coin.

Another soldier was called out to fix a boiler in a house only to be met by a gang of killers when he entered the house - a bullet proof jacket saved him and he was able to flee and fire his personal protection weapon despite his wounds.

Others were not so lucky - being on your own with a pistol and being attacked by four of five men armed with assault rifles does not often make for a happy ending.

Stories like these are crammed into the book. It is a stunning tribute to those who served.
 

The Sixties model who joined the UDR - and was still turning heads at 75​

Nikki Sievwright knew the risks of serving on the front line in Northern Ireland, but when her dashing cavalry officer husband was posted here, she didn't hesitate to enlist. Ivan Little recalls the colourful and courageous life of a woman who, years after she left the Army, couldn't resist spying on Hezbollah​

Arresting looks: Nikki Sievwright was a former model who later joined the UDR

Her striking, saucer-like eyes, her head-turning radiance and her wispy blonde hair helped propel model Nikki Ross onto the covers of the world's top glamour magazines and made her a target for international playboys in the Sixties.

However, no one imagined that one day this unpredictable English beauty would be on a very different beat, strutting her stunning stuff in surreal surroundings, fighting the IRA along the Ulster border.

In London and Paris, the fashionistas had called her the girl with the million dollar looks, and insiders said she was destined to become a face of the swinging Sixties to rival the likes of Jean Shrimpton and Twiggy.

But Nikki Ross didn't play the fame game the way the model industry - and gossip writers - expected her to. The clean-living model even shunned the advances of French singer Sacha Distel who wasn't used to taking no for an answer to his amorous entreaties.

Perhaps it was her unconventional attitude to life at the top of the modelling tree - and an unlikely two-year spell in the UDR - which ensured that the svelte stunner from Sussex, who died recently at the age of 75, would still find her way onto the obituary pages of all the major newspapers in Britain.

No one else had ever before swapped the pampered existence of modelling for the perilous patrols of the UDR along the border, where attacks from the IRA were ever-present threats.

What made the model soldier so fascinating for the feature writers in England wasn't just that she had given up fashion for flak jackets, but also that she was the wife of an Army officer.

It simply wasn't the done thing for the spouse of a high-ranking soldier to serve Queen and Country too.

But people who knew Nikki said she didn't conform to the notion of the done thing in any sphere of her life.

She'd come to Northern Ireland with her husband, David Sievwright, a handsome career soldier she met at a party in a hotel in the United Arab Emirates after her 1974 divorce from John Venning, a property developer who she claimed had a wandering eye.

Nikki Sievwright

Nikki Sievwright
After the end of their six-year marriage, Nikki was still in big demand as a model, but it was said that she grew weary of over-eager photographers who wanted more than her picture.

David Sievwright, a dashing cavalryman, was an officer and a gentleman. He swept her off her feet in the Gulf and, after a six-month courtship, they were married, much to the pleasure of previously disappointed gossip writers in the red tops.

But her suspicions about the columnists returned again after one of them published a long lens picture of her wearing nothing more than a giant bandanna on a beach.

Life was to change dramatically for Nikki after her husband re-joined his old regiment, the 13th/18th Royal Hussars.

He proudly showed off his new bride, who gained the admiration of her female contemporaries for her non-traditional approach to the life of a wife in the cavalry.

But no one foresaw what Nikki Sievwright did next. After the Hussars were posted to Northern Ireland to Lisanelly Barracks in Omagh in November 1977 on a two-year deployment, she enlisted in the UDR.

Dark days: mourners at the funeral of Eva Martin

Dark days: mourners at the funeral of Eva Martin
Nikki would have been well aware of the risks. In 1974, UDR member Eva Martin died in an attack on her base in Clogher in Tyrone.

The late double agent Sean O'Callaghan later pleaded guilty to her killing.

If Nikki was frightened, she didn't show it, and she thought quickly at times to avoid embarrassment for herself and her husband. She and her UDR patrol once arrived before David and his quick-reaction force at the scene of a bombing near Omagh, and she swiftly took off her beret so that she wouldn't have to salute him.

Former colleagues say she was a fearless Greenfinch - the name given to women members of the UDR who weren't routinely armed but were trained in how to use guns.

The story goes that Nikki was an intuitive soldier who on one occasion helped her colleagues capture a wanted man in Tyrone in 1978.

Her patrol had apparently stopped a car for a routine check, but another vehicle came on the scene and, in the ensuing chaos shots were fired, though no one was injured.

Reports from the time said that the occupants of the cars convinced the soldiers that they weren't terrorists and didn't pose a threat to anyone.

But Nikki wasn't so sure and insisted on searching a female passenger, who was subsequently found to have hidden a passport belonging to one of her male companions in her underwear.

It transpired that he was on the security forces' list of terrorist suspects.

But even though she was a UDR soldier, Nikki Sievwright didn't give up her modelling work altogether.

The opportunities in Northern Ireland, especially during the stagnant Seventies, weren't quite the same as back home in Britain.

Nikki managed to find work in Dublin, but she didn't share the secrets of her other job with anyone.

One man who served alongside her husband in the Hussars said Nikki was very much her own person, a free spirit who couldn't understand why she should come to Northern Ireland and not be involved in the security situation. The former colleague said it mightn't have been in keeping with the bohemian world she had inhabited, but he sensed a patriotic streak in her.

Lagan Valley MP Sir Jeffrey Donaldson, the president of the Regimental Association of the UDR, said of Nikki: "She was an incredible lady who showed great commitment and courage by becoming a Greenfinch in an area where the security forces were regularly targeted both on and off duty."

Nikki was born in January 1943, the daughter of Charles Ross, an officer in the British Colonial Service in Sierra Leone.

Her father sent his wife, Nina, back home to Britain for the birth of the new arrival, but it was wartime and the seas off the west African coast were notorious hunting grounds for the German U-boats.

Happily, Mrs Ross made it home safely.

Mr Ross didn't return to Britain until 1947, and his wife died four years later. He later married his Spanish housekeeper, after which the family moved to Jersey.

But Nikki wasn't happy there, so, aged 18, she went to Paris where she was recruited by the Chloe fashion house.

Her modelling career really took off when, aged 22, she was chosen to take part in a no-expense-spared British fashion show in New York in 1965.

It was the biggest ever Government-backed event of its kind and was held on board the Queen Elizabeth liner under the direction of Michael Whittaker, who had famously designed Honor Blackman's costumes for the Avengers TV series.

Nikki's 34-25-34 figure and her allure helped the British delegation sell thousands of pounds worth of orders, as Whittaker predicted they would.

He'd sought out Nikki, who had been working in Paris fashion houses before re-locating to London in a bid to find her niche as a photographic model.

She was initially rejected by one of the largest agencies, run by Peter Lumley, who said she had no personality in front of the camera.

Her response was to shed a stone and don a wig for her next meeting with Lumley, who signed her up on the spot, ensuring her future in the world of international photographic modelling. It was estimated that her income increased tenfold.

After the Army, David Sievwright entered the realms of military intelligence and initially went to Madrid, where Nikki was said to have become friendly with King Juan Carlos and his wife, Queen Sofia.

Nikki's fluency in French, German, Spanish and Arabic made her invaluable to her husband as he travelled to postings across the world, with her ostensibly passing her time by reverting to her love of horses.

However Nikki didn't always play by the book in foreign climes. One obituary in the Times said she was once called before the British ambassador in Beirut and told to stop going into Hezbollah territory when exercising racehorses.

"It had been a useful means of intelligence gathering, but she was just too conspicuous. Even at 75, heads would turn when she entered a room," said the Times writer, who added that Nikki was still horse-riding and playing tennis up until the end when she died of sepsis in a hospital in Swindon.

Belfast Telegraph
 
Conspicuous Gallantry - stories of the men and women of the 8th (County Tyrone) Battalion, Ulster Defence Regiment

t3NFgJG.png


https://www.helion.co.uk/military-h...-tyrone-battalion-ulster-defence-regiment.php

This book is not an easy read. It is well-written, funny at times, informative and very touching. But behind the daring-do of ambushes and car chases there is the reality of 44 men murdered - some of them serving soldiers, some of them former members, almost all of them murdered when off-duty in their homes or places of work.

The 8th Battalion of the Ulster Defence Regiment was recruited in and served in the eastern part of County Tyrone which runs roughly from Aughnacloy in the south, through Dungannon in the centre up to Cookstown. From the shores of Lough Neagh in the East to the Sperrin Mountains.

As such it has an admixture of Protestant and Catholic areas, in many the communities are very mixed. It also spawned a hideous brood of IRA and INLA killers who would take a heavy toll on their Protestant neighbours and members of the security forces.

Throughout this book shines the camaraderie of the UDR, of locals serving together whilst going about their daily business - and they needed that camaraderie to buffer them from the constant attack of murder.

The book gives you a great idea of how the security forces worked - how by their constant patrolling and vigilance they would identify the terrorists, their weapons hides, the cars they used to build up an intelligence picture which would be used to interdict their attacks and catch them fleeing from the scenes of crime.

One patrol group of five men based around Cookstown would see every member subjected to murder attempts and one would loose his life in an attack.

Private John Hardy would be murdered in the meat factory in which he worked - quick thinking by the security forces meant that six members of the murder gang were caught fleeing from the scene, or collecting weapons for hiding thereafter, and charged with his murder. One of his murderers actually worked beside him and had taken the day off to commit the murder. There were two UDR men working at Granville Meats and the killers chose their target by tossing a coin.

Another soldier was called out to fix a boiler in a house only to be met by a gang of killers when he entered the house - a bullet proof jacket saved him and he was able to flee and fire his personal protection weapon despite his wounds.

Others were not so lucky - being on your own with a pistol and being attacked by four of five men armed with assault rifles does not often make for a happy ending.

Stories like these are crammed into the book. It is a stunning tribute to those who served.
For Valentines they are doing the book with 14% off and no p&p.
 
An Orange membership certificate from 1903 I bought a few years ago form eBay - I wonder if the "Netherton" mentioned is the old Orange Hall on Temple Road heading to Dawsholm.

dcc7UXk.jpg
 
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COUNTY GRAND ORANGE LODGE OF GLASGOW MERCHANDISE - TO MAKE A PURCHASE - DOWNLOAD THE COUNTY GRAND LODGE APP - IT USES THE NAME "CGLG" IN THE APP STORE, GOOGLE ETC.
 
Never mind reading it join the orange order simple we are in a health state but need every member we can get so we can take the fite to the natz
 
Never mind reading it join the orange order simple we are in a health state but need every member we can get so we can take the fite to the natz
Unfortunately I think to many like to sing the songs, follow the parades but don't take the leap to actually join.
 
Unfortunately I think to many like to sing the songs, follow the parades but don't take the leap to actually join.
May be mate but there is the other side of the coin in that a lot join without actually knowing very much about it other than being a protestant organisation who meet once a month and organise parades to display their heritage and uphold the freedoms won by their fore fathers.
Thats a simplified version for the members that walk the walk so to speak but if those joining looked into the structure of it and how it is run from above as well as the religious side of it ,its no wonder the young are not getting involved .
Certain areas of NI may have seen rising numbers but certainly where i live ,lodges that once has 70 or 80 members on the street for the 12th just 30 years ago are now struggling and their lodges on the biggest day of the year would not top 20 .
Sadly i don't see the trend reversing anytime soon due to todays youth having other interests and a lot also disconnecting from any sort of religious participation and regular church attendance .
i know loads of young people that are in marching bands but very few of them in the OO .
 
A JEWEL TO CELEBRATE 200 YEARS OF ORANGE PARADES IN GLASGOW


A new and exclusive Jewel to commemorate the Bicentennial of Boyne Parades in Glasgow has been especially commissioned by the County Grand Orange Lodge of Glasgow, to commemorate this significant achievement.


This limited number, high quality medal is sure to be a collector’s item of the future.


Boxed in an attractive presentation case and suspended from a gold-coloured bar, the Jewel’s ribbon design consists of an Orange and Purple feature, to which is attached a medal depicting the story of St. Mungo and will look excellent on your collarette.


Ideal for yourself or a gift for a loved one.


Cost is £20 plus postage of £4.95 and the medal can be purchased from the County Grand Lodge of Glasgow Phone App.


N.B. This item will be delivered via Royal Mail as Recorded Delivery with a signature required on delivery.




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COUNTY GRAND ORANGE LODGE OF GLASGOW MERCHANDISE - TO MAKE A PURCHASE - DOWNLOAD THE COUNTY GRAND LODGE APP - IT USES THE NAME "CGLG" IN THE APP STORE, GOOGLE ETC.

kELa0WI.jpg
 
An Orange membership certificate from 1903 I bought a few years ago form eBay - I wonder if the "Netherton" mentioned is the old Orange Hall on Temple Road heading to Dawsholm.

dcc7UXk.jpg

Fella I work withs mother was WM of a ladies Lodge in Temple
 
http://chng.it/CM5mCTxM via @UKChange

Keep the Covenanters' Cottage for the Community!​

SqdgDCrqCNqpxXb-128x128-noPad.jpg


Biggar and District Civic Society
19 APR 2021 —

Dear Supporter
We've been blown away by the number of people who have signed up to our petition asking Biggar Museum Trust to Keep the Covenanters' Cottage in the Community! In two weeks, 1000 people have signed up to keep this important piece of heritage for future generations.

Our campaign was boosted when leading Scottish historian Prof Sir Tom Devine joined those calling on Biggar Museum Trust to rethink what he called an "unwise" decision to sell. His comments have been reported in the linked article in the Scotsman and in local press. In addition, several local businesses have shown an interest in helping to save this building.

As a result of public pressure, the Museum Trust has extended its deadline for selling by two weeks to Fri 30th April, but this is still not long enough to do a feasibility study of new uses and secure funding to purchase the building. However, we think that even at this late hour, the Museum Trust could be persuaded to change its mind if enough people show that they care about the Covenanters' Cottage.

Please could you help us just a little bit more and share this petition on social media and encourage friends who might be interested to sign. Thank you so much!

Janet Moxley
Secretary,
Biggar and District Civic Society
 

Eoghan Harris: ‘Barbara J Pym was no trolling account’​

Letter: ‘Why did I set up an anonymous account – and admit to it when asked?’​

Sat, May 15, 2021, 00:10
Sir, – A 78-year-old man with terminal cancer can still learn this life lesson: my cancer is not as malignant as the manipulations of Sinn Féin whose hand is heavy behind the current campaign to cancel me.

Sinn Féin trolls, in their thousand, used Twitter to spread the smear that I sent Irish Examiner journalist Aoife Grace Moore multiple sexualised private messages from multiple accounts.

Moore’s original complaint was about two public tweets on the Barbara J Pym account. The first tweet of which she complains refers to her lauding Mary Lou McDonald, and simply says: “So that’s what turns you on?”.

This is a common figure of speech meaning “So that’s what you like?” and has no sexual connotations for most people.

The second tweet of which she complains says: “Moore thinks she’s sniping safely from behind Derry hedges, but she’s actually sniping from an ROI hedge in the Examiner, and her SF backside is sticking up in the air”.

Moore’s version of this changed its tone: “The account sent me sexualised messages about whether Mary Lou McDonald ‘turned me on’ the size of my arse and called me a terrorist from the month I started at the Examiner.”

By changing “SF backside” to “the size of my arse” it is not me who is sexualising the message but in retrospect, I regret the crudity of “backside”.

Finally, there is no tweet in the Barbara J Pym account calling Aoife Moore a terrorist.

Sinn Féin has mobilised its social media army to gender a political issue and ruin my reputation by depicting me as a misogynist.

Two of your columnists, Kathy Sheridan (Opinion & Analysis, May 12th) and Finn McRedmond (Opinion & Analysis, May 13th), seem to think these allegations of abusive misogyny against me are proven. They are not. Should these allegations be considered in a court of law, I will welcome the opportunity to refute them.

Speaking of which, solicitors for the complainants, clearly under the delusion I run them, have repeatedly tried to link me with nine other suspended Twitter accounts.

I have only one Twitter account, Barbara J Pym. I suspect the other accounts were suspended because they supported my anti-Sinn Féin views.

In fact I only know two of these suspended account holders, both strong women, who share my loathing of Sinn Féin and are well able to articulate that abhorrence.

One is my sister, Bridget McIntyre, the other is “Dolly White” who tells me she’s soon going public because she’s sick of the misogynistic smear that she is really me.

Why did I set up an anonymous account – and admit to it when asked?

The short answer is that my column could not concentrate on Northern Ireland and I was desperate to find a wider platform to reach out to unionists and fight Sinn Féin.

Barbara J Pym was no trolling account. About 90 per cent of the tweets were about Northern Irish politics. It blocked followers who used the word c**t.

One of the reasons I used a pseudonym was because my own name would filter how my tweets were received. I wanted to be read with an open mind.

Fintan O’Toole recently wrote that “for a political columnist working in a democratic society, anonymity is a betrayal” (Opinion & Analysis, May .12th).

I disagree. I strongly believe journalists should be allowed to use a pseudonym to fight Sinn Féin on social media.

A recent Twitter statement says: “Pseudonymity has been a vital tool for speaking out in oppressive regimes, it is no less critical in democratic societies.”

That applies in Ireland. Irish democracy is under siege from Sinn Féin, a party with a military wing – and most journalists are in denial about the danger.

In the limited time left to me, I wanted to be honest. That is why I honestly unmasked myself as Barbara J Pym. Likewise I honestly believe any tweets I sent to women journalists were neither sexual nor abusive but political in aim.

Yes, I accept women journalists are often unfairly targeted online – but this does not make them immune to criticism. Political journalism requires a level of robustness. Aoife Moore has a strong public platform in the Irish Examiner and over 42,000 adoring Twitter followers.

Apart from this Irish Times letter, I have been offered no public redress. Sinn Féin trolls can say anything they like about me. And do. Like swimming through a sea of sewage.

But I will not meekly follow the standard script for the cancelled – abject apology and pleas for free speech. I make no apology for my Twitter account – and Sinn Féin doesn’t believe in free speech.

I will not go gently to my grave. I will fight Sinn Féin fascism with my last breath. – Yours, etc,

EOGHAN HARRIS,

Blackrock,

Co Dublin.
 
The Glasgow County Grand Lodge programme for 2021 is now available.

64 pages of history and information.

£2 plus postage - please note if you are overseas the postage is kinda crazy for your areas - £9.85 for Australia/NZ, £8.30 for the the US and Canada and £5.25 for Europe. If overseas please buy and we will invoice for the extra cost.

PURCHASE LINK - www.tinyurl.com/OrangeProgramme2021

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Celebrate 12 Days of July
And support your Favourite Charity

Tickets are available from SOHF Committee Members

Or via PAYPAL:
Log-in to your Paypal account
Click Send/Request - Send Money
scottishorangehomefund@gmail.com

Key in amount you wish to pay
e.g. 1 Ticket £5: 2 Tickets £10 etc.

Add a Note: PLEASE INCLUDE
Number of tickets you wish to purchase
Your Name & Telephone Contact No.

Once you have processed your payment,
secretary will text your ticket number(s) to you.

Each ticket will be eligible for the daily draw for each 12 days

If you, or your Lodge would like to support this event by “Pledging”
a bottle of Spirit as a prize, please contact Secretary on 07913 978348
If you have already done so, thank you so very much for your support.


 
East Donegal Unionism - 1885-1921

A great wee book covering the Protestant community in the east of County Donegal throughout tumultuous years. In it’s 120 pages it packs a lot of information - well worth obtaining. £7 via Pay pal from the author - ian.mackey@yahoo.com

 
The Londonderry Plantation 1609-41: The city of London and the Plantation in Ulster





I am grateful to a friend in Northern Ireland for obtaining a copy for me of TW Moody’s magisterial work - originally published in 1939 and re-issued by the Ulster Historical Foundation in 2019.





The work is 490 printed pages plus colour and black-and-white illustrations - and includes some maps which fold away into the dust jacket.





Despite it’s scholarly and detailed content it is still eminently readable and I would commend it to you.






The Londonderry Plantation was published originally in 1939. Only 500 units were produced and printed in the Channel Islands where, reputedly, part of the stock was impounded by the occupation of the islands by the Germans at the end of June 1940. Original copies now go for £450 online.
















 


200 Year Celebrations of parading in the city - 1821 to 2021



The Right Worthy County Grand Master and Executive of the County Grand Orange Lodge of Glasgow are delighted to confirm that the final plans for Saturday 18th September 2021 have now been completed. We are rightly proud to once again take to the streets of the ‘dear green place’ to celebrate the civil and religious liberties secured for all in the Glorious Revolution of 1688 which laid the foundation for the evolution of constitutional democracy within the British Isles.

We are delighted to announce that the three-home jurisdictions will be represented by the Grand Masters of Ireland, England, and Scotland, who will be present to join in the celebrations as well as the many long-standing friends that our County Grand Orange Lodge has made since its inception in 1967.

We also extend the hand of friendship to the Scottish Sisters and Brethren who will make their way into the city on Saturday as well as the many thousands of visitors from England and Ireland who will also be in attendance. This will be the largest Orange event in the city for a number of years as we commemorate the Bi-centenary of the first Orange procession in Glasgow held on the 12th of July, 1821.

We hope that all who come along to both participate and spectate enjoy the day where we have the opportunity to, once again, show off our unique cultural and historical identity within this great city of Glasgow where we continue to display all aspects of the Biblical, historical and cultural images of the reformed andBritish way of life.



We recognise that not all in the city may wish to stand and spectate to witness our historical and colourful display and should anyone wish to make their way through the procession to continue with their daily business, then please contact a marshal wearing an orange vest who will be only too happy to safely assist you.

If you are coming along to spectate, please remember that our Institution’s core value is one of civil and religious freedoms to be enjoyed by all and we ask that you enjoy our day in a tolerant and respectful manner by acting responsibly at all times.
 
On Saturday just past the marque parade review stand of the County Grand Lodge of Glasgow in Glasgow Green and surrounding areas were subject to an early morning sectarian and racist attack.

In front of the review stand the words “God Bless The Pope” were spray painted and two kinds of heavy-duty and high quality vinyl stickers were attached to the marque itself, lamp standards and junction boxes - these were of a racist and sectarian nature - one featuring a pig in Rangers colours and the other emblazoned with the words “Primates Convention.”

This gives us insight into the diseased racist and sectarian minds of those who oppose Orange parades - despite their talk of “rights” those who follow their words with action display their true intent with the racist imagery of pigs and apes.

To go to the cost and effort of designing, having made, paying for and then distributing these stickers and posters shows a degree of organisation and hatred which should be ignored at society’s peril.

In view of the hate campaign which has been going on against Orange parades it’s a very apt reminder to those in authority who should know better to be very careful with their words and whom they give succour to.

The incidents have been reported to the relevant authority.






 







On Saturday just past, the County Grand Master of Glasgow, Brother Eddie McGonnell, and other members from Glasgow attended a Memorial Service and Banner Dedication in memory of the late Grand Master of Scotland - Brother Ian Wilson.





The service was held in Brucefield Parish Church, Whitburn - where Ian had worshipped, served and played the organ for over 50 years. The bannerette was dedicated on behalf of his own private lodge - LOL 202 Bible & Crown.





Conducted by the Reverend Ray Williamson it was a happy celebration of Ian’s life and times. An amusing but detailed address was delivered by Brother J G MacLean detailing Ian’s long involvement in the Orange Order.





The bannerette was unveiled by one of Ian’s daughters. The bannerette was then displayed in a parade around the town.





The hymns were “Great things he hath done”, “Be still for the presence of the Lord” and ”Guide me O Thou Great Jehovah.”





Ian’s long service - Grand Master, Imperial President, Editor of the Orange Torch - ended where it began - in his home town of Whitburn. We give thanks for his dedication and service.




 

The Idea of the Union
Great Britain and Northern Ireland - Realities and Challenges
John Wilson Foster William Beattie David Smith

Who is speaking for the Union?

It is a question that has been asked for several decades by Northern Ireland citizens anxious about the firmness of their place in the United Kingdom.

It is now a question that will be asked with increasing concern by unionists in England, Scotland and Wales.

In 'The Idea of the Union: Great Britain and Northern Ireland', historians, distinguished politicians, economists, political journalists, cultural historians and versatile scholars on both sides of the water break cover and declare for the Union. The 20 contributors include David Trimble, Mike Nesbitt, Ray Bassett, and Graham Gudgin. The Foreword is by Baroness Hoey.

'The Idea of the Union' is a manifesto in favour of the constitutional link between Northern Ireland and Great Britain, and between the nations of the kingdom. It also promotes cultural relations in the British Isles. But primarily, it is a handbook of arguments, rooted in history and the real world, against Northern Ireland's severance from Great Britain.

Irish separatist nationalism has had a fair innings. Now it's time for reason and reality to go to bat.

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