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By John, on February 4th, 2010% Oor Ain Folk by James Inglis (which we’ve mentioned previously here and here) is now scanned and available to be read in its entirety online now. For some reason it can’t be viewed through Google Books but from the Open Library website despite it originally coming from Google. No matter, find it here. I’m going to update some of the older posts with links to the relevant pages. Note that it is the second edition they have online while we have the first edition. I don’t believe there are any real changes genealogy-wise, only one . . . → Read More: Oor Ain Folk by James Inglis now online
By John, on March 30th, 2008% As mentioned in the last post there was two circular letters published in Oor Ain Folk. The second is transcribed below. From pages 266 to 270.
The next was written a full decade after the foregoing, and the observant reader will see that in the interim death had been busy, and that our hitherto happy and united family was beginning to feel the common fate of all merely earthly associations and institutions.
1st January 1884, Warepa, Otago, N.Z.
My Dear Mamma, and all the Members of the Family, big and little,—
. . . → Read More: Oor Ain Folk: Circular Letter from 1884
By John, on February 25th, 2008% In Oor Ain Folk James Inglis prints two examples of the type of circular letter that his family used to send:
I hope that the reader may make some allowances as he runs his eye through what was certainly never intended for publication of this sort; my only excuse for now reprinting these old circular letters it the belief that others may perhaps be fired to follow our example; and if the pleasure given to some loved ones be even measurably near to what our random letters gave, I will not have given the hint for naught.
At the . . . → Read More: Oor Ain Folk: Circular Letter from 1874
By John, on January 18th, 2008% The following article is an extract from Oor Ain Folk by James Inglis regarding his brother Thomas Chalmers Inglis.
Thomas died about three months after James finished writing Oor Ain Folk at the young age of 46. The cause was Phlebitis Embolism.
As his father was a Free Church Minister and was active in The Disruption then he would have been named after Thomas Chalmers the leader of the 450 ministers who left the Church of Scotland General Assembly in 1843. Thomas Chalmers died five months before Thomas Chalmers Inglis was born thereby, perhaps, prompting . . . → Read More: Oor Ain Folk: Thomas Chalmers Inglis (1847-1893)
By John, on January 17th, 2008% The following article is an extract from Oor Ain Folk by James Inglis regarding his brother John Knox Inglis.
From pages 259 and 260 of Oor Ain Folk:
John was next on the list. In some respect he was perhaps the best equipped, intellectually, of the whole family. He was set apart by the old couple for the ministry. He passed through his university course with distinction; took the degree of Master of Arts; received his theological training in the Free Church College, and while yet very young was appointed to the charge of the . . . → Read More: Oor Ain Folk: John Knox Inglis (1849-1878)
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