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Kelso, Scottish Borders

Kelso (Scots: Kelsae Scottish Gaelic: Cealsaidh)[2][3] is a market town in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland. Within the boundaries of the historic county of Roxburghshire, it lies where the rivers Tweed and Teviot have their confluence. The town has a population of 5,639 according to the 2011 census and based on the 2010 definition of the locality.[4]

Kelso
Kelso seen from the Cobby Tweedside meadow
Kelso
Location within the Scottish Borders
Population6,870 (mid-2020 est.)[1]
OS grid referenceNT7268233961
• Edinburgh44 mi (71 km)
• London350 mi (560 km)
Council area
Lieutenancy area
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townKELSO
Postcode districtTD5
Dialling code01573
PoliceScotland
FireScottish
AmbulanceScottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
List of places
UK
Scotland
55°35′55″N 2°26′01″W / 55.59851°N 2.43357°W / 55.59851; -2.43357Coordinates: 55°35′55″N 2°26′01″W / 55.59851°N 2.43357°W / 55.59851; -2.43357

Kelso's main tourist draws are the ruined Kelso Abbey and Floors Castle. The latter is a house designed by William Adam which was completed in 1726. The Kelso Bridge was designed by John Rennie who later built London Bridge.

Kelso held the UK record for the lowest January temperature at −26.7 °C (−16.1 °F), from 1881 until 1982.[5]

History

The town of Kelso came into being as a direct result of the creation of Kelso Abbey in 1128. The town's name stems from the earliest settlement having stood on a chalky outcrop, and the town was known as Calkou (or perhaps Calchfynydd) in those early days, something that is remembered in the modern street name, "Chalkheugh Terrace".[6]

Standing on the opposite bank of the River Tweed from the now-vanished royal burgh of Roxburgh, Kelso and its sister hamlet of Wester Kelso were linked to the burgh by a ferry at Wester Kelso. A small hamlet existed before the completion of the abbey in 1128 but the settlement started to flourish with the arrival of the monks. Many were skilled craftsmen, and they helped the local population as the village expanded.

Archaeological excavations in the 1980s discovered that the original medieval burgh of Wester Kelso was much farther west than previously believed and that it was abandoned in the 14th or 15th centuries, at the same time that the royal burgh of Roxburgh was deserted, likely the result of the English occupation of Roxburgh Castle. The other settlement of Easter Kelso, near the abbey, survived and expanded from the market area around the abbey northwards towards the Floors estate by the early 18th century. Thus 'Easter' Kelso, became Kelso.[7]

The abbey controlled much of life in Kelso-area burgh of barony, called Holydean, until the Reformation in the 16th century. After that, the power and wealth of the abbey declined. The Kerr family of Cessford took over the barony and many of the abbey's properties around the town. By the 17th century, they virtually owned Kelso.

In Roxburgh Street is the outline of a horseshoe petrosomatoglyph where the horse of Charles Edward Stuart cast a shoe as he was riding it through the town on his way to Carlisle in 1745. He is also said to have planted a white rosebush in his host's garden, descendants of which are still said to flourish in the area.[8]

For some period of time, the Kelso parish was able to levy a tax of 2 pence (2d) on every Scottish pint of ale, beer or porter sold within the town.[9][10] The power to do this was extended for 21 years in 1802 under the Kelso Two Pennies Scots Act when the money was being used to replace a bridge across the River Tweed that had been destroyed by floods.[9]

Kelso Town Hall was completed in 1816 and remodelled in 1908.[11] The war memorial was erected in 1921 to a design by Sir Robert Lorimer.[12]

Community

 
View of Kelso in the late 18th century
 
Teviot Bridge Near Kelso

Kelso High School provides secondary education to the town, and primary education is provided by Edenside Primary and Broomlands Primary.

The River Tweed at Kelso is renowned for its salmon fishing. There are two eighteen-hole golf courses as well as a National Hunt (jumping) horse racing track. Kelso Racecourse is known as "Britain's Friendliest Racecourse." Racing first took place in Kelso in 1822.

In 2005, the town hosted the 'World Meeting of Citroën 2CV Friends' in the grounds of nearby Floors Castle.

The town's rugby union club is Kelso RFC. The club holds an annual rugby sevens tournament takes place in early May. Former players include Ross Ford, the current record holder for men's senior caps with the Scotland men's rugby union team. Other former players include John Jeffrey, Roger Baird, Andrew Ker and Adam Roxburgh, who all featured in 7s teams that dominated the Borders circuit in the 1980s - including several wins in the blue ribbon event at Melrose. Kelso RFC also hold an annual rugby fixture; this fixture is the oldest unbroken fixture between a Scottish and Welsh side.

Every year in July, the town celebrates the border tradition of Common Riding, known as Kelso Civic Week. The festival lasts a full week and is headed by the Kelsae Laddie with his Right and Left Hand Men. The Laddie and his followers visit neighbouring villages on horseback with the climax being the Yetholm Ride on the Saturday. Kelso hosts its annual fair on the first weekend of September. The festivities include dancing, street entertainers, live music, stalls and a free concert. The fair attracts about 10,000 people to the town.

People

Sir Walter Scott attended Kelso Grammar School in 1783 and he said of the town: "it is the most beautiful if not the most romantic village in Scotland". Another attraction is the Cobby Riverside Walk which goes from the town centre to Floors Castle along the banks of the Tweed passing the point where it is joined by the River Teviot. Kelso has two bridges that span the River Tweed, "Rennie's Bridge" was completed in 1803[13] to replace an earlier one washed away in the floods of 1797, it was built by John Rennie of Haddington, who later went on to build Waterloo Bridge in London, his bridge in Kelso is a smaller and earlier version of Waterloo Bridge. The bridge was the cause of local rioting in 1854 when the Kelso population objected to paying tolls even when the cost of construction had been covered, the Riot Act was read, three years later tolls were abolished. Hunter's Bridge, a kilometre downstream, is a modern construction built to divert vehicles around the town and so take much of the heavy traffic that has damaged Rennie's bridge.

Famous people from Kelso have included the suffragette Georgiana Solomon who was born here in 1844, the civil engineer Sir James Brunlees (1816–1892) who constructed many railways in the United Kingdom as well as designing the docks at Avonmouth and Whitehaven. Sir William Fairbairn (1789–1874) was another engineer who built the first iron hulled steamship the Lord Dundas and constructed over 1,000 bridges using the tubular steel method which he pioneered. Thomas Pringle the writer, poet and abolitionist, was born at nearby Blakelaw, a 500-acre (2.0 km2) farmstead four miles (6 km) to the south of the town where his father was the tenant. Donald Farmer, a Victoria Cross recipient was born in Kelso, as was Ross Ford, who holds the record for the most senior caps (110) with the men's Scotland national rugby union team.

Robert Allan Smith (1909-1980) physicist, was born and brought up in Kelso.

Notable current and former residents

Film, music and literature

Much of the 1984 film Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes was filmed on location at Floors Castle in Kelso, which featured as the fictional Greystoke Manor.[15]

Kelso features in the traditional folk music ballad 'The Shepherd Lad of Kelso', as well as 'The Old Woman of Kelso', a variation of the ballad Eggs and Marrowbone.

Floors Castle

 
Walled garden at Floors Castle

Floors Castle is a large stately home just outside Kelso. It is a visitor attraction. Adjacent to the house there is a large walled garden with a cafe, a small garden centre and the Star Plantation.

Twin towns

Kelso is twinned with two cities abroad:

Panorama

 
Kelso is unique in Scotland for having a cobbled square fed by four cobbled streets

See also

References

  1. ^ "Mid-2020 Population Estimates for Settlements and Localities in Scotland". National Records of Scotland. 31 March 2022. Retrieved 31 March 2022.
  2. ^ "Scotslanguage.com - Names in Scots - Places in Scotland".
  3. ^ Mac an Tàilleir, Iain (2003) Placenames. (pdf) Pàrlamaid na h-Alba. Retrieved 20 January 2010. from the original on 24 October 2004.
  4. ^ "Kelso, Scottish Borders". City Population. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  5. ^ "Weather January".
  6. ^ Moffat, A., (2006). Kelsae: A History of Kelso from Earliest Times. page 12. Birlinn Ltd. ISBN 1841584576
  7. ^ "Vol 2 (2003): The origins of settlements at Kelso and Peebles, Scottish Borders archaeological excavations in Wester and Easter Kelso and Cuddyside/Bridgegate, Peebles by the Border Burghs Archaeology Project and the Scottish Urban Archaeological Trust, 1983--1994 | Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports". journals.socantscot.org. Retrieved 26 July 2021.
  8. ^ Westwood, Jennifer (1985), Albion. A guide to Legendary Britain. Pub. Grafton Books. London. ISBN 0-246-11789-3. P. 378.
  9. ^ a b The Law Commission & the Scottish Law Commission (2012), (PDF), Law Commission, pp. 321–323, archived from the original (PDF) on 13 April 2012, retrieved 25 April 2012
  10. ^ "PROPOSED REPEALS RELATING TO TWO PENNIES SCOTS ACTS" (PDF). www.scotlawcom.gov.uk. Scottish Law Commission. 11 September 2009. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  11. ^ Historic Environment Scotland. "The Square, Kelso Town Hall (LB35828)". Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  12. ^ Dictionary of Scottish Architects: Robert Lorimer
  13. ^ Historic Environment Scotland. "Kelso Bridge (58470)". Canmore. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  14. ^ Matthew, H. C. G. (2004). "Stoddart, Jane Thompson (1863–1944), journalist and author". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/53271. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. Retrieved 12 March 2021. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  15. ^ "Filming Locations for Greystoke, the Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes (1984)".

Further reading

  • Moffat, Alistair (2006), Kelsae: a history of Kelso from earliest times, Birlinn, ISBN 978-1-84158-457-7

External links

  • Photos of Kelso

kelso, scottish, borders, kelso, scots, kelsae, scottish, gaelic, cealsaidh, market, town, scottish, borders, area, scotland, within, boundaries, historic, county, roxburghshire, lies, where, rivers, tweed, teviot, have, their, confluence, town, population, ac. Kelso Scots Kelsae Scottish Gaelic Cealsaidh 2 3 is a market town in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland Within the boundaries of the historic county of Roxburghshire it lies where the rivers Tweed and Teviot have their confluence The town has a population of 5 639 according to the 2011 census and based on the 2010 definition of the locality 4 KelsoScottish Gaelic CealsaidhScots KelsaeKelso seen from the Cobby Tweedside meadowKelsoLocation within the Scottish BordersPopulation6 870 mid 2020 est 1 OS grid referenceNT7268233961 Edinburgh44 mi 71 km London350 mi 560 km Council areaScottish BordersLieutenancy areaRoxburgh Ettrick and LauderdaleCountryScotlandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townKELSOPostcode districtTD5Dialling code01573PoliceScotlandFireScottishAmbulanceScottishUK ParliamentBerwickshire Roxburgh and SelkirkScottish ParliamentEttrick Roxburgh and BerwickshireList of places UK Scotland 55 35 55 N 2 26 01 W 55 59851 N 2 43357 W 55 59851 2 43357 Coordinates 55 35 55 N 2 26 01 W 55 59851 N 2 43357 W 55 59851 2 43357Kelso s main tourist draws are the ruined Kelso Abbey and Floors Castle The latter is a house designed by William Adam which was completed in 1726 The Kelso Bridge was designed by John Rennie who later built London Bridge Kelso held the UK record for the lowest January temperature at 26 7 C 16 1 F from 1881 until 1982 5 Contents 1 History 2 Community 3 People 4 Notable current and former residents 5 Film music and literature 6 Floors Castle 7 Twin towns 8 Panorama 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory EditThe town of Kelso came into being as a direct result of the creation of Kelso Abbey in 1128 The town s name stems from the earliest settlement having stood on a chalky outcrop and the town was known as Calkou or perhaps Calchfynydd in those early days something that is remembered in the modern street name Chalkheugh Terrace 6 Kelso Town Hall Standing on the opposite bank of the River Tweed from the now vanished royal burgh of Roxburgh Kelso and its sister hamlet of Wester Kelso were linked to the burgh by a ferry at Wester Kelso A small hamlet existed before the completion of the abbey in 1128 but the settlement started to flourish with the arrival of the monks Many were skilled craftsmen and they helped the local population as the village expanded Archaeological excavations in the 1980s discovered that the original medieval burgh of Wester Kelso was much farther west than previously believed and that it was abandoned in the 14th or 15th centuries at the same time that the royal burgh of Roxburgh was deserted likely the result of the English occupation of Roxburgh Castle The other settlement of Easter Kelso near the abbey survived and expanded from the market area around the abbey northwards towards the Floors estate by the early 18th century Thus Easter Kelso became Kelso 7 The abbey controlled much of life in Kelso area burgh of barony called Holydean until the Reformation in the 16th century After that the power and wealth of the abbey declined The Kerr family of Cessford took over the barony and many of the abbey s properties around the town By the 17th century they virtually owned Kelso In Roxburgh Street is the outline of a horseshoe petrosomatoglyph where the horse of Charles Edward Stuart cast a shoe as he was riding it through the town on his way to Carlisle in 1745 He is also said to have planted a white rosebush in his host s garden descendants of which are still said to flourish in the area 8 For some period of time the Kelso parish was able to levy a tax of 2 pence 2d on every Scottish pint of ale beer or porter sold within the town 9 10 The power to do this was extended for 21 years in 1802 under the Kelso Two Pennies Scots Act when the money was being used to replace a bridge across the River Tweed that had been destroyed by floods 9 Kelso Town Hall was completed in 1816 and remodelled in 1908 11 The war memorial was erected in 1921 to a design by Sir Robert Lorimer 12 Community Edit View of Kelso in the late 18th century Teviot Bridge Near Kelso Kelso High School provides secondary education to the town and primary education is provided by Edenside Primary and Broomlands Primary The River Tweed at Kelso is renowned for its salmon fishing There are two eighteen hole golf courses as well as a National Hunt jumping horse racing track Kelso Racecourse is known as Britain s Friendliest Racecourse Racing first took place in Kelso in 1822 In 2005 the town hosted the World Meeting of Citroen 2CV Friends in the grounds of nearby Floors Castle The town s rugby union club is Kelso RFC The club holds an annual rugby sevens tournament takes place in early May Former players include Ross Ford the current record holder for men s senior caps with the Scotland men s rugby union team Other former players include John Jeffrey Roger Baird Andrew Ker and Adam Roxburgh who all featured in 7s teams that dominated the Borders circuit in the 1980s including several wins in the blue ribbon event at Melrose Kelso RFC also hold an annual rugby fixture this fixture is the oldest unbroken fixture between a Scottish and Welsh side Every year in July the town celebrates the border tradition of Common Riding known as Kelso Civic Week The festival lasts a full week and is headed by the Kelsae Laddie with his Right and Left Hand Men The Laddie and his followers visit neighbouring villages on horseback with the climax being the Yetholm Ride on the Saturday Kelso hosts its annual fair on the first weekend of September The festivities include dancing street entertainers live music stalls and a free concert The fair attracts about 10 000 people to the town People EditSir Walter Scott attended Kelso Grammar School in 1783 and he said of the town it is the most beautiful if not the most romantic village in Scotland Another attraction is the Cobby Riverside Walk which goes from the town centre to Floors Castle along the banks of the Tweed passing the point where it is joined by the River Teviot Kelso has two bridges that span the River Tweed Rennie s Bridge was completed in 1803 13 to replace an earlier one washed away in the floods of 1797 it was built by John Rennie of Haddington who later went on to build Waterloo Bridge in London his bridge in Kelso is a smaller and earlier version of Waterloo Bridge The bridge was the cause of local rioting in 1854 when the Kelso population objected to paying tolls even when the cost of construction had been covered the Riot Act was read three years later tolls were abolished Hunter s Bridge a kilometre downstream is a modern construction built to divert vehicles around the town and so take much of the heavy traffic that has damaged Rennie s bridge Famous people from Kelso have included the suffragette Georgiana Solomon who was born here in 1844 the civil engineer Sir James Brunlees 1816 1892 who constructed many railways in the United Kingdom as well as designing the docks at Avonmouth and Whitehaven Sir William Fairbairn 1789 1874 was another engineer who built the first iron hulled steamship the Lord Dundas and constructed over 1 000 bridges using the tubular steel method which he pioneered Thomas Pringle the writer poet and abolitionist was born at nearby Blakelaw a 500 acre 2 0 km2 farmstead four miles 6 km to the south of the town where his father was the tenant Donald Farmer a Victoria Cross recipient was born in Kelso as was Ross Ford who holds the record for the most senior caps 110 with the men s Scotland national rugby union team Robert Allan Smith 1909 1980 physicist was born and brought up in Kelso Notable current and former residents EditRoger Baird rugby James Ballantyne printer Horatius Bonar poet and hymn writer Jane Lundie Bonar 1821 1884 hymnwriter Sir James Brunlees engineer Peter Crawford land surveyor Sir William Fairbairn engineer Donald Farmer Victoria Cross recipient Ryan Flannigan cricket Ross Ford Rugby Union John Jeffrey Rugby Union Ryan Hogarth Darts Player Andrew Ker rugby amp cricket Alistair Moffat journalist Tom Nevin boxer Scott Newlands Rugby Union Will H Ogilvie 1869 1963 poet Sir Matthew Pinsent rower Thomas Pringle poet Sir William Purves banker Alan Tait Dual rugby international Rugby League and Rugby union Adam Roxburgh rugby Sir Walter Scott writer Robert Smith CBE physicist Jane T Stoddart writer and editor 14 Alan Tait Rugby Union Rugby League Jennie Kidd Trout Canadian Physician the first woman in Canada to practice medicine born in Kelso James Thomson poet and composerFilm music and literature EditMuch of the 1984 film Greystoke The Legend of Tarzan Lord of the Apes was filmed on location at Floors Castle in Kelso which featured as the fictional Greystoke Manor 15 Kelso features in the traditional folk music ballad The Shepherd Lad of Kelso as well as The Old Woman of Kelso a variation of the ballad Eggs and Marrowbone Floors Castle Edit Walled garden at Floors Castle Main article Floors Castle Floors Castle is a large stately home just outside Kelso It is a visitor attraction Adjacent to the house there is a large walled garden with a cafe a small garden centre and the Star Plantation Twin towns EditKelso is twinned with two cities abroad Kelso Washington United States Orchies FrancePanorama Edit Kelso is unique in Scotland for having a cobbled square fed by four cobbled streetsSee also EditKelso High School Kelso HospitalReferences Edit Mid 2020 Population Estimates for Settlements and Localities in Scotland National Records of Scotland 31 March 2022 Retrieved 31 March 2022 Scotslanguage com Names in Scots Places in Scotland Mac an Tailleir Iain 2003 Placenames pdf Parlamaid na h Alba Retrieved 20 January 2010 Archived from the original on 24 October 2004 Kelso Scottish Borders City Population Retrieved 3 June 2015 Weather January Moffat A 2006 Kelsae A History of Kelso from Earliest Times page 12 Birlinn Ltd ISBN 1841584576 Vol 2 2003 The origins of settlements at Kelso and Peebles Scottish Borders archaeological excavations in Wester and Easter Kelso and Cuddyside Bridgegate Peebles by the Border Burghs Archaeology Project and the Scottish Urban Archaeological Trust 1983 1994 Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports journals socantscot org Retrieved 26 July 2021 Westwood Jennifer 1985 Albion A guide to Legendary Britain Pub Grafton Books London ISBN 0 246 11789 3 P 378 a b The Law Commission amp the Scottish Law Commission 2012 Statute Law Repeals 19th Report PDF Law Commission pp 321 323 archived from the original PDF on 13 April 2012 retrieved 25 April 2012 PROPOSED REPEALS RELATING TO TWO PENNIES SCOTS ACTS PDF www scotlawcom gov uk Scottish Law Commission 11 September 2009 Retrieved 16 January 2022 Historic Environment Scotland The Square Kelso Town Hall LB35828 Retrieved 10 October 2021 Dictionary of Scottish Architects Robert Lorimer Historic Environment Scotland Kelso Bridge 58470 Canmore Retrieved 6 July 2021 Matthew H C G 2004 Stoddart Jane Thompson 1863 1944 journalist and author Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 53271 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Retrieved 12 March 2021 Subscription or UK public library membership required Filming Locations for Greystoke the Legend of Tarzan Lord of the Apes 1984 Further reading EditMoffat Alistair 2006 Kelsae a history of Kelso from earliest times Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 457 7External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kelso Scottish Borders Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Kelso Kelso Scottish Borders Kelso Songs Photos of Kelso Coin Hoard Article Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kelso Scottish Borders amp oldid 1149170494, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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