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Rosebank Cemetery

ROSEBANK PHONE MAST TO MOVE

Submitted by Editor on

Good news! 

Readers will remember our report in late November about the 18.5m telecommunications mast newly installed on Broughton Road. 

The siting had caused upset among many locals who felt its positioning next to the Gretna Rail Disaster memorial in Rosebank Cemetery was unsightly and disrespectful. 

SAD NEWS FROM ROSEBANK

Submitted by Editor on

One doesn’t expect happy news from a cemetery, so none of what follows should come as a particular surprise. 

These researches are not intended to be intrusively morbid. They have been made in reaction to gravestone inscriptions in Rosebank Cemetery which were surely intended by relatives to trigger memory or spark interest among future generations.

In that sense, these short and melancholy stories constitute polite responses to long-standing invitations.

SHIPWRECK ON AUSTRALIAN COAST

Submitted by Editor on

LOCAL MAN'S LAST HOURS RECALLED 

A long wander about Rosebank Cemetery yesterday, and an unexpected glimpse of tempest and terror on the far side of the world. 

Able Seaman John Paterson was one of 27 crew who sailed from Lamlash on Arran on 3 May 1894. Under the command of Captain William Leggat, the three-masted steel barque Cambus Wallace was on her maiden voyage, bound for Brisbane with a cargo of whisky, beer, pig iron, salt, fancy goods and explosives. 

PURRY OLD BURIAL

Submitted by Editor on

This is rather sweet.

A somewhat eroded stone cat sits patiently on its companion's grave ... not so much Greyfriars Bobby as Rosebank Moggie.

We noticed it the week before last whilst preparing for Saturday's Quintinshill (Gretna) Commemoration.

It may have something to do with Peter Wishart, an Associate of the Royal Society of Artists whose details appear last on the headstone below.