These stories are excerpts taken from Bill Lawson’s Croft History books.
There are now almost sixty Croft History books, all available in our shop.
Many of these Croft History books begin with a word picture and history of the general area, usually told by someone who grew up in that area, and a selection of these stories are available here.
Village groups
Browse the extracts below, or use the links below to read histories from individual islands.
Harris
Lewis
North Uist
Scalpay
St Kilda
Stories
With Mrs Chirsty MacLean (daughter of Neil son of Alex son of William) It was working on the land that was the livelihood of the crofters in Ahmore. The children would be helping, looking after the animals, milking, clearing the byre, going out to the back of the hill looking for the animals in the […]
With Mrs Chirsty MacLean (daughter of Neil son of Alex son of William) Ahmore was a part of the tack of Orinsay. A lot of people had it at first, but when it was made a part of the tack, many of the people were sent away, and the place went under sheep. Ahmore was […]
with Torquil MacRae Fishing When I was older we would go fishing for haddock with the little boat. My uncle had a big boat, with four oars in her, and we would go out with four at the oars and another steering. I was so young then – only about fourteen. There was an old […]
with Torquil MacRae Early Day’s I began my life on this very croft. I was born on 21st July 1923, and there was no minister here at that time. It was in 1924 that Malcolm MacIver came, and it was Rose who was here in 1923, so I was more than a year old before […]
with Jessie MacLeod (widow of Roderick MacIver) Our family My husband was from Tolastadh. He was sailing with the New Zealand Shipping Company. He was away for long trips. Our daughter was born in March and her father didn’t see her again until November. I’m sorry to say that soon after he left, he was […]
with Jessie MacLeod (widow of Roderick MacIver) Fishing The people here had their own boats, going out with small-lines, but they had boats in Stornoway too. My father had a boat, the Dove and one called Clan MacLeod, and there used to be boys from Point working as cooks on them – galley-boys – Angus […]
with Jessie MacLeod (widow of Roderick MacIver) Schooldays We had two teachers – Mary Jane Smith from Holm and Maggie Mary MacLeod. The headmaster was from Uig, Mr MacLean. We had a teacher from Point too – she was married to Allan Cameron. They didn’t speak Gaelic to us, and we had no English going […]
with Donald MacDonald (Domhnall ShĂ m), Horgabost Leaving Manish We came to the machair on the 28th of May 1937. I remember it as though it were only yesterday. It was two years before that that the machair was broken up into crofts. There were 8 crofts in Horgabost and 20 in Seilebost. There were so […]
with Donald MacDonald (Domhnall ShĂ m), Horgabost Houses In my grandfather’s day, the cattle were in the house along with them; my great-grandmother’s sister lived beside our own house, and she had the fire in the middle of the floor. When she stoked the fire in the morning on a still day, you had to go […]
with Donald MacDonald (Domhnall ShĂ m), Horgabost Schooldays The longest distance I was ever away from home when I was at school was on the day of the King’s Coronation on the 12th of May 1937. The Manish schoolchildren were taken to Scarista sands, and that was the first sands I had ever seen! To me […]
Explore Further
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