Scotland with the Greater Green Bay Chamber

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Scotland with the Greater Green Bay Chamber DISCOVER & EXPLORE SCOTLAND WITH THE GREATER GREEN BAY CHAMBER Edinburgh, Scotland DAY BY DAY DAY 1 • Transatlantic flight DAY 2 - ARRIVAL • Arrive in Scotland and transfer to your hotel • City Tour of Edinburgh • Visit Edinburgh Castle • Welcome Cocktail DAY 3 - EDINBURGH • Breakfast at your hotel • Visit to Rosslyn Chapel, Dunfermline 8-DAY JOURNEY Abbey & Stirling Castle • Optional Scottish nights Dinner HIGHLIGHTS: • Round trip scheduled airfare DAY 4 - ST. ANDREWS - INVERNESS OPTIONAL 3-NIGHT POST- • Breakfast at your hotel • Round trip transfers between airports and • Visit St. Andrews’s Castle and TOUR EXTENSION TO BELFAST hotel while overseas Cathedral $699 per person (double-occupancy) • 6 nights hotel accommodation • Lunch at the Swilcan Restaurant INCLUDES: • 2 nights Edinburgh • Travel to Inverness • Breakfast each morning • 2 night Inverness • 2 nights Glasgow DAY 5 - INVERNESS • 3-Nights Hotel Accommodations • 8 meals: breakfast daily, 1 lunch and dinner • Breakfast at your hotel • Airport transfers in Belfast on group • Tours of: Edinburgh Castle, Rosslyn Chapel, • Day at leisure travel days Edinburgh and Glasgow City Tours • Optional tour to the Isle of Skye & • Belfast City Tour with a visit to Titanic belfast • Time to visit: Dunfermline Abbey, Stirling Eileen Donan Castle • Day Trip to North Antrim Coast with a visit to Castle, St. Andrews Castle & Cathedral, DAY 6 - INVERNESS - GLASGOW Giants Causeway. Urquhart Castle, Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Glasgow Cathedral • Breakfast at your hotel • Free Time in Belfast to explore at leisure! • Discovery Program guide • Visit Loch Ness and Urquhart Castle • 2 Hour Ferry ride from Cairnryan to Belfast • Visit Glenfinnan & the Harry Potter • Complimentary post-departure travel Bridge (time & weather permitting) insurance • Travel to Glasgow DAY 7 - GLASGOW $3,449 PER PERSON • Breakfast at your hotel BOOK $3,249 PER PERSON BOOK NOW st • Tour of Glasgow SAVE if deposited by May 31 !* • Visit Kelvingrove Art Gallery & Museum & and Glasgow Cathedral of St. Mungo • Enjoy drinks and dinner at a local pub Departing October 22, 2019 DAY 8 • Breakfast at your hotel For more information and a full brochure, please contact • Transfer to airport for flight home Micky Doyle at (920) 593-3419.
Recommended publications
  • News Release
    Press Office Threadneedle Street London EC2R 8AH T 020 7601 4411 F 020 7601 5460 [email protected] www.bankofengland.co.uk 17 June 2009 Dunfermline Resolution: Announcement of the Preferred Bidder for the Social Housing Lending Business The Bank of England has selected Nationwide Building Society as the preferred bidder for the social housing loans and related deposits from housing associations (the 'Business') held by the Bank of England's wholly- owned subsidiary, DBS Bridge Bank Limited. This follows a competitive auction process conducted by the Bank of England, in accordance with the Code of Practice issued by HM Treasury under the Banking Act 2009. The Business had previously been transferred from Dunfermline Building Society ('Dunfermline') to DBS Bridge Bank Limited while a permanent home for the Business was sought. The transfer of the Business to the bridge bank took place on 30 March 2009 at the same time as the sale of certain core parts of Dunfermline to Nationwide Building Society. Dunfermline was then placed into the Building Society Special Administration Procedure. It is business as usual for the Business's customers. They can contact the Business in the usual way and should continue to make repayments as normal. Customers of other parts of the former Dunfermline Building Society's businesses now owned by Nationwide, or operated out of the Building Society Special Administration Procedure, are unaffected. The decision to select Nationwide Building Society as the preferred bidder followed advice from the Bank of England's Financial Stability Committee and consultation with the FSA and HM Treasury in accordance with the Banking Act 2009.
    [Show full text]
  • Perth & Kinross Council Archive
    Perth & Kinross Council Archive Collections Business and Industry MS5 PD Malloch, Perth, 1883-1937 Accounting records, including cash books, balance sheets and invoices,1897- 1937; records concerning fishings, managed or owned by PD Malloch in Perthshire, including agreements, plans, 1902-1930; items relating to the maintenance and management of the estate of Bertha, 1902-1912; letters to PD Malloch relating to various aspects of business including the Perthshire Fishing Club, 1883-1910; business correspondence, 1902-1930 MS6 David Gorrie & Son, boilermakers and coppersmiths, Perth, 1894-1955 Catalogues, instruction manuals and advertising material for David Gorrie and other related firms, 1903-1954; correspondence, specifications, estimates and related materials concerning work carried out by the firm, 1893-1954; accounting vouchers, 1914-1952; photographic prints and glass plate negatives showing machinery and plant made by David Gorrie & Son including some interiors of laundries, late 19th to mid 20th century; plans and engineering drawings relating to equipment to be installed by the firm, 1892- 1928 MS7 William and William Wilson, merchants, Perth and Methven, 1754-1785 Bills, accounts, letters, agreements and other legal papers concerning the affairs of William Wilson, senior and William Wilson, junior MS8 Perth Theatre, 1900-1990 Records of Perth Theatre before the ownership of Marjorie Dence, includes scrapbooks and a few posters and programmes. Records from 1935 onwards include administrative and production records including
    [Show full text]
  • Churches and Chapels Monastery
    CHURCHES AND CHAPELS From Historical and Statistical Account Of Dunfermline -Volume I. P.219 MONASTERY OF DUNFERMLINE. By Rev. Peter Chalmers Ruins of Monastic Buildings - Dunfermline. A REPRINT ON DISC 2013 ISBN 978-1-909634-03-9 CHURCHES AND CHAPELS OF THE MONASTERY OF DUNFERMLINE FROM Historical and Statistical Account Of Dunfermline Volume I. P.219 By Rev. Peter Chalmers, A.M. Minister of the First Charge, Abbey Church DUNFERMLINE. William Blackwood and Sons Edinburgh MDCCCXLIV Pitcairn Publications. The Genealogy Clinic, 18 Chalmers Street, Dunfermline KY12 8DF Tel: 01383 739344 Email enquiries @pitcairnresearh.com 2 CHURCHES AND CHAPELS OF THE MONASTERY OF DUNFERMLINE. From Historical and Statistical Account Of Dunfermline Volume I. P.219 By Rev. Peter Chalmers The following is an Alphabetical List of all the Churches and Chapels, the patronage which belonged to the Monastery of Dunfermline, along, generally, with a right to the teinds and lands pertaining to them. The names of the donors, too, and the dates of the donation, are given, so far as these can be ascertained. Exact accuracy, however, as to these is unattainable, as the fact of the donation is often mentioned, only in a charter of confirmation, and there left quite general: - No. Names of Churches and Chapels. Donors. Dates. 1. Abercrombie (Crombie) King Malcolm IV 1153-1163. Chapel, Torryburn, Fife 11. Abercrombie Church Malcolm, 7th Earl of Fife. 1203-1214. 111 . Bendachin (Bendothy) …………………………. Before 1219. Perthshire……………. …………………………. IV. Calder (Kaledour) Edin- Duncan 5th Earl of Fife burghshire ……… and Ela, his Countess ……..1154. V. Carnbee, Fife ……….. ………………………… ……...1561 VI. Cleish Church or……. Malcolm 7th Earl of Fife.
    [Show full text]
  • The Fife Pilgrim
    PILGRIMAGE The Fife From the 11th – 16th centuries, Fife attracted pilgrims from across Europe to the shrines of St. Andrew and St. Margaret. They followed their faith, in search of miracles, cures, Pilgrim Way forgiveness and adventure. A network of ferries, bridges, wells, chapels and accommodation was built to facilitate the Discover Scotland's safe passage of the pilgrims. Get away from it all and enjoy the fresh air and exercise by Pilgrim Kingdom becoming a modern day pilgrim. Undertake an inspiring journey by walking the ancient pathways, visit the medieval sites along the route and uncover Fife’s forgotten pilgrim stories. As in medieval times, you will find a choice of shelter Pilgrims journeying to St. Andrews and hospitality, whilst enjoying the kindness of strangers you Crown Copyright HES meet along the way. GET INVOLVED Work to improve the existing network of paths and construct new sections began in summer 2017 and will be complete soon. You then will be able to download a detailed map from our website and walk the route. In the interests of your safety and the working landscape, please resist trying to find the route before the map is published. A range of Interpretation proposals are under development and will be complete by March 2019, when the route will be officially launched. Get involved in the project by volunteering or taking part in an exciting free programme of talks, guided walks, an archaeological dig and much more! See website for details www.fifecoastandcountrysidetrust.co.uk FUNDERS Fife Coast and Countryside
    [Show full text]
  • In Search of Dunfermline Abbey's Lost Medieval Choir
    History Scotland (Sep/Oct 2020) 20.5, pp. 20-26 Part 1: In Search of Dunfermline Abbey’s lost medieval choir: history, liturgy and ground-penetrating radar. Michael Penman The many visitors to Dunfermline Abbey and Palace in Fife typically encounter a church of two halves. To the west stands the medieval nave and, until 1821, parish church. Stripped of its post-Reformation pews and lofts and re-presented as a stunning Romanesque-Gothic stone shell, it still coveys much of the misty spirituality of its Benedictine monastery dedicated to the Holy Trinity. Its elegant columns speak to its former scale and status and its strong links with Benedictine Durham Cathedral Priory through the 11th and 12th centuries. Fig 1: Dunfermline Abbey’s buttressed medieval nave (west) and modern Abbey Church (east) [© Robert Cutts, CC BY 2.0] However, of the later medieval monastic choir to the east (and the cloisters) little remains. The great east-end of this church was left ruinous by the iconoclasm of the Reformation. Like its nave, it had been home to successive royal and aristocratic burials and the cult of the queen of Malcolm III, St Margaret (d.1093), canonised in 1249. Long used after the Reformation as a romantic burial ground by local townspeople, known as the ‘Psalter’ churchyard, the choir ruins were eventually cleared and overbuilt c.1817-21 to make way for a new Presbyterian ‘Abbey Church’ of Dunfermline parish, conjoined to the nave. Fig 2: The fossiliferous marble base of St Margaret’s feretory shrine within her east-end chapel, outside the Abbey Church vestry [Author’s photograph].
    [Show full text]
  • Tayside, Central and Fife Tayside, Central and Fife
    Detail of the Lower Devonian jawless, armoured fish Cephalaspis from Balruddery Den. © Perth Museum & Art Gallery, Perth & Kinross Council Review of Fossil Collections in Scotland Tayside, Central and Fife Tayside, Central and Fife Stirling Smith Art Gallery and Museum Perth Museum and Art Gallery (Culture Perth and Kinross) The McManus: Dundee’s Art Gallery and Museum (Leisure and Culture Dundee) Broughty Castle (Leisure and Culture Dundee) D’Arcy Thompson Zoology Museum and University Herbarium (University of Dundee Museum Collections) Montrose Museum (Angus Alive) Museums of the University of St Andrews Fife Collections Centre (Fife Cultural Trust) St Andrews Museum (Fife Cultural Trust) Kirkcaldy Galleries (Fife Cultural Trust) Falkirk Collections Centre (Falkirk Community Trust) 1 Stirling Smith Art Gallery and Museum Collection type: Independent Accreditation: 2016 Dumbarton Road, Stirling, FK8 2KR Contact: [email protected] Location of collections The Smith Art Gallery and Museum, formerly known as the Smith Institute, was established at the bequest of artist Thomas Stuart Smith (1815-1869) on land supplied by the Burgh of Stirling. The Institute opened in 1874. Fossils are housed onsite in one of several storerooms. Size of collections 700 fossils. Onsite records The CMS has recently been updated to Adlib (Axiel Collection); all fossils have a basic entry with additional details on MDA cards. Collection highlights 1. Fossils linked to Robert Kidston (1852-1924). 2. Silurian graptolite fossils linked to Professor Henry Alleyne Nicholson (1844-1899). 3. Dura Den fossils linked to Reverend John Anderson (1796-1864). Published information Traquair, R.H. (1900). XXXII.—Report on Fossil Fishes collected by the Geological Survey of Scotland in the Silurian Rocks of the South of Scotland.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Abbots of Dunfermline
    LIST OF ABBOTS DUNFERMLINE ABBEY Ebenezer Henderson. Annals of Dunfermline. Glasgow, 1879. From Historical and Statistical Account Of Dunfermline By Rev. Peter Chalmers And Biographical Notices or Memoranda of the preceding Abbots. LIST OF ABBOTS DUNFERMLINE ABBEY Ebenezer Henderson. Annals of Dunfermline. Glasgow, 1879. From Historical and Statistical Account Of Dunfermline By Rev. Peter Chalmers Vol. I P.176- In Steven‟s History of the ancient Abbeys, Monasteries, &c. of England, vol. i. fol. 1722, there is a Life of St Benedict, and an account of that order, and its rules, from which it appears that there were connected with the order as members of it, not less than 48 popes from St Boniface IV to Gregory XII inclusive; 11 emperors, who resigned their dignity, and became of the order of St Benedict, from the year 725 to 1039; 9 empresses; 10 queens, one of whom was Maud, Queen of England, grandchild of Malcolm Canmore; 20 kings (besides 11 others, an emperors, who submitted to the rule); 8 princes, sons of do; 15 dukes of Venice, Italy &c.; 13 earls, besides many other persons of different ranks. There are inserted in the column also two bulls in favour of the order, one by Pope Gregory, and the other, its confirmation by Pope Zachary I. 2 The monastery of Dunfermline is generally thought to have been ony a Priory till the reign of David I, and to have been raised by him to the rank of an Abbey, on the occasion of his bringing thirteen monks from Canterbury; which, on the supposition of the previous occupants being Culdees, was intended to reconcile them to the new order of things.
    [Show full text]
  • Born Prince & Princesses
    DUNFERMLINE – BORN PRINCE & PRINCESSES 2 DUNFERMLINE – BORN PRINCE & PRINCESSES BY J. B. MACKIE, F.J.I., Author of “Life and Work of Duncan McLaren.” “Modern Journalism.” “Margaret Queen and Saint.” & Dunfermline; DUNFERMLINE Journal Printing Works. 3 RUINS OF THE ABBEY CHOIR, AULD KIRK, & DUNFERMLINE. CIRCA A.D. 1570. (From Old Sketches and Plans.) 4 PREFACE. ____ These Sketches were written for the Dunfermline Journal for the purpose of quickening local interest and pride in the history of the ancient city. They are now published in book form in the hope that they may prove not an unwelcome addition to the historical memorials cherished by lovers of Dunfermline at home and abroad, and be found helpful to the increasing number of visitors, attracted by the fame of the city, so greatly enhanced within recent years by the more than princely benefactors of one of its devoted sons. J. B. M. Dunfermline, November, 1910. 5 Contents. _______ Chapter 1. - The Children of the Tower. Page 6 II. Edgar the Peaceable. 11 III. Alexander the Fierce. 15 IV. David “the Sair Sanct.” 23 V. Queen Matilda. 29 VI. Prince William and the Empress 35 Matilda. VII. Mary of Boulogne and her Daughter. 40 VIII. James I. 45 IX Elizabeth of Bohemia, “Queen of Hearts.” 54 X Charles I. 61 6 DUNFERMLINE BORN PRINCES AND PRINCESSES . CHAPTER 1 THE BIRTHPLAE OF ROYALTY – MALCOLM AND MARGARET’S FAMILY. Dunfermline has frequently been spoken and written about as a burial place of Scottish Royalty. In the eleventh century the centre of ecclesiastical power was transferred from Iona to Dunfermline, after the Culdee leadership had been overpowered by the authority of the Roman Church, and King Malcolm and Queen Margaret had made the seat of their Court the leading centre of religious worship.
    [Show full text]
  • Some Passages in the Carmina of James Foullis of Edinburgh John B
    Studies in Scottish Literature Volume 14 | Issue 1 Article 15 1979 Some Passages in the Carmina of James Foullis of Edinburgh John B. Dillon Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/ssl Part of the English Language and Literature Commons Recommended Citation Dillon, John B. (1979) "Some Passages in the Carmina of James Foullis of Edinburgh," Studies in Scottish Literature: Vol. 14: Iss. 1. Available at: https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/ssl/vol14/iss1/15 This Article is brought to you by the Scottish Literature Collections at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Studies in Scottish Literature by an authorized editor of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. John B. Dillon Some Passages in the Carmina of James F oullis of Edinburgh Students of Scottish Literature owe a debt of gratitude to Professors J. IJsewijn and D. F. S. Thomson for providing them with an accessible and annotated edition of the Carmina of James Foullis of Edinburgh (aa.1485-1549).1 Although Foullis is not a great poet, his work (or, rather, what remains of it) is of interest not only for the light it sheds on contemporary personages, conditions and events but also because of its strong moral qualities and occasional forcefulness of expres­ sion. Moreover, as one of the editors has noted elsewhere, Foullis is the first Scottish humanist known to have brought out a printed volume of his Latin verse,2 and it is for this reason as well as for his being a forerunner of George Buchanan that he assumes importance in the eyes of a literary historian.
    [Show full text]
  • NHS Fife Healthy Lifestyle Event
    Registered Charity No. SC007215 AUGUST 2014 This year saw the 30th anniversary of Volunteers’ week. On Thursday 12th June, we celebrated all the wonderful work our volunteers do for Fife Shopmobility with an evening at The Society in Kirkcaldy. The volunteers were joined by staff and Board members. Vice-chair, Richard Ouston, presented scrolls in recognition of their hard work and to thank them for everything they do to help the service. NHS Fife Healthy Lifestyle Event Fife Shopmobility were pleased to be invited to this event at the Rothes Halls, Glenrothes, on Thursday 19th June. The patient information event was hosted by NHS Fife, aimed at promoting and maintaining a healthy lifestyle. The event brought together 18 organisations and provided a one-stop-shop for support and information, offering advice and hands on demonstrations for people living with a long term condition. National organisations including Chest, Heart and Stroke Scotland, Diabetes Scotland, Citizens Advice and the Scottish Health Council joined local services such as the Fife Carers Centre, Dementia Fife, Mood Cafe, and members of NHS Fife’s Smoking Cessation Program. One of the most innovative features was the practical demonstra- tions, where visitors took part in workshops. Amongst them was ‘Active Options,’ where specialists from Fife Sports and Leisure Trust delivered healthy living exercises designed especially for those who have heart disease, previously had a stroke or live with a respiratory condition. Our Contact Details: 0844 335 6414 Select Option 1 for Glenrothes, 2 for Kirkcaldy or 3 for Dunfermline If there is no-one available at the service you require, please try the other services who will be happy to help.
    [Show full text]
  • City of Dunfermline Area Committee
    City of Dunfermline Area Committee Due to Scottish Government guidance relating to Covid-19, this meeting will be held remotely. Tuesday, 2nd March, 2021 - 9.30 a.m. AGENDA Page Nos. 1. APOLOGIES FOR ABSENCE 2. DECLARATIONS OF INTEREST In terms of Section 5 of the Code of Conduct, members of the Committee are asked to declare any interest in particular items on the agenda and the nature of the interest(s) at this stage. 3. MINUTE – Minute of meeting of City of Dunfermline Area Committee of 1st 3 - 4 December, 2020. 4. AREA ROADS PROGRAMME 2021/22 – Report by the Head of Assets, 5 - 12 Transportation and Environment. 5. LOCAL COMMUNITY PLANNING BUDGET - PROJECT APPLICATIONS – 13 - 60 Report by the Head of Communities & Neighbourhoods. 6. LOCAL COMMUNITY PLANNING BUDGET - BUDGET REQUESTS – 61 - 63 Report by the Head of Communities & Neighbourhoods. 7. PROPERTY TRANSACTIONS – Report by the Head of Assets, 64 - 66 Transportation & Environment. 8. CITY OF DUNFERMLINE AREA COMMITTEE WORK PROGRAMME 67 Members are reminded that should they have queries on the detail of a report they should, where possible, contact the report authors in advance of the meeting to seek clarification. Morag Ferguson Head of Legal and Democratic Services Finance and Corporate Services Fife House North Street Glenrothes Fife, KY7 5LT 23rd February, 2021 If telephoning, please ask for: Emma Whyte, Committee Officer, Fife House Telephone: 03451 555555, ext. 442303; email: [email protected] Agendas and papers for all Committee meetings can be accessed on www.fife.gov.uk/committees 1 2 2020 CODAC 91 THE FIFE COUNCIL - CITY OF DUNFERMLINE AREA COMMITTEE – REMOTE MEETING 1st December, 2020 9.30 a.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Investigating Place in Scotland’S History
    The abbey and royal palace at Dunfermline hold a key INVESTIGATING place in Scotland’s history. DUNFERMLINE ABBEY Information for Teachers investigating historic sites DUNFERMLINE ABBEY 2 The abbey and royal palace at but monastic life was already in decline Dunfermline hold a key place in by the time of the Reformation in 1560. Scotland’s history. Royal burial Timeline In the early days of the Reformation, ground, 12th-century church, much of the abbey was sacked. By 1570, 1070 Malcolm III marries towering palace, holy shrine; this Margaret at Dunfermline however, work had begun to remodel varied and interesting site is an the abbey church as a new parish 1070s Margaret invites excellent source of evidence for a church; it was re-roofed and the ancient monks from Canterbury range of historical studies. to set up Benedictine church walls were shored up with priory Historical background massive flying buttresses. 1128 David I elevates After marrying Malcolm III in an earlier The abbey guesthouse had long been a priory to abbey; royal residence but in the 1590s major rebuilding church in 1070, Queen Margaret invited a group of Benedictine monks from rebuilding work began. Queen Anna, 1093 Margaret dies and is Canterbury to set up Scotland’s first wife of James VI was the driving force buried in abbey alongside behind this; her son, Charles I was born Malcolm Benedictine monastic community at Dunfermline. This priory was extended here. From 1603, with the union of the 1250 Margaret canonised and developed by her son, David I as crowns, however, the Scottish court as saint; new chapel built effectively moved to England and the for her relics a tribute to her and became an abbey after 1128.
    [Show full text]