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People

Right at the heart of things

March 5, 2022 by David Pike Leave a Comment

The oldest part of town is aptly home to the flagship Heart of Hawick development.

It comprises the Heritage Hub, repository of ancient documents and records from the Borders, and a superb visitor centre that incorporates a bistro cafe, tourist information desk, a cinema and theatre.

It is also a popular choice for travelling exhibitions, as is the square outside for concerts, street theatre and local gatherings.

Formerly Elliott’s textile mill, the cafe features a glass floor through which visitors can view the original water wheel that once powered the machinery.

In these environmentally conscious times the wheel has been the subject of a study to see if it could be brought back to life provide power for the building.

Beautifully restored, many of the original mill features have been designed into the new facilities – but one aspect of its industrial past was not planned for.

Several people have reported seeing and sensing something paranormal on the top floor of the old mill – a presence confirmed by a local psychic and backed up by research that found that a local girl had died in an industrial accident there in the 1800’s.

At the neighbouring Heritage Hub, delving into the past attracts enquiries and visitors from all over the world. The electronic highway is particularly hot these days as more and more people piece together their family tree.

Travelling back in time has become something of a global obsession in recent years.

We are referring, of course, to the tens of thousands of people who have become descendant detectives hot on the trail for clues to piece together a family tree.

It’s a journey made easier of late thanks to the internet which has flung open doors to vast stores of information. And the electronic highway is particularly hot these days at the Heritage Hub in Hawick, a centre that acts as the guardian for Borders’ archives on just about everything you would want to know about the region’s past.

It holds all census records from 1841 (the first for which records survive) to 1901 for the four Border counties and, going further back, old parish records of christenings, marriages and burials.

The building is part of the admirable Heart of Hawick site, an award winning development built with the help of Heritage Lottery and European funding, and, appropriately, based in the oldest part of the town.

The Hub’s archive paints a fascinating and historical picture of life as it was in the Borders. Records of businesses and merchants, legal records, maps, school records, poor laws and police records sit alongside more ancient collections, much of which is stored in temperature controlled chambers.

Conservative estimates say that for every Scot resident in Scotland there are five more living abroad, an indication of the mass emigration that took place over the past 200 years or so.

Many booked a one-way passage to the brave new world that was the USA; young men like John ‘Black Jack’ Elliot, the son of William and Barbara (nee Scott) Elliot. Among the possessions he packed and took with him was a photograph album containing images of his family and cherished memories of the Border country he would never see again.

Some time ago the album came home.

It was in the possession of John’s great grandson, Bob Harris, a retired English and drama teacher now living in Rochester, New York State who was at the first stage of researching his family’s history.

He was directed to the Heritage Hub, that, wouldn’t you just know it, now occupies the site where Aitken’s photographic studio once stood. “When I inherited the photographic album I wanted to know more about the family and my Scottish roots and the Hub was a terrific source of help,” said Bob.

Filed Under: Border Towns, Hawick, People Tagged With: Family history research, Hawick, Scottish Borders

Hawick’s sons of speed

March 5, 2022 by David Pike Leave a Comment

Bikers from all over the UK make a beeline for Hawick’s Wilton Park museum, to pay homage to two of the town’s sporting superstars.

A decision by Scottish Borders Council to bring together permanent exhibitions, paying tribute to motorcyclists Jimmie Guthrie and Steve Hislop, proved to be inspired.

The displays chart success at the highest levels for Guthrie and Hislop who were among the greatest motorcyclist riders of their generations and whose stories both ended in tragedy.

Jimmie Guthrie died aged 40, riding his beloved Norton motorcycle and, as usual, leading the field and thrilling a crowd of 250,000 people packed into the Sachsenring circuit in Germany.

The year was 1937 and Jimmy, who had sharpened his talent for riding motorcycles in the most dangerous circumstances, as a despatch rider on the battlefields of France during the First World War, was at the pinnacle of a glittering career.

Over the previous 10 years he had raced and beaten the best collecting 32 major titles along the way.

The Hawick flying machine won grand prix year after year in Europe and a clutch of Isle of Man TT titles. Along the way he broke six world speed records between 1934 and 1936.

He was adored by motorcycling fans, even in a Germany gripped by Nazism. The inscription on his 1936 European Grand Prix trophy carries an endorsement from the highest level – the leader and Chancellor of the German Third Reich, Adolph Hitler.

At home Jimmie ran a garage business in Hawick High Street with his brother Archie. He is said to have regularly rode to Keswick and back before starting work – the distance being almost exactly that of the Isle of Man TT course.

At the Sachsenring he was on the final lap when he came off his bike on the notorious Noetzhold corner, suffered terrible injuries and died soon afterwards. The Germans laid on a special train and a military escort as Jimmie’s body made the solemn journey home to Hawick where his funeral attracted huge crowds.

Steve ‘Hizzy’ Hislop (above left) was another “quiet lad” who let his skills on the track do the talking. He got his big break when Denholm garage owner Jim Oliver got him a ride with Honda and he didn’t disappoint.

Best remembered as a double British Superbike champion, winning the title in 1995 and 2002, Steve also recorded 11 wins at the Isle of Man TT races between 1987 and 1994.

He was as good as they come on his day when everything was running right. In 2002 he rode a faultless season and when qualifying for a championship round at Donnington Park he broke Valentino Rossi’s Grand Prix lap record – on a bike 25% less powerful.

Steve died at the age 41, when the helicopter he was piloting crashed in murky weather conditions over Teviotdale in 2003.

On show at Wilton Park are the bikes they rode, trophies and the stories of the skills and courage that took both men to the top in their sport.

Both are commemorated, too, with statues in the park next to the museum and – pandemics permitting – popular memorial annual rallies.

Admission to Hawick Museum is free. For information about opening times
please ring 01450 373457.

Filed Under: Border Towns, Hawick, People

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