Summer 2007 v17-Jul-07
Transcription
Summer 2007 v17-Jul-07
c/o Don MacAskill, Treasurer 8 Huckleberry Lane Hampton, NH 03842-1516 USA CLANN NA ASKETILL Descendants of Asketil The MacAskill Sept Society Adherents to the Chiefs of MacLeod of Harris and Great Swordsmen in Defense of that Clan Summer 2007 Volume IV, Number 2 © 2007 MacAskill Sept Society The MacAskill Sept Society Adherents to the Chiefs of MacLeod of Harris and Great Swordsmen in Defense of that Clan INSIDE Page Crossing Paths by Lloyd MacAskill .................3 How to buy and how to wear the MacAskill Sept tartan By Olive McCaskill Bell ...........5 Performing Artists at the Sept MacAskill Gathering ....................9 The 2007 MacAskill Sept Society Gathering....... center insert The Book Nook, featuring "The Art of Scottish-American Cooking", by Kay Shaw Nelson By Olive McCaskill Bell ......... 11 About the author: Kay Shaw Nelson By Midwest Book Review ...... 12 Proposed slate of new officers for Sept MacAskill Society 2007-08.................................. 13 Corrections, praise, gripes, and humor ................................... 14 MacAskill Sept Society membership application or renewal form ...... inside back cover Page 16 The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 Join us at beautiful Ashworth by the Sea In Hampton, NH (USA) For the 2007 Gathering MacAskill Sept Society Friday, Saturday, Sunday September 14-15-16 Join us for live music, good food, workshops, afternoon excursions, and great company in a beautiful seaside venue. (More on page 9 and in center insert.) The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 Page 1 The MacAskill Sept Society The MacAskill Sept Society An ancient sept of MacLeod of Harris 8 Huckleberry Lane Hampton, NH 03842 USA MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION OR RENEWAL FORM Please print or type Officers and contacts President Olive McCaskill Bell 3309 El Malecon Road Albuquerque, NM 87120-2725 USA o.mcc.b@bellcasa.com Vice-President, USA Vice-President, Canada Treasurer Betty MacAskill Shea Post Office Box 1975 Exeter, NH 03833 USA +1 (603) 772-2569 bettyshea@webtv.net Jamie Wilson Post Office Box 12 Englishtown, NS B0C 1H0 Canada +1 (902) 929-2128 Donald W. MacAskill 8 Huckleberry Lane Hampton, NH 03842 USA +1 (603) 926-4608 maccdn2002@yahoo.com Contributions to this newsletter, letters, and suggestions for future articles are welcome and should be sent to: Dorna Caskie 268 Washington Street Groveland, MA 01834 USA +1 (978) 373-7826 dcaskie@greennet.net COPY DEADLINE FOR FALL ISSUE: OCTOBER 1, 2007 Page 2 The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 Member name: Address: Town or city: State or Province: Country: Postal code: Phone: E-mail: Signature: Date Annual dues are $25.00 (in US Funds) and are paid annually on July 1, 2007. Your dues cover the costs of this newsletter and preparation for our Gatherings. Please send your membership form and a check or money order to: The MacAskill Sept Society c/o Don MacAskill 8 Huckleberry Lane Hampton NH 03842-1516 OPTIONAL: What is your connection with the name “MacAskill” (or McCaskill, etc.)? Should we contact you for the names of any others who might be interested in joining the MacAskill Sept Society? YES NO The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 Page 15 Corrections, praise, gripes, and humor McDonalds Corners To Lloyd MacAskill: Greetings and blessings. I have been to McDonalds Corners [Ontario] and seen the sights that you sent pictures of. I was born in Camden S. C. since my dad was working for DuPont there in 1950. When I was two DuPont moved Dad to Waynesboro where we lived until DuPont moved him to Northern Ireland in 1966. Also my Grandfather Kenneth McCaskill was from South Carolina and was pastoring a church there as had reached retirement age and was asked to retire. He heard that in Canada that you could keep preaching so he moved to family to McDonalds Corners and keep going. Now my son Joseph Brand McCaskill is going to Paris Island, S. C. in exactly one month to train to be a Marine. We seem to have S. C. ties. Also all 10 sons of Finley McCaskill from the Skye in Scotland moved to South Caroline 5 or more generations ago. Bill McCaskill, June 9, 2007 Chief Hugh’s residence In the article “The Passing of a Great Chief” (MasAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 1), it was incorrectly reported that Chief Hugh of MacLeod presently resides in France. Chief Hugh divides his time between Dunvegan and London, where he lives with his wife Frederique and son Vincent. A brief biography of Chief Hugh can be found at http://www.clanmacleod.org/clan-news/chiefhugh-macleod.php. Dorna Caskie, 24 June 2007 Page 14 The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 Crossing paths by Lloyd MacAskill The MacAskill Sept Society was founded upon the belief that there must be some common ancestry between the McCaskills whose ancestors settled in the Carolinas in the 18th century and the MacAskills who arrived later in Canada. Recent DNA evidence indicates that this is indeed the case. There are branches on either side that appear to be descended from a common male ancestor who lived 500 or so years ago. All branches are believed to be descended from the Norse ancestor who was beheaded in Dublin in 1171 A.D. The dating method is not precise but still useful for sorting out different degrees of relatedness. A few more volunteers for DNA analysis might shed additional light upon the (c) Perry-Castañeda Library Map Collection subject. To do the search http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps on your family name, visit www.FamilyTreeDNA. Ask anyone who has ordered the tests already for more information - another reason to attend the Gathering in September ! The subject is further complicated by migrations between Skye, which the clan claims as its ancestral homeland, and Harris, from which most of the Canadian families emigrated. Like their Norse ancestors, some of the early MacAskills were skilled sailors and crossed the Little Minch between Skye and The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 Page 3 Harris frequently. Marriages have occurred between these different branches. Proposed slate of new officers for Sept MacAskill Society 2007-08 Similar movements have taken place on the American side. Olive McCaskill Bell, of Carolinian heritage, has established a summer home in Cape Breton. Your writer, whose family is from nearby in Cape Breton, now lives in North Carolina. At the Annual Business Meeting, Society members will be asked to vote on the proposed slate of officers for the upcoming year. Everyone whose dues have been paid as of July 2007 may vote. If you are NOT attending the ABM, you may use this page of the newsletter as a mail ballot. Please fill in and mail your ballot to Don MacAskill (see inside front cover) with a postmark no later than September 1, 2007. If you wish to have a person nominated for an office from the floor of the ABM, please contact Anne Libis at aclibis@bcpl.net or the address below. Further examples could be cited from among those listed in Dixie and Andy McCaskill's 1985 history of our family. Kenneth McCaskill was a Presbyterian minister whose family was from South Carolina but he spent his career in central Virginia and then served a congregation in McDonalds Corners, Ontario from 1928 until 1948. His son William Brand McCaskill, was educated as a chemical engineer at Queens University in Kingston, Ontario, returned briefly to South Carolina but also to central Virginia in the United States, where he was employed by DuPont and still owns the Quarters Farm west of Charlottesville. His son Bill lives in a newer house on the same farm. Your writer's wife, Diane, lived in the 1960s with her family at Bells Corners, Ontario, not far from the McDonalds Corners home of the Brand McCaskills. Our first date was in Waynesboro, VA, where Brand McCaskill had worked, and we spent that afternoon across the Blue Ridge at Wavertree Hall, just down the road from the McCaskills' Quarters Farm. Family movements like this can become confusing if you don't pay attention to who came from where and at what time in history. Modern transport makes it easier for distantly related clan members to cross paths like this. We hope that our paths might be crossing yours again at the New Hampshire gathering in September! Page 4 The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 Candidate for President Vote for: Candidate for Vice President, Canada Vote for: Candidate for Vice President, USA Vote for: Candidate for Treasurer Vote for: Candidate for Secretary Vote for: Lloyd MacAskill 1149 Veranda Court Leland, NC 28451-7790 Lloyd MacAskill USA [other – please write in name] Alan B. Blair 506 Brand Street Vancouver, BC V7N 1G1 CANADA Alan B. Blair [other – please write in name] Elizabeth MacAskill Shea P. O. Box 1975 Exeter, NH 03833 USA Elizabeth MacAskill Shea [other – please write in name] Donald W. MacAskill 8 Huckleberry Lane Hampton, NH 03842-1516 USA Donald W. MacAskill [other – please write in name] Anne Libis 8708 Windsor Mill Road Windsor Mill, MD 21244-1118 USA Anne Libis [other – please write in name] Voting member (Sign, date and print name.) The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 Page 13 About the author: Kay Shaw Nelson How to buy and how to wear the MacAskill Sept tartan By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) Reprinted from Amazon.com By Olive McCaskill Bell As a Scottish-American and daughter of Scottish-Canadian parents, Kay Shaw Nelson is proud of her Scottish ancestors -- the Morrisons, MacLeans, MacAskills, and Shaws -from the Isles of Lewis and Harris. Inspired by several visits to her homeland, she wrote A Bonnie Scottish Cookbook and The ScottishIrish Pub and Hearth Cookbook prior to The Art of Scottish-American Cooking. Upon her graduation from Syracuse University in 1948 (B.A. in Russian studies and journalism), she was employed as a reporter for New Hampshire newspapers (Claremont Daily Eagle and Manchester Union Leader) before taking a job as an intelligence officer for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in Washington, D.C. In 1951, Kay began an extended period of travel and residence abroad with her husband, then also an intelligence officer with the CIA. Over the years they traveled extensively in the Middle East, Europe, the Far East, North Africa, North and South America, and the Caribbean islands. During this time she actively pursued an interest in gastronomy, including cooking techniques and the lore and history of foods and national specialties. In 1997, she wrote the introduction "How to Go from Spies to Pies: Operation Gastronomy" for the best-selling cookbook Spies, Black Ties, & Mango Pies: Stories and Recipes from CIA Families All Over the World. Kay Shaw Nelson is a member of the National Press Club, American News Women's Club, Les Dames d'Escoffier, Society of Women Geographers, Culinary Historians of Washington, the Living Legacy of Scotland, the Clan Shaw Society, and the MacAskill Sept Society. Page 12 The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 In our Winter 2006 issue, Olive McCaskill Bell gave us a bit of background on the wearing of tartan. Now, with the 2007 Gathering coming up, here is some more practical advice in case you’d like to wear the Sept MacAskill tartan, truly one of the most handsome tartans that can be worn by MacAskills. Creative tartan options using one of our more notorious tartans, known formally as the Dress MacLeod or MacLeod of Lewis (and affectionately as the “Loud MacLeod”), are shown right. Images courtesy “Dressed to Kilt”, http://www.dressedtokilt.com. Sept MacAskill tartan availability When we were first ordering our MacAskill sept tartan (which appears at the top of each page in this newsletter), we wanted the best possible price for cloth of high quality, which meant ordering a full 60 meter bolt. We wondered if the demand would justify it, or if someone (Olive!) would be left with half or more of it. Well, we are now on our third bolt although Olive still fears leftovers! Three Scottish weavers have brought their looms to Vancouver and are weaving authentic tartan to special order. By taking delivery in Canada, we avoided the 36% (!!) duty U. S. Customs charges and it is now available at the best possible price. It is pure new wool, worsted Merino yarn, 60 inches wide, and 12 ounce in weight. It can be sent it to you for $49.50 USD per yard, postage included. We also have sashes to sell separately for $37.00 USD each, postage included. To make a purchase, contact Olive using the information on the inside cover of this newsletter. The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 Page 5 What to do with your tartan The Book Nook If this is your first kilt, consult a little book by the late J.C. "Scotty" Thompson, So You're Going to Wear the Kilt, a lively volume that deals with contemporary Highland attire in very practical terms. by Olive MacAskill Bell A man's kilt, up to about 45" girth, takes about four yards to make a standard, pleated-to-sett kilt. The sett of our MacAskill tartan is an even, reversing pattern and the fabric has no right or wrong side. Kilts have no hem. The selvedge edge of the fabric forms the bottom edge of the kilt. Half the kilt is cut from each side of the length of tartan. Since the measurement from the natural waist to the top of your knee cap is typically less than 30 inches, there may be a strip Typical kilt measurements include the man’s waist, hip, and in the center which makes a fine length -- to the top of the knee! lady's shoulder sash. Remember that the gentleman’s kilt must fall to the TOP of the knee cap. Scots poke fun at kilted American men who insist the kilt come to the bottom of the knee cap, then modestly pull their hose up (instead of cuffing them a couple of inches lower than the knee) so that only occasional tantalizing glimpses of their bonnie knees are available. A lady's kilted skirt typically takes two yards, for either street length or long. One MacAskill lady with a lovely figure has made a gorgeous tailored suit with a straight skirt, which required 2 1/2 yards. For a skirt in a style other than kilted, consult yardage table on pattern envelope. Don't forget to add a bit for matching the plaid on the seams. (A larger person might also require a bit more fabric. Consult with your local kiltmaker for further advice.) Finding a kiltmaker Finding a kiltmaker in North America can be a bit of a challenge. The tailoring of a kilt is of the essence, and the pleats should be hand-sewn, not done by machine! One foolPage 6 The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 The Art of Scottish-American Cooking By Kay Shaw Nelson Flash! Stop the presses! It is finally here, our own Kay Shaw Nelson's newest cookery volume, The Art of Scottish American Cooking! Intrigued with the ways in which immigrants to North America from Scotland adapted to the changes in availability of food stuffs in their new homes, and how they met the challenges, Kay has gathered recipes from practically everyone of Scottish descent she met in Canada and the States. The result is a most fascinating collection of recipes, many of which I plan to try (especially vegetarian haggis!). I had never known until I went to Scotland, and was served shortbread, that it was the shor'n'bread I'd loved as much as any Mammy's lil baby did, as a child in the deep south. Any Scot furth o'Scotland is bound to love this little volume, Kay's twentieth cookbook. The book is priced at $21.00 USD and may be ordered from The Pelican Publishing Company, 1000 Burmater St, Gretna, Louisiana, 70053-2246. Toll free 1 (800) 843-1724 or 1 (888) 5-PELICAN. Meet the author! Kay Shaw Nelson will be on hand at the MacAskill Sept gathering in Hampton, New Hampshire, to both discuss the glories of ScottishAmerican cooking as well as sign copies of her book. Copies of her book will be also on sale. The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 Page 11 him a sought after accompanist. His spontaneous light humor adds to the enjoyment of their live performances. proof way to find a kiltmaker is to ask the members of your favorite pipe band where they got their kilts made. Not only do these two perform as a duo but they are very involved in keeping traditional music alive, teaching workshops and playing at sessions throughout the area. This sincere combination of love of music, talent and good humor has recently culminated in their first, self-titled CD. An excellent kilt maker in Albuquerque (who did not solicit this recommendation) is Kathy Lare. She is trained and certified by a kiltmaking school in Scotland, and charges $265.00 USD for a man’s hand-sewn kilt (when you provide the material). Consider this a ball-park figure on what the cost of making the kilt should be. More information about Stanley and Grimm can be found at http://www.stanleyandgrimm.com. Dancers from the New Hampshire School of Scottish Arts Stanley and Grimm will have a well-deserved break and we will have the additional treat of Highland dancing, performed by students from the New Hampshire School of Scottish Arts. NHSSA was organized in September 1998 and provides a regional focal point for instruction and performance. Its purpose is to foster and expand the spirit of Scottish Performing and Cultural arts in New Hampshire. Students at the School are afforded the opportunities: • to take lessons to sequentially improve their skills, • to explore their Scottish heritage, • to participate in organized performances and competitions, • and to train to become future instructors in the Scottish Arts. Other creative ideas There are many other uses for tartan. One Clan MacLeod couple has decorated each room in their home in a different MacLeod tartan. Blue McCaskill, in North Carolina, upholstered his favorite heirloom chair in the MacAskill tartan. (This was pictured in the Fall 2006 newsletter). Upholstering a chair is easier than it may seem at first. First, you need to remove the old fabric covering from the furniture, marking each piece in the order removed. Before you order the fabric, lay the pieces out on newspaper as if on 60" fabric, to determine the amount you needed. Allow half a yard or so for matching and centering sett. After you purchase your tartan, cut it using the old fabric pieces as a pattern. Then sew and reassemble the covering, replacing trim and hardware where needed. Voila! Highland Dancers from NHSSA at Regional competition in 2006 More information about the New Hampshire School of Scottish Arts can be found at http://www.nhssa.org. Piper (to be announced) Piper? Well, of course there will be a piper!!! Page 10 Kathy Lare's telephone is: 1-505-821-6215, her e-mail address is kathyskilts@earthlink.net, and her website is http://www.kathyskilts.com. Let your newsletter editor know of other kiltmakers that you would recommend in North America. The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 Be creative! Tartan is not just for kilts and sashes, or for winter scarves. Ladies especially can use the tartan as a trim or accent item on a garment of coordinating solid color. A bit of tartan ribbon under your favorite Scottish brooch can brighten up any outfit. We all look forward to meeting you, nattily turned out, at the MacAskill Gathering in New Hampshire this fall! The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 Page 7 Performing Artists at the Sept MacAskill Gathering The MacAskill Sept Society By Terry MacAskill and Claudia Libis A REMINDER – DUES ARE DUE! MEMBERSHIP FEES ARE DUE BY JULY 1, 2007 HELP THE SOCIETY WITH THE COSTS OF NEWSLETTERS AND PLANNING OUR YEARLY GATHERINGS (See Membership Application at the back of this newsletter) PLEASE SEND YOUR $25.00 (in US FUNDS) CHECK OR MONEY ORDER TO: Saturday evening with Stanley and Grimm The MacAskill Sept Society c/o Don MacAskill, Treasurer 8 Huckleberry Lane Hampton NH 03842-1516 USA If you know others who would be interested in receiving this newsletter and joining the society, please e-mail me and I will gladly contact them about membership. Thank you Don MacAskill, Treasurer Maccdn2002@yahoo.com (See Membership Application at the back of this newsletter The MacAskill Sept Society PROPOSED MACASKILL SEPT SOCIETY WEBSITE At the Annual Business Meeting of the MacAskill Sept Society in September, we will discuss setting up a small website to facilitate contact among our members and to promote MacAskill news world-wide. If you are interested in volunteering to be our webmaster (or webmistress!) please contact Dorna Caskie (see inside front cover for her address). You do not need to be present at the Annual Business Meeting in order to volunteer. Page 8 We will be fortunate to have some very talented local artists with us at the September Sept MacAskill Gathering. Tentatively at the Friday evening reception, we will have a live harpist. (If not, we will be treated to a sampling of Scottish music from Terry MacAskill’s collection of over 400 recordings!) On Saturday night, we will have a traditional-style ceilidh after dinner. You are invited to watch, to dance, and perhaps contribute your own performance to the gala event! Our own Don MacLeod will be the master of ceremonies. The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 “Stanley and Grimm” is the unlikely name for a wonderful duo that will anchor the Saturday evening ceilidh. Fiddler Nikki Engstrom and guitarist and vocalist Sean Brennan celebrate the Irish tradition through jigs, reels, and songs with lively fiddle, guitar, voice and good humor. The two came together in February 2006 and perform an exciting upbeat mix of traditional Celtic tunes and songs. Nikki Engstrom has delighted audiences for over two decades with her spirited, sometimes whimsical jigs, reels, and airs. Growing up in Western Massachusetts, Nikki was surrounded by her musical family. She and her siblings traveled throughout New England and Canada, where her fiddling earned her many awards -- most recently the 2006 "Trick and Fancy" Championship at the New England Fiddle Contest. Sean Brennan is a singer/songwriter who has been singing ballads and backing traditional players on guitar in sessions on Cape Cod for over 10 years. His warm mellow vocals coupled with his love for music make The MacAskill Sept Society Newsletter Volume IV, Number 2 Page 9