The Palm Beach Thistle - Scottish American Society of Palm Beach
Transcription
The Palm Beach Thistle - Scottish American Society of Palm Beach
The Palm Beach Thistle Published by the Scottish American Society of Palm Beach County NOTE NEW Mailing Address & phone: 9679 159th Ct. N. Jupiter, FL 33478 561-743-9129 Editors Scott & Gail Ladd President’s Message Hello SAS members! Schedule of Events Check Website for more info http://www.saspbc.org We had a heart to heart discussion at our last Gatherings are held at Church of the Holy Guardian Angels meeting with the realization that, despite 2 1325 Cardinal Lane, Lantana, Fl. Palm Beach Post articles and a WPTV news clip, Meetings TBA our membership and meeting attendance has November 30 Kirkin dwindled. Consequently, the SAS board has *See information page 2* decided on a few changes. We will NOT have regular meetings every single month in the fall December 19 Christmas Party/Duffy’s and spring. Hence, there will be NO NOVEMBER Gift exchange/ 6 p.m. meeting, but instead we will be gathering for January 24 Burns Night the church Kirking on 11/30. We will have our NPB Country Club Christmas party at Duffys on Village Blvd. on 12/19 at 6 p.m., and our Burns Dinner on Jan 24. The schedule after that will be determined November December Birthdays Birthdays by the board and announced accordingly. Please know this is not necessarily a permanent 28 Lillian Rossi 26 Gail Burkett change but is the result of the lack of 29 Scott Ladd participation. Sincerely, Gail Burkett, President (Directions to Duffy’s – I 95 to Palm Beach Lakes Blvd W, a couple of lights turn right on Village. In Publix plaza at the first light.) November Anniversaries None known December Anniversaries None known Please let us know if we inadvertently miss your special day! The Ladies: Ilia, Gail B., Betty, Lorna, Lynn, and Gail L. The Gents: Larry, Bob, Scott and Walter ***Come to the Kirkin!*** Church of the Holy Guardian Angels 1325 Cardinal Lane, Lantana The Rev. David Kennedy 10 a.m. Celebrate your Heritage Wear your Scottish Attire Brunch to follow The Background Kirk is Scottish Gaelic for church, and a kirking is a ‘churching’ or a ‘blessing.’ Although plaids are worn throughout the world, only Scots wear the tartan. Scots look on the tartan as a multicolored bit of wool. To the Scots, a tartan is steeped in history, saturated with the blood of martyrs, and interwoven with sentiment and tradition. A clan is a family, and Scots wear the tartan of their clans or families with pride and a sense of history. Each Scottish tartan is distinctive, registered in Scotland and unchangeable. Scottish literature referred to the tartan as early as the 1200s. The English King prohibited the wearing of the tartans, the kilt, and the playing of the great highland pipes in 1746. This prohibition was repealed in 1782. The Kirking of the Tartans reflects a tradition of the Church of Scotland, the mother church of the Presbyterian Church. The actual Kirkin of the Tartans was instituted by Dr. Peter Marshall in April of 1941 as a worship service to remember and honor those of Scottish blood that had given so much in the centuries past. We celebrate our heritage in this “Blessing of the Tartans.”