Author Topic: Some Scottish Trivia  (Read 34819 times)

Michael Thompson

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Re: Some Scottish Trivia
« Reply #15 on: April 14, 2009, 09:48:14 PM »
Me great-grandfather, James George Penny, of Monmouthshire Wales, used to hunker doon, even into his eighties. You'd stop by the kitchen for a chat and there he'd be on his haunches, limber as any twenty-year-old. Few people could squat that way today, much less stay there for such a time as our family chats would last.

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Barbara

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Re: Some Scottish Trivia
« Reply #16 on: April 16, 2009, 06:20:30 PM »
Stu, I'm just "gob smacked" by all your info.   ;D

Barbara
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Stirling Thompson

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Re: Some Scottish Trivia
« Reply #17 on: May 05, 2009, 11:00:54 AM »
various tidbits...

Geography    
- Berwick on Tweed, an English town, changed ownership between Scotland and England more than a dozen times since the 12th Century.

- The border between Scotland and England has been defended furiously for many Centuries, yet it is only 110 miles (180 kilometers) long.

- Scotland is approx 275 miles (440km) long. 25 miles (40km) wide at it's narrowest between the River Clyde and River Forth. 155 miles (250km) wide between it's furthest points.

- Scotland land mass is 30,028 sq miles which equates to 31% of United Kingdom but population is less than 9% of UK total.

- Scottish territorial coastline adds up to 6189 miles in length.

- Highest mountain in Scotland, also UK record. Ben Nevis at 4406 feet.

- Scottish coastal waters contain over 800 islands, only 132 of them known to be inhabited.

- Longest river, Tay at 120.6 miles.

- Biggest Loch. Loch Lomond at 27.4 square miles (71 sq km)

- Deepest Loch. Loch Morar at 1077 feet (328 metres).

- Most famous Loch. Loch Ness home of the legendary Loch Ness Monster.

- Shetland and Orkney Islands were once owned by Norway.

Trivia    
- English football team Berwick Rangers actually plays in the Scottish League. The only English team to do so.

- The word Clan (Gaelic clann) means offspring, children, decendants.

- The Forth Rail Bridge took 8 years to build. Contains 55,000 tons of steel, 650,000 cubic feet of granite, 8 million rivets, 150 acres of paint. Stands 361 feet, or about the height of a Saturn V rocket that took man to the Moon. During warm weather it expands about 18 inches at both ends, a total of 3 feet. At peak of construction over 4500 folk were employed.

- Guy Fawkes tried unsuccessfully to blow up the Houses of Parliament with gunpowder. Every year on 5th November the Scots along with the rest of the UK celebrate the "gunpowder plot" with fireworks.

- Heather grows in abundance in central and eastern Highlands, due to it's particularly acidic qualities which Heather thrives upon.

- Scottish banknotes. Average daily circulation £2.2 billion. Although all major Scottish banks print their own money, they have no legal authority to produce coins. English Royal Mint retains exclusive rights.

- Scottish banknotes amazingly enough, are not legal tender. Shopkeepers in Wales and England are not legally bound to accept them. Thankfully this is merely a legislative technicality.

- The word Whisky comes from a Gaelic translation of "water of life".

- Whisky sales in Scotland peaked in 1978 at 70 million gallons (300 million litres).

- First legally licenced distillery, Glenlivet 1823.

- Taxes average 72% per bottle of whisky sold in Scotland.

- The Sunday Mail and Sunday Post newspapers individually, are read by an equivalent of 25% of the population of Scotland.

- Scotland hosts over 300 Castles, or one per every 100 square miles.

Weather    
- Sunniest month. 329 hours at Tiree, Argyll in May 1946 and May 1975.

- Dullest month. 36 minutes at Cape Wrath, Highlands, January 1983.

- Wettest day. 9.52 inches of rain (238 mm) at Sloy Main Adit, Loch Lomond, 17 January 1974.

- Highest low level wind gust. 142mph (123 knots) at Fraserburgh Aberdeenshire, 13 February 1989.

- Warmest day. 32.9 °C ( 91.2°F) at Greycrook Lothian & Borders, 9 August 2003.

- Coldest day. -27.2 °C (-17°F) Braemar Aberdeenshire, 11 February 1895 and 10 January 1982. -27°C (-17°F) Altnaharra, Highlands 30 December 1995.

- Scotland gets enough rain in one year to completely fill Loch Lomond.

- Highest high level wind gust. 173 mph (150 knots) at Cairngorm Automatic Weather Station, altitude of 4085 feet (1245m), 20 March 1986.

- Edinburgh receives half to one third less rain than Glasgow per annum.
   

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Stu

Stirling Thompson

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Re: Some Scottish Trivia
« Reply #18 on: June 01, 2009, 05:45:54 AM »
Trivia

Scottish people are called Scots. Things from Scotland are called Scottish, not Scotch, which refers solely to the drink.

James Lind, born Edinburgh, Scotland, October 4, 1716. Established the curative effect of lemon juice on scurvy.

Duncan I was the King of Scotland until he was slain by his cousin, Macbeth, on August 15, 1057. This slaying was the basis for the famous Shakespeare play, "Macbeth."

John Hunter, born East Kilbride, Scotland, February 13, 1728. Wrote The Natural History of the Human Teeth and laid the foundations for dental anatomy and pathology.

The Ghost of Mary Queen of Scots haunts the Talbot Hotel. Her Ghostly figure has been seen walking down the beautiful oak staircase, which was brought from the ruins at Fotheringhay, where she was executed.

Edward I (1272-1307)--think "Long Shanks" in Brave Heart--was so wrapped up in his desire to subdue Scotland that on his death bed he extracted a promise from his son: When Scotland was attacked, his body was to go with the army. After Edward died his body was preserved in oiled linen. The promise was kept for the next two hundred years, his large tomb in Westminister Abbey being opened again and again.

Scotch Tape' is a result of the 3M company's decision to put adhesive only on the edges of its tape. The tape did not work properly and among the returns was the complaint that the company should take back its "Scotch Tape". A reference to the supposed stinginess of Scots people.

The Scots believed in "Samhanach", a goblin who came out only on Samhain and stole children.

Margaret the wife of Malcolm III (King of Scotland) died on November 16, 1093 . She was later declared a saint. To this day in Scotland, the grace cup is called St. Margaret's blessing.

The power of Edgar "the Peaceful" was such that as a sign of his power, Edward was rowed down the River Dee with the oars manned by 8 Kings of tributary kingdoms.

There are three Scottish place names which contain only two letters-Oa, Ae, and Bu.

The Lincoln Monument in Edinburgh's Old Carlton Cemetery was the first statue of an American president to be constructed outside the US.

Carrying a bagpipe was considered to be as much a crime as carrying arms during the Jacobite rebellion, it was classified an "instrument of war"

Loch Lomond is Britain's' largest fresh water lake, 23 miles long and one and a half to five miles wide. There are 24 islands on it.

In 1969 the U.S. astronaut Alan Bean, an American Scot carried a square metre of the MacBeath (MacBean) tartan with him on his historic Apollo XII space mission to the moon.

The Guinness Book of Records shows that the tallest Scotsman and the tallest "true" giant was Angus Macaskill. Born on the island of Berneray off the island of Harris in 1825, Macaskill was 7ft 9in (2.36m) tall. He was also strong, reputedly able to lift a hundredweight (50kg) with two fingers and hold it at arms length for ten minutes. He died on Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, in 1863. A cairn on Berneray commemorates him.

Before the 19th century tartans were not used in the identification of clans in Scotland. The plant badge that the men wore would tell the Scotsman's clan loyalties.

Scotland is the only country in Europe that the Romans could not conquer.

The Scots were the tallest race in Europe, according to the 1909 Census. But the carnage of WW1 changed that. By the 1930s, the average height of men in Scotland had been reduced by 9 inches.

The blue paint that Pictish, and later the Scottish warriors wore in battle was a hallocinogen. It was was the mold from rye.

The first kilts were worn by the Irish not the Scottish. However, many of the Irish moved to Scotland (Alba) and they brought their clothing with them.

Scotland is the only country in the world. that Coca cola is not the best selling soft drink. Irn Bru made by the Barr Company i s the best selling soft drink.

Sheep theft is still legally a hangable offence in Scotland.

There are more pipe bands in America than in Scotland.

The word "whisky" or "whiskey" is derived from the Gaelic uisge breatha meaning "water of life."

The original name of Scotland was Caledonia.
   

Semper Fidelis! Semper Familia!
Stu

Donna

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Re: Some Scottish Trivia
« Reply #19 on: June 04, 2009, 12:53:24 AM »
Thank you, Stu   :D
I really enjoy your Scottish Trivia

Donna
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Stirling Thompson

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Re: Some Scottish Trivia
« Reply #20 on: June 16, 2009, 06:59:42 AM »
HIGHLAND DANCING

 

Women's Lib came a lot earlier to Scotland than most of us realise, while the fair sex in England were still doing their embroidery and meekly honouring and obeying, a major bastion in Scotland was crumbling.

It was late in the last century when a young woman called Jenny Douglas struck the first decisive blow for sexual equality and competed in a Highland Dancing Competition.

When organised Highland Games were instituted with caber-tossing, hammer throwing, and piping the dancing contests too, were male events.

No-one had ever considered that girls could dance or wish to compete, but Jenny entered and was accepted on the principle that what was not forbidden must be permitted.

By 1900 that first girlish drop had become a substantial trickle and then a flood so that today the position is reversed and the girls outnumber the boys by roughly 100 to 1. August and September are the traditional months for many of the big games and it can be seen that those taking part in the dancing are nearly all girls, the boys sticking out like a sore thumb with a tammy on top.

Highland Dancing is entirely different from Scottish Country Dancing. Country Dancing is, by its nature, a group dance form in which sets of 2,3,4 or 5 couples perform the steps and figures together. Highland Dancing, on the other hand, is essentially solo dancing, no partners being involved. Two Country Dances are however classified as Highland Dances for the purpose of competition - The Reel of Tulloch and The Argyll Broadswords.

The real Highland Dances, of which there are only three, - The Highland Fling, the Sword Dance, and the Seann Triubhas - were most definitely not a lassies game in their original form. Of the three the Fling is the oldest, considered to be based on the rutting movements of the stag, a kind of fertility dance. All the movements, the arms held aloft like antlers, the feet dancing from side to side and the body turning round suggests the stag. The date of its origin is not known for certain but it was probably being danced by Highland men before Christianity came to Scotland.

Malcolm Canmore, King of the Scots, is accredited with the Sword Dance. The story goes that in 1058 he slew his opponent and, overjoyed at his victory, placed his own sword and that of his enemy on the ground in the form of a cross and danced in triumph over them.

The wearing of the kilt, or rather the ban on its wearing, brings us to the third of the trio of Highland Dances - the Seann Triubhas. This is the youngest of the Highland Dances having been devised during the period after Culloden when the wearing of the kilt was forbidden, often under the penalty of death. The name Seann Triubhas, loosely translated from the Gaelic, means ugly or unwanted trousers, and the movements of the dance, the shake, shake, down of the leg, are visible attempts to discard the hated garment. Many men dance it in tartan trews for greater effect.

 None of these three dances were ever intended to be danced by women and one can imagine the shock when Jenny Douglas stepped on to the boards and opened the floodgates of women's participation.

The period between the two World Wars saw the growth in popularity of Highland Dancing as a pastime, and it was a poor town, or village, that didn't boast a Teacher of Dancing.

Girl pupils wore exactly the same dress as the boys - bonnet, velvet jacket, jabot, plaid, kilt, sporran and hose. Some girls even wore the sgiain dubh for everyone took it for granted that Highland dress meant the lot.

In competitions judging was often a case of bias in favour of a particular style used in some part of the country and even if a dancer's performance was absolutely correct, if it was not the style the judge preferred, the dancer was in danger of being marked down as a result.

The system of selecting judges left a lot to be desired; the adjudicator very often being just a well known dancer, with that as the only recommendation to justify his fee. rules, where they existed, could vary depending on in which contest the dancer wished to compete, although it must be said that the major gatherings laid down quite firm guidelines.

Cowal Highland Gathering, amongst others, made its conditions quite plain in their programme of events, under the heading "Rules for Dancers" were included

(1) Birth Certificates must be produced on demand.

(2) No judge will be allowed to judge more than one event in Scottish Championships.

(3) All protests must be in writing accompanied by a deposit of £1.

(4) Don't wear medals on your doublet, or any jewellery other than Highland Dress ornaments.

(5) Don't chew gum when dancing.

(6) Don't glance at the judges when dancing.

These rules were right and proper but there existed no governing body which could formulate a consistent procedure covering all Highland Dancing contests. Medal-hungry dancers became easy prey to so-called organisers who arranged local competitions in halls and rooms up and down the country, and there is no doubt that a great deal of fiddling besides piping went on at these venues.

All local contests at this time were not rigged, but a great number were suspect. Dancers in one age group of, say 10 to 12 years old, could find themselves competing in an entry of 60 to 70 children with only three medals awarded. Distressing scenes could occur at the end of the day, with angry mums besieging the judges.

 

Meanwhile great strides had been taken to ensure the pipe band contests were judged fairly. Adjudicators sat within closed tents relying only on their hearing to select the best. Similar considerations could not be accorded to dancers until in 1950 interested parties got together to devise how to arrive at an overall policy that would ensure that standards were the same in all teaching and contests, dress and judging. After months of research and discussion the Scottish Official Board of Highland Dancing (S.O.B.H.D.) was formed.

All the steps in the dances were standardised, as was the order in which the steps should be performed - eight steps for the Fling, Six slow and two quick for the Sword Dance, and eight slow and six quick for the Seann Triubhas. A book was published which included judging standards, and finally dress for the dancers. A form of Kilt dress for females was devised and out went the head-dresses, plaids, sporrans and belts and in came a fitted and boned velvet waistcoat with short-sleeved blouse along with the Kilt. The official board dress also put paid to the widely-used custom of schools of dancing dressing all their pupils on one particular tartan and style. It was like handing a visiting card to an adjudicator and intimidating the lone competitor.

National Dances became part of the contest scene in the 1960's and with their introduction formed a very attractive element in addition to the Highland Dances. The National Dances mainly for girls had seldom been seen. The dances themselves are old but they brought a whole new dimension to the scene, being danced in an up-to-date version of he old Aboyne Dress for girls. This consisted of a laced velvet waistcoat, ruffled blouse, belted plaid, full tartan skirt over petticoats, and either long white stockings or bare legs. It's a dress that lends itself perfectly to the dances as in most movements the skirt is held in the fingers. Seven of the National Dances are now permissible at most contests.

The Seven National Dances selected by the board - all solo - are:-

The Scottish Lilt, Flora Macdonald's Fancy, The Earl of Errol, Highland Laddie, Blue Bonnets over the Border, The Village Maid, and lastly Wilt Thou go to the Barracks Johnnie.

The S.O.B.H.D. is now affiliated to the Scottish Pipe Band Association who are responsible for the organisation of Bands in Games and contests. There are very few competitions today which are not staged under S.O.B.H.D. rules.

Highland Dancers can now tread the boards, take exams via medal tests which give an unbiased assessment of their ability, and compete in an unprejudiced and competitive atmosphere giving pleasure to the thousands who watch

 
Semper Fidelis! Semper Familia!
Stu

Thomas Thompson

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Re: Some Scottish Trivia
« Reply #21 on: August 29, 2009, 08:22:12 PM »
Trivia of the month.

    Question: What's the fastest way to incite a riot in Scotland?      Answer:  Mess with their whiskey!
More than 20,000 Scots took to the streets in Kilmarnock after multinational beverage giant Diageo announced its plans to shut down the plant that produced 'Johnny Walker' whiskey, costing about 700 jobs.They have been making Johnny Walker since 1820.
Its enough to bring tears to yur eyes.
Tom

Donna

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Re: Some Scottish Trivia
« Reply #22 on: August 29, 2009, 11:39:06 PM »
Hey Tom,
Thanks for posting the Trivia of the Month  :D
But don't ya know, it made me miss Stu.  

Stu,
I really miss your jokes, my friend.  :-[
I hope you're feeling better and I'm still praying for you (and Dot)

Donna
ANY DAY ABOVE GROUND IS A GOOD DAY !

Michael Thompson

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Re: Some Scottish Trivia
« Reply #23 on: September 09, 2009, 09:41:22 PM »
Question: What's the fastest way to incite a riot in Scotland?

Answer:  Mess with their whiskey!

To a Scot, that's whisky. They're quite proud of the fact that there's no 'e' in Scotch whisky. The Irish have the 'e' in their whiskey.

But it's true. If you enter a Scottish household and they don't offer you a wee dram, they probably don't like you.
The Reivers Ride Again!

Stirling Thompson

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Re: Some Scottish Trivia
« Reply #24 on: October 05, 2009, 05:23:56 AM »
Are you ready for some football? Check out the roster for Scotland!

The first international football match match was played in Scotland on a cricket ground. at Hamilton Crescent, the West of Scotland Cricket Ground in Partick, Glasgow.

Prior to the first official meeting, there had been several unofficial international matches played between the countries at the behest of the English Football Association. Such was their enthusiasm for these fixtures they arranged the venue, the officials, the selection of the English side and, incredibly, the selection of the Scottish side. For these matches, the "Scotland" team was assembled from players in and around London who had Scottish connections.

In 1872 League Championships had yet to begin in either country. The FA Cup tournament had completed its inaugural running in England and the Scottish competition would start the following year. For the match on 30 November 1872, St Andrew's Day, the Scotland players were all selected from Queen's Park, the leading Scottish Club of its day. This was not the original intention but the Scots were unable to obtain the services of two countrymen who had competed in the FA Cup final. Arthur F Kinnaird of the Wanderers and Lt Henry Waugh Renny-Tailyour of the Royal Engineers would have to wait until 1873 to play for their country.

While Scotland was eventually represented by eleven men drawn from the Queen's Park club, England played the match with players from nine different sources selected by Charles Alcock the English Football Association Secretary and captain of the FA Cup winning Wanderers. Alcock, who was the driving force behind the unofficial matches, was unable to play in the first official meeting due to injury but he participated by running the line.

Three England players came from Oxford University but only Reginald Welch played from the successful Wanderers side. Scotland wore dark blue shirts, the then colour of Queen's Park, with a single lion crest badge attached. England, in white, had the badge of the three lions on their shirts.

The crowd who gathered to watch the match numbered 4,000 and they paid an entry fee of a shilling, the same price charged by the English Football Association for the first FA Cup final. They endured a twenty-minute delay to the scheduled 2pm kick-off but then settled to watch the contest in the relaxed and enjoyable atmosphere that would accompany the fixture for over one hundred years before the wrong shade of partisan behaviour started to creep in during the 1970s.

The atmosphere worked its way onto the pitch and the game was conducted in a friendly manner (the introduction of shin pads to the game was still two years away) and there were few contentious decisions for the Scottish referee to make.

On a pitch that was heavy due to the rain that had watered Glasgow over the previous three days, the smaller and lighter Scottish side pushed their English counterparts hard. The advantage that the Scots had with their team being drawn from Queen's Park was negated by the way that the English team came together, dispelling fears that their unfamiliarity of playing alongside each other would be an issue.

The crowd, whilst witnessing the first official meeting between the countries, were denied the pleasure of the first goal. That would come the following year at the Oval when England enjoyed a 4-2 victory over the travelling Scots. The next time that Scotland and England would meet without generating a goal was 1970 at Hampden Park.

The Scottish captain, Bob Gardner, who would play a further four times against England and lose only once, had been responsible for team selection. The future Scottish Football Association president had that year made the switch from forward to goalkeeper. He kept goal for his country for the whole match unlike his English counterpart, Robert Barker, who decided to join the action outfield when he switched with William Maynard.

In an age when playing with six or seven forward players was normal, the team selection of Bob Gardner almost paid off as Scotland came closest to victory. In the final stages of the match Robert Leckie sent in a shot that landed on top of the tape that was strung between the two posts to represent the crossbar. It was as near as either side would come and the match yielded no goals but it was the start of a rivalry that continues to generate passion when the countries meet.

Scotland: Bob Gardner, William Ker, Joseph Taylor, James Thompson, James Smith, Robert Smith, Robert Leckie, Alexander Rhind, William Muir MacKinnon, Jamie Weir, David Wotherspoon (all Queen's Park)

England: Robert Barker (Hertfordshire Rangers), Ernest Greenhalgh (Notts County), Reginald Welch (Wanderers), Frederick Chappell (Oxford University), William John Maynard (1st Surrey Rifles), John Brockbank (Cambridge University), Charles Clegg (Sheffield Wednesday), Arnold Kirke Smith (Oxford University), Cuthbert Ottaway (Oxford University/Old Etonians), Charles John Chenery (Crystal Palace), Charles John Morice (Barnes
Semper Fidelis! Semper Familia!
Stu

Thomas Thompson

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Re: Some Scottish Trivia
« Reply #25 on: December 30, 2009, 11:17:54 AM »

Sent to me by a meber of the Wigtown List.
Ern
> --------------------------------------------
>
>
> Dear friends, There was an interesting long article in the Wall Street
> Journal  a couple of days ago from which I will clip interesting parts.
> "New Year madness is a thing of quite modern making, and hardly an
> improvement on the tradition that long preceded it, which called for a
> somewhat sober, respectful, and reflective morning celebration.  I blame
> the Scots for the worldwide embrace of midnight debauchery.  And of
> course, whoever it was some little while beforehand, went and invented
> public clocks.
>
> These devices first began to peal their chimes in the 15th century, and
> they became popular and quite widely dispersed by the 17th.  All towns had
> them by then, as did most villages - and it was about this time that the
> Scots, armed with timepieces of their own, enthusiastically got into the
> act.
>
> They adopted in short order their peculiar twin customs of Hogmanay and
> First Footing, designed to mark the sliding of one year into another, and
> by the 1680's they started organizing celebrations around them that
> eventually had us all getting off on this whole present day
> New-Year-begins-at- midnight malarkey.  Then a century later Robert Burns
> wrote the words to "Auld Lang Syne" and set it to a jaunty Scottish dance
> tune - and that and the provision on the last evening of December of
> copious draughts of whisky, so these normally dour and repressed peoples
> oversaw the beginning of the long decline of the old habit of marking  New
> Year with ceremonies of dignified moderation and temporal respect.
>
> I lived in Scotland for awhile, and there was no escaping it. The precise
> nature of the partying varied from town to town: In one they would
> manufacture and dress up a giant herring, and parade it through the
> streets, in another set ablaze  huge smoking bonfires of juniper bushes,
> and in one fishing village on the North Sea coast, local lads well in
> drink would set to swinging dangerous looking fire balls around their
> heads, usually until someone got arrested or killed.
>
> All Scotland thus awakes to the New Year in a state of catatonic
> incapacity, aching of head and foul of temper. All are said to pity them.
> And there in Scotland would the madness have happily remained - except for
> that bounder of an English poet, Alfred Tennyson, who got into the act one
> full century after Robert Burns, by declaiming on a lover's whim his most
> famous poem"Ring Out, Wild Bells".
>
> And that quite frankly did it.  Come the year of 1860 Wildness on New
> Year's Eve anywhere was now and for evermore officially sanctioned. "The
> year is dying in the night/Ring out wild bells and let him die" The Celtic
> infection began swiftly to spread.
>
> The new custom went still further afield: Given the spread of Scotsmen
> about the Empire, old and new, the habits born of Hogmanay soon achieved
> the status of diaspora, fetching up in Hong Kong and Melbourne, Quebec and
> Singapore, and for the last century or so, in New York City, and her
> American siblings, too.
> Despite alternative daylight festivities, western customs are fast easing
> into the fabric everywhere just as if they were in Trafalgar Square, or on
> Eighth Avenue, or on Princes Street in Edinburgh, where it all began."
>
> -------------------------------
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