The Latheron Parish Church
Now Clan Gunn Museum |
"In fourteen hundred
and ninety two Columbus sailed the ocean blue......"
So runs the old verse, learned by rote and recited by generations of
children all over the world.But was it fact or fiction? history or humbug? Was this Genoese
navigator really the first European to discover the New world or was he
100 years too late? |
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Recently, evidence has
turned up which indicates that Christopher Columbus was. after all, just
an also ran, that he came a not very close second; and an increasing
body of research is showing that credit for the discovery of America
should really go to a Scot.
Why not come to the Clan Gunn Heritage Centre and Museum at Latheron, in
Caithness and see the evidence for yourself? Perhaps you can throw some light, for instance, on the 600-year-old
portrait of a Scottish knight, marked out in stone, on a quiet roadside
in Massachusetts
How did he get there?
After all, America was still undiscovered by Europeans at the time and a
further 94 years was to pass before Columbus could arrive. and
what about the evidence on the knight's shield?
What was the connection between a tribe of wild Indians and an order of
powerful Scottish knights and what about the grave in a chapel near
Edinburgh and the architecture of a strange round tower in Newport,
Rhode Island? |
The Clan Gunn Heritage
Centre was established by the Clan Gunn Heritage Trust in 1985 in the
18th Century Old Parish Church of Latheron.
The remains of Castle Gunn, the original seat of the chief's of the
Clan, and of Halberry Castle, the later stronghold, are situated on the
Caithness coast seven miles north of the Heritage Centre. Neil Gunn's
"Highland River", which was the basis for a number of his
works, is at Dunbeath four miles south.
The
Centre has a Clan Shop and is the base of the Clan Gunn Society, which
maintains the traditions of the Clan throughout the world. There are
also Clan Gunn Societies of North America, Nova Scotia and New Zealand
open to members of Clan Gunn and its septs. Among 77 septs traditionally associated with the Gunns are the Hendersons,
Johnsons, MacWilliams, Mansons, Robsons, Robinsons, Thomsons, Williamsons,
Wilsons and Wyllies. Is your family name related to our clan? Why not come
along to the Clan Gunn Heritage Centre and find out? |