A safe refuge for ancient Scots documents

Charles Thorpe McInnes [1892-1980] was a close friend of my family. He loved to visit Drumdruils.

‘Thorpe’, as he was known to his friends, grew up in Keirfield House, Bridge of Allan:

‘Thorpe’ was christened Charles Thorpe Haywood Turnbull McInnes:

Thorpe had a deep love of old Lecropt and called his family home in Saughton, Edinburgh, ‘Lecropt’

Thorpe became Curator of Scotland’s historical records:

Thorpe’s father, Charles Gardiner McInnes, was born in Cross Street, Dunblane on the 1st February 1860, the ‘illegitimate’ child of Charlotte Gardiner and Donald McInnes:

Map of Dunblane, circa 1861:

All that the records can share of Donald McInnes is that he was a ‘Bookbinder’ and that he had died before his illegitimate son married in 1881:


Like Thorpe, I love old Lecropt [even though the M9 motorway has replaced the Lecropt burn and its healing spring well].

I sometimes find myself wondering if Thorpe’s rise from a ‘second-class clerk’ to the Keeper of Scotland’s records might relate back to his family story and an understandable wish to find out more about his grandfather, Donald McInnes:


Footnote: In looking through surviving records I have not been able to  establish any obvious reason why Thorpe was christened with these middle names: Thorpe, Haywood, Turnbull.


A few films about Lecropt [click on each image to play a different film]:

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