Innes, J. B. to Darwin, Emma
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Urges Emma to bring CD to hydropathic establishment at Forres.
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Transcription
Milton Brodie
16
Dear M
Thanks for your information about the closing of the Bromley Savings bank. M
I send Johnny's book and the order filled up. I suppose my signature as witness will do, as I am licensed by the Bishop to a mission at Milton Brodie, and a roving commission over the diocese of Moray.
I wish you could give a better account of M
Johnny and I have had some capital skating and curling last week, this week we have had mild weather again—
With all our kindest regards to all your party | Believe me | Dear M
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- f1 4387.f1
The year is established by the reference to the closing of the Bromley Savings Bank, which took place on 31 December 1863 (see n. 2, below). - +
- f2 4387.f2
The passage in 1863 of the Post Office Savings Bank Act, which created a savings bank as part of almost every post office, caused the Bromley Savings Bank to close on 31 December 1863 (see Horsburgh 1980, p. 303, and Statutes, public and general, 26 & 27 Vict. c. 14). - +
- f3 4387.f3
CD had been one of the trustees of the Bromley Savings Bank (see Correspondence vol. 11, letter from J. T. Austen, 3 June 1863). The bank had been under the control of a president, vice-president, up to twenty trustees, and a managing committee (Horsburgh 1980, p. 303). See also Correspondence vol. 10, letter to J. B. Innes, 22 December [1862] and n. 5. - +
- f4 4387.f4
John William Brodie Innes, son of John Brodie Innes. Section 1 of the Post Office Savings Bank Act covered trust accounts and joint accounts of minors, specifying that minors should issue a certificate for the transfer of their accounts to a Post Office savings bank. - +
- f5 4387.f5
John Innes, the Anglican incumbent of Down, changed his name to John Brodie Innes at the end of 1861 upon inheriting an entailed estate, Milton Brodie, near Forres in Scotland; he moved to Milton Brodie shortly afterwards (see Correspondence vol. 9, letter from John Innes, [24 December 1861], and Correspondence vol. 10, letter from J. B. Innes, 2 January [1862]). Innes then became priest in charge of Milton Brodie Mission and chaplain to the bishop of Moray; he continued to be the non-resident incumbent of Down until 1869 (Crockford's clerical directory 1894, Freeman 1978). - +
- f6 4387.f6
Innes refers to the Cluny Hill hydropathic establishment near Forres, Morayshire. Building started in 1863, and the establishment formally opened in August 1865. See Metcalfe 1906, pp. 158--64, and Douglas 1934, pp. 347--8. See also Correspondence vol. 11, letter from J. B. Innes, 4 September [1863]. - +
- f7 4387.f7
George Dollond ran a family optical business first established in 1750 by Peter Dollond; Dollond telescopes had long been thought to be of the highest quality (see King 1955 and Clifton 1995). - +
- f8 4387.f8
Alexander Penrose Gordon Cumming of Altyre was a friend and neighbour of Innes's and had written letters in April and May 1863 to the Elgin Courier and the Forres Gazette about live toads being found in large numbers deep in the strata exposed by the cuttings of the Inverness and Perth Railway, which was being constructed near Altyre (see Correspondence vol. 11, letter from J. B. Innes, 29 August [1863]). The story was reprinted in the Scotsman and The Times (see The Times, 16 April 1863, p. 7, and 25 May 1863, p. 9). The myth that toads or frogs contemporaneous with coal or rock formations had been exhumed alive in modern times was prevalent in popular natural history books and periodicals of this period (see Barber 1980, p. 18).