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  Predating the ''Origin of the name Drysdale''

                                    discredits  the ‘’Creation’’ of the name Drysdale

      The genesis of  the Surname  today  more commonly spelled Drysdale was no folly by the     Douglas's , by far ....A Scandinavian by the name of Ingebald , he was the one that named the river Dryfe .... it ran thru lands granted him by the king . In history There are no references to him firsthand , but a second hand reference written in Latin , from Charter by Robert de Brus to Hugh the son of Ingebald is returned the lands of his father , Held in Drivesdale . [ Drivesdale is on the second line below the yellow bar at the top of the photo below ]

...........this happened 288 years before 1503.
Hugh of Dryfesdale was noted first to use the Surname in the year 1274 on the quitclaim of land of Todrig , which ; [according to POMS] was witnessed by Heirs of Aymer Maxwell | Nicholas of Synton, master | Aymer Maxwell | Maurice, chaplain (Coldstream) | Alexander, clerk (Coldstream) | Coldstream Priory | Richard, chaplain of Bishop William of Glasgow, vicar of Ashkirk | Robert of Coldstream, clerk | Alexander of Synton (II), sheriff of Fife | John of Lilliesleaf | John of Musselburgh
..........this happened 229 years before 1503 .
             Source : infographic - Paradox Of Medieval Scotland 
Here there is a long silence , then in 1488 Gawaine Dryfesdale and Johne Dryfesdale and 4 others ,went on trial . This was for treason against the king at the battle of Sauchie , St.Barnabas Day 15 years before
.........all this happened 15 years before 1503 . 

  • Publication of the ''1503 Drysdale Document'' first was in print in the Dunfermline Press , a sensationalist tabloid , on 30 Sept.,1863
  • .........all this happened 360 years after 1503
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  •                                                                            

                                     THE ORIGIN OF THE NAME DRYSDALE

     

    "On the Twentieth Day of May, One Thousand Five Hundred and Three Years

     

    We, Thomas, William, and James Douglas, sons of the departed Thomas Douglas , of Brushwood Haugh, in the parish of Drysdale, and Shire of Dumfries, left our native place for the reason here assigned, viz:- Defending our just and lawful rights against our unjust neighbour,Johnston of Greenstone Hill, who, being determined to bring water to his mill through our property, and having obtained leave of his friend, the King, began his operations on Monday, the 16th of May, We prevented him by force.

    The next day he brought twenty of his vassels to carryout his  work. We with two friends and three servants, eight in all, attacked Johnston with his twenty, and, in the contest, fourteen of his men were killed, along with their base leader.

     

    A report of these proceedings was carried to the King, and we were obliged to fly, (the tocsin being sounded).We took shelter under the shades of the Ochil Hills, in a lonely valley on the river Devon. After having lived there a full two years, to returned home in disguise, but found all our property in the possession of Johnston's friends, and a great reward offered for our lives.

     

    We, having purchased a small shot, called the Haugh of Dollar, and changed our names to the name of our Parish, are clearing in mind to spend the residue of our days under the ope of the Ochils, and wish the name of Dryfdale to flourish in the lonely valley.

     

    The King passed through this with his Court on the 12th of June, 1506, going from Stirling to Falkland - dined on Halliday's green. (an eastern neighbour;) but we were not recognised."

           * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    The above story has been preserved among the descendants of Thomas, William, and James Douglas, now known by the name of Drysdale, and copied at several times by different individuals -

    first, by Simon Drysdale of the Haugh of Dollar, in the year 1620;

    by Robert Drysdale of Yillicoultry, in 1708;

    by John Drysdale, Dunfermline, in 1835;

    by James Hogg  Drysdale, Dumfermline, in 1838;

    and was printed first in the year 1833 by John Drysdale , Montrose

    and again in the same form by the last named John Drysdale, Glasgow 1883 ;

    and now by Thomas D. Drysdale , Westerton Farm , Leslie , Fife , 1906 .

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    Clan Johnstone has no record of the 1503 incident , as one would think a rival clan would take note ,  mark a dark day for 14 of their own being slaughtered  ,and  by comparison-- the Maxwells were nearly wiped from the face of the earth by the Johnstones in the battle at Dryfe sands.
  • 14 of the Johnstones  men die and its a just a beautiful day in the Neighborhood for every other Douglas ?  Has no one paused right here - and applied a bit of critical thought ?  For myself this is what tipped the scales from  a  plausible possibility  to utter rubbish . Justice in the form of swift  retribution was the order of the day . 
  • I ask , How can you create what already exists ?????
    bottom line - You  tell a lie
  • till it becomes  Your truth...
  • then you indoctrinate your children, and their children 
  • the cycle is complete

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