Tuesday 27 November 2012

Telling Our Story: Pinkie Cleugh Battlefield Group celebrates £10000 Heritage Lottery Fund grant



Pinkie Cleugh Battlefield Group, based in Musselburgh, is one of the first groups in the UK to receive a Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) All Our Stories grant, it was announced today. The Group has been given £10,000 in support of an exciting project that will culminate in the creation of a Battlefield Trail for the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh (1547), on the site of the biggest battle ever fought in Scotland, in the open country between Inveresk and Wallyford.
All Our Stories, a brand new small grant programme, launched earlier this year in support of BBC Two’s The Great British Story – has been designed as an opportunity for everyone to get involved in their heritage. With HLF funding and support, community groups will carry out activities that help people explore, share and celebrate their local heritage.
The popular series presented by historian Michael Wood and supported by a programme of BBC Learning activities and events got thousands of us asking questions about our history and inspired us to look at our history in a different way through the eyes of ordinary people.
The programme and HLF All Our Stories has proved a real hit and now the Pinkie Cleugh Battlefield Trail is one of hundreds of successful projects around the UK to receive a grant. Pinkie Cleugh Battlefield Group was set up as a collaborative venture by local heritage and community organisations including Musselburgh Conservation Society, the Old Musselburgh Club and Wallyford Community Council to ‘raise the profile’ of this important but neglected battle.
Pinkie Cleugh was the last battle fought between the separate kingdoms of England and Scotland. It took place during the ‘Rough Wooings’, Henry VIII’s attempt to coerce the Scots into agreement with the betrothal of the infant Mary, Queen of Scots to Henry’s son, who became the boy king Edward VI. The battle was a disastrous defeat for the Scots, with over 10,000 men killed, but the longer term outcome was the marriage of Mary not to Edward, but to the Dauphin of France. Most of the battlefield remains as attractive open country, and the Battlefield Group’s objective is to encourage and help the local community and visitors to enjoy the rewarding experience of informed interaction with this interesting and significant site.
TV presenter and historian Michael Wood, said: “We British love our history, and no wonder: few nations in the world, if any, have such riches on their doorstep, and so much of it accessible to all of us. It is really tremendous that the people of Musselburgh have been inspired to get involved to tell their own story and to dig deeper into their own past. It’s brilliant that so many people are being given the chance to get involved through the All Our Stories grants. Having travelled the length and breadth of the British Isles this last year filming The Great British Story, I am certain that fascinating and moving stories will be uncovered which will not only bring to life the excitement of local history, but will illuminate and enrich every community’s connection with the national narrative.”

Commenting on the award, PCBG vice-chairman Andrew Coulson said: “This grant has come at just the right time for us. We have a great story to tell, and an ideal location to set it. Support from HLF means that by the next anniversary of the battle in September, the battlefield trail will be open for visitors, and the local community, to enjoy.”

Colin McLean, Head of the Heritage Lottery Fund Scotland, said: “Clearly the success of All Our Stories has reinforced the fact that we are indeed a nation of story tellers and that we want to explore and dig deeper into our past and discover more about what really matters to us. This is exactly what the grant will do for the Pinkie Cleugh Battlefield Group as they embark on a real journey of discovery.”
Earlier this year, the importance of the battle – also known as the Battle of Pinkie – was recognised by its inclusion as one of the first 17 sites on Historic Scotland’s Inventory of historically significant battlefields. Full information about the battle and the site, including detailed maps and plans, is available at:
and:

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