The Summer Walkers: Travelling People and Pearl-fishers in the Highlands of Scotland by Timothy Neat soon to be presented for sale on the marvellous BookLovers of Bath web site!
Published: Edingburgh: Birlinn Limited, 2002, Paperback.
Illustrated by way of: Appendices [3]; Black & White Photographs;
From the cover: The Summer Walkers are the pearl-fishers, tinkers, hawkers and horse-dealers of the North-West Highlands in Scotland. These travellers are not gypsies. They are indigenous, Gaelic-speaking nomads with a particular moral code. They are perhaps one of Europes last nomadic people whose story will have a tremendous significance for social history.
This book presents a unique and contemporary portrait of their culture. The Highland travellers consisted of different families such as the MacPhees or the Williamsons, each with very distinctive characters. Hamish Henderson, the Scottish poet and folklorist, lived with them in the 1940s and 1950s, when Edinburgh dealers would send their pearls down to London. This book introduces the travellers through interviews and folk-legends within true stories, and through Hendersons memories and evaluations.
The book also includes a study of the groups ethnic origins, tent architecture, crafts and an introduction to their secret language, the Beialrearich, which has never been written down. Since the 1950s, modern life mass-production, good roads, the motor car, the welfare state has forced rapid changes on the travelling community. Tinsmithing is a dead art, horsedealing a thing of the past, hawking now done by catalogue and supermarket. But many older travellers were brought up on the road and still remember in detail the traditional, archetypal lifestyle of Scotlands travelling clans.
This book documents the traveller experience and a living oral literature which is one of the folk glories of Europe.
Near Fine.
[IX] 230 pages. 10¼” x 7½”.
Of course, if you don’t like this one, may I persuade you to have a look at more books hither or maybe further, hand picked, books in my Social History catalogue?