[Magdalen] church organs.... and a famous benefactor
sheila ketler
ketbears at yahoo.com
Sat Nov 26 14:47:19 UTC 2016
When we were in Scotland in 2011 we visited the town of Dumferline and we were there over the Sunday. We were very close to the Abbey and I realized that people were going into the church so I told my husband to meet me outside the church in an hour or so I was going to go to service at the Abbey. I sat next to some very friendly ladies during the service and afterwards spoke with their organist. They had a beautiful pipe organ in place and we were able to standright by the place in the abbey where Robert the Bruce is buried. It is famous for brass rubbings... Going out the doorI went out the wrong door and the same lovely ladies who had sat with me in church guided me along the footpaths so I could try to find my husband! We ate in a wonder pub there also I think it was called The Seven Kings? I don't need psychotherapy right now I just need to get back to scotland!!
Sheila
On Friday, November 25, 2016 5:22 PM, Lynn Ronkainen <houstonklr at gmail.com> wrote:
(from today's "Writer's Almanac" by Garrison Keillor:
It's the birthday of American steel magnate and philanthropist Andrew
Carnegie, born in Dunfermline, Scotland (1835), the son of a weaver and
political radical. His father instilled in young Andrew the values of
political and economic equality, but his family's poverty taught Carnegie a
different lesson. At the age of 12, the boy worked as a milkhand for $1.20
per week. When the Carnegies immigrated to America in 1848, Carnegie was
determined to find prosperity. One of the pioneers of industry of
19th-century America, Andrew Carnegie helped build the American steel
industry, which turned him into one of the richest entrepreneurs of his age.
In 1868, at age 33, Carnegie wrote himself a memo in which he questioned his
chosen career, a life of business. He kept the letter for his entire life,
carefully preserving it in his files. In the memo, he vowed to retire from
business within two years, believing that the further pursuit of wealth
would degrade him. Carnegie eventually sold his steel business and gave his
fortune away to cultural, educational, and scientific institutions for the
improvement of mankind.
Over the course of his life, Andrew Carnegie endowed 2,811 libraries and
many charitable foundations as well as the internationally famous Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace. He also bought 7,689 organs for churches.
The purpose of the latter gift was, in Carnegie's words, "To lessen the pain
of the sermons."
website: www.ichthysdesigns.com
When I stand before God at the end of my life I would hope that I have not a
single bit of talent left and could say, "I used everything You gave me."
attributed to Erma Bombeck
"Either Freedom for all or stop talking about Freedom at all" from a talk
by Richard Rohr
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