![]() Michael Costello with a Gordon Violin, at the entrance to Hugh Gordon's old homestead at Lower Ballymacward, Stoneyford Read more… |
Articles & Stories by "The Digger"
The following is a list of articles and stories written by "The Digger" which have been published on www.lisburn.com. Links to these articles & stories will take you to the www.lisburn.com website. (Thanks to Jim Collins for permission to use these links.)
- Davy Jones 'Irish Tom Thumb' part 2 (14/03/2012)
- Reading the signs (14/03/2012)
- Clinchers, Conkers and Cheesers (14/03/2012)
- What's in a word? (14/03/2012)
- A murder at Magheragall and an execution at Carrickfergus (14/03/2012)
- Ballypitmave's famous son (14/03/2012)
- Tales from "The Prog," Ballypitmave and a new book "Living in Hope" by Sue Allan (14/03/2012)
- "Bings" (PART ONE) (14/03/2012)
- Obstructions and recesses (PART TWO) (14/03/2012)
- Roadmen and repairs (PART THREE) (14/03/2012)
- Roses are red, violets are blue … (14/03/2012)
- Cow Quake (14/03/2012)
- May Eve (14/03/2012)
- The Murder that never was (14/03/2012)
- Cigarette, cleric, characters and cards (14/03/2012)
- "The Wee Still" (14/03/2012)
- Tuesday 15th August 1876 and the stolen drum (14/03/2012)
- The Ballymote Earthquake (14/03/2012)
- Pain in the picking and pleasure on the plate (14/03/2012)
- The effect of Two World wars on one family – The Huston Family (14/03/2012)
- Stage and Screen - 1960 style (14/03/12)
- The local Kilns that kept vital supplies of limestone running (13/01/2012)
- From desert to quarry to nature reserve (06/01/2012)
- All I want for Christmas -1932 (23/12/2011)
- Whitemountain - Plovers, Poteen and Preachers (09/12/2011)
- Brady family's journey from Ballymacash to America (26/08/2011)
- One family's journey from Ballymacash to Canada (19/08/2011)
- The Digger recalls the return of road racing after the war in Ballymacash (12/08/2011)
- Granny's old remedies and donkey tales (29/07/2011)
- Discovery, dames and dodging gamekeepers on Divis (22/07/2011)
- Migration, movement and merchants in Lisburn town centre (10/06/2011)
- From Ballycarrickmaddy to the moon (06/05/2011)
- 'A friend to the friendless and a sympathizer with the oppressed' (22/04/2011)
- Teacher and poet who went from Lisburn to Texas (08/04/2011)
- 'Farewell to Ballymacash, my native place....' (18/02/2011)
- Exploring Methodism in Glenavy (11/02/2011)
- Reuniting the past with the present (04/02/2011)
- The Digger recalls a different way of finding a valuable commodity (14/01/2011)
- Return to sender - how old mail can help you with your family history (31/12/2010)
- Hope amidst poverty - that was Christmas 100 years ago (17/12/2010)
- Reliving memories of Christmas 1975 - The Digger goes back 35 years to recall the Christmases we enjoyed in the 1970s (10/12/2010)
- 'Snow' place like home as winter grips Lisburn (03/12/2010)
- Early days of the Ulster Tower at Thiepval and Lisburn (05/11/2010)
- Digging up the past – The forgotten Spade Mills at Derriaghy (22/10/2010)
- Cure your ills with brown paper and red flannel (15/10/2010)
- A discarded Bible reveals a 19th century scandal (27/08/2010)
- Raising the dead - The Digger reveals the dramatic lengths one man went to prove he wasn't a body snatcher (09/07/2010)
- On the shoulders of giants - the 'Irish Tom Thumb' (07/05/2010)
- Hurdles in history of racing at the Maze (09/04/2010)
- New Book launch at Killultagh Historical Society (03/03/2010)
- William Harbison, the Fenian Uprising and Portmore (29/01/2010)
- When businesses were praised for giving workers Christmas Day off (25/12/2009)
- Portmore - an area steeped in history and flowing with milk and honey (11/12/2009)
- "John & Jack Frost", ice and skates (10/12/2009)
- Fundraising Events at Glenavy Protestant Hall (05/12/2009)
- A glimpse into our ancient past at newly refurbished Museum (04/12/2009)
- The story of the Stoneyford violin maker returns to Lisburn in music and song (27/11/2009)
- Efforts of local men still remembered on Normandy's beaches (13/11/2009)
- Lest we forget - the sacrifice local people made in World War 2 (06/11/2009)
- "When he entered the sick room he became a brother and a friend" (23/10/2009)
- Deadly diphtheria, dogs and Dr. Murphy (09/10/2009)
- When the wail of the Banshee filled the air (18/09/2009)
- Family History Society ready to begin new season in historic building (04/09/2009)
- "May Almighty God have mercy on your soul..." — concludes the story of the Ballymacbrennan murder (14/08/2009)
- The Digger continues his tale of a 19th century crime (07/08/2009)
- 19th century crimes and strange events at Ballymacbrennan (31/07/2009)
- William's rhyming Treasure Hunt clues are back in fashion (24/07/2009)
- Drooth, dreams and temperance (17/07/2009)
- David Corkey and the terrible reality of The Great War (10/07/2009
- The quiet hero who became a much loved minister at Dundrod Church (03/07/2009)
- Call Lisburn 3111 to get 'education with an aim!' (03/07/2009)
- Early days of transportation on the Lagan Canal (26/06/2009)
- The mysterious case of the man with the Victoria Cross (29/05/2009)
- Miss Cherry, trees and the neglected plaques (22/05/2009)
- The life and times of a famous Glenavy doctor are recalled (01/05/2009)
- Robert Cinnamond - the Ballinderry Balladeer (24/04/2009)
- Religion, riots and rhyme in Glenavy (03/04/2009)
- 'Seven sixteenths' and Frank Leckey's Lodge (23/01/2009)
- 'A valuable insight' is provided in the Diaries of Dr. Alexander Irvine (16/01/2009)
- Dr. Alexander Irvine and the Crumlin link (09/01/2009)
- Story of a letter posted in Glenavy almost 174 years ago (02/01/2009)
- The census, courts, Christmas and cows (26/12/2008)
- Wedding antics and country customs (12/12/2008)
- Killultagh Historical Society goes from strength to strength (21/11/2008)
- Where the grass is always greener? (19/09/2008)
- The Digger recalls a wartime romance at Langford Lodge (12/09/2008)
- The Yank who won his Glenavy girl (05/09/2008)
- The Digger finds clues to our past inscribed in wood at Rams Island (29/08/2008)
- Was Lisburn murder suspect really a victim himself? (08/08/2008)
- The harsh life of a Lighter man (01/08/2008)
- Early days of transportation on the Lagan Canal (25/07/2008)
- From early Christian churches to thriving 19th century trade (book review) (11/07/2008)
- An innocent game of 'Ducks and Drakes' that ended in tragedy (27/06/2008)
- Keeping alive the memory of those who fell in World War 1 (23/05/2008)
- Remarkable story of the Stoneyford violin maker (11/04/2008) (full story below)
- Easter celebrations of long ago and cards to the chemist (21/03/2008)
- A Lisburn Headstone in an unusual story (14/03/2008)
- A spruce up for the Wishing Chair of Glenavy (01/02/2008)
- When you could feel the dark - recalling the days before light pollution spoiled the view (18/01/2008)
- When life was ruled by the light of the silvery moon (11/01/2008)
- The ghostly lone piper at Piper's Hill (21/12/2007)
- Recalling stories of the great Lisburn inventor (16/11/2007)
- Fireworks and Frolics - the old style Halloween (26/10/2007)
- There could be "verse" ways to sell products (28/09/2007)
- Annandale, Glenavy and the Downer family (21/09/2007)
- Chrome Hill, Lambeg and the Downer family (13/09/2007)
- The Mystery Maid of Lisburn Town is tracked down (17/08/2007)
- Second tragedy for the Rice family (20/07/2007)
- Wallace Park tragedy caused widespread grief in Lisburn (13/07/2007)
- Echoes of the brutal Ballynalargy murder that lingered on (06/07/2007)
- Shock at a murder most foul in Ballynalargy (29/06/2007)
- A bitter winter and a horrifying discovery (15/06/2007)
- Rediscovering the rich history of a forgotten townland (18/05/2007)
- Anyone recall The Maid of Lisburn Town? (27/04/2007)
- Tales of love and war at Glenavy station (06/04/2007)
- The changing fortunes of Glenavy railway station (30/03/2007)
- American military trains and strict GNR discipline (23/03/2007)
- Lisburn stationmaster held office for 55 years (16/03/2007)
- Looking back at the early days of rail travel in Lisburn (09/03/2007)
- Lives of former Lisburn citizens recalled (02/02/2007)
- Grave matters give clue to past way of life (19/01/2007)
- Unearthing the past at the Ballyclan dig (15/12/2006)
- The Digger' takes a look at the history of the blackthorn (08/12/2006)
- Marbles kept the young and old amused in days gone by (17/11/2006)
- The Cherry family, The Ulster Covenant and the loss of a son (20/10/2006)
- Lisburn and the Ulster Covenant (13/10/2006)
- Blame it all on the fairies (22/09/2006)
- A charming way to deal with your ailments (15/09/2006)
- Paradise regained at Ram's Island (08/09/2006)
Remarkable story of the Stoneyford violin maker - by The Digger
COULD SOMEONE STILL HAVE A
GORDON INSTRUMENT IN THEIR ATTIC?
It wasn't that long ago an old friend of mine related to me a story from the 1930's, about an old fellow from the Lurgan area called Charlie. Charlie had taken a notion to learn the violin and had acquired one. One evening a knock came to the door. He opened the door, violin in hand, to find the next door neighbour standing there. "Ach goodness gracious, is that what it is Charlie," she said. "Do you know what that sounded like in our house? It was like a pig eating cinders!" Of course you had to start somewhere.
In this part of the world the fiddle was one of the most popular instruments that was played around the countryside many years ago and provided both entertainment and accompaniment to the many socials and dances held in homes, barns and halls and good fiddlers were always in demand.
I read with interest some time ago in an old 1930 Belfast Newsletter an article written by someone known only as a "special representative." He or she had visited a civil servant called George Barnes at his home, which appeared from my research to be in the Haypark Avenue area of Belfast. The newspaper reporter was writing about Mr Barnes's hobby - violin making. It was reported that George Barnes had no interest violins until one day in the early 1920's he picked one up and he decided to have a go at making one for himself. Not only was he a self-taught violin maker, but he was teaching himself to play. He appeared to be content in his workshop amongst his templates, ribs, tail pieces, scrolls, violin books and pamphlets. George was a member of a family who had military links with the 4th Hussar cavalry regiment since 1734. His grandfather had been at the charge of the Light Brigade and he himself had served for eleven years in that regiment during the 1st World War. George Barnes died in February 1964.
On 3rd April, 1854, just over six months before the charge of the Light Brigade, Hugh Gordon, a well-known resident of the Ballymacward townland, Stoneyford had passed away and preparations were being made for his funeral to St. Aidan's Parish Church at Glenavy on April 5th. I had read the inscription on the Gordon headstone many times and passed by it, unaware of the significance and the background of Hugh Gordon, at least, not until I came across a website dedicated to the Gordons of Stoneyford, County Antrim - Violin Makers by Belfast man Michael Costello.
Michael, a proficient violin player himself, first encountered a Gordon violin on the premises of Ormonde Hall, a violin and piano dealer on the Lisburn Road, Belfast, when as a youth, he had been seeking to purchase one. It was outside of his price range at the time. That experience would, however, be the catalyst of an interest that would lead to a lifetime of research on Hugh Gordon an amateur violin maker.
Michael's research over the years would bring him into contact directly with some of the Gordon violins, the violin moulds and templates actually used in their manufacture and manuscript linked to Hugh Gordon from the early 1800's. Amongst the reels, jigs and hornpipes and other music in the manuscript are two pieces titled Miss Gordon's Reel and the Stoneyford Lasses, which are more than likely linked to some of the female members in Hugh's own family and those from the immediate district.
The Gordon family appear from those historical records that are still in existence, to have been in the area of Ballymacward from the early 1700's. Hugh's father John Gordon was laid to rest in Tullyrusk graveyard in November 1824. Hugh was a blacksmith and farmer. He was described in a written record made by another local man, John Simpson, a friend of Hugh, as "a mechanical genius … who could make anything."
I have had sight of several of the Gordon violins and moulds that Hugh used in the violin making process. The materials, such as sycamore and pine, used in the construction of the violins would have been sourced locally by Hugh Gordon. Michael told me that Hugh would have made his own tools and templates, which were based on the designs of Stradivari and other notable violin makers. One of the templates was clearly marked "Hugh Gordon's pattron, June 21st, 1850". Amongst the collection of templates, were two bog oak fingerboards. One of the fingerboards was three quarter length in size and had been prepared for a child's violin. Michael discovered that there was an old bog close by to the Gordon family home and suggests that is probably the source of the material. Fingerboards were normally made of ebony, but that had to be sent away for, and in the 1820 - 1850 period could have proved very expensive to obtain. The Gordon violins were stamped on the rear, below the button, and would normally have a label inside. One of the early labels known to Michael reads "Belfast 1825." Michael estimates that Hugh Gordon may have made as many as fifty violins during his lifetime.
Hugh Gordon was married to Sarah Hood. Early records from the Lower Ballymacward area show the Hood family resided close by to the Gordon residence. Sarah died in 1887. Hugh and Sarah had 3 sons - William, who died in infancy, James and Hugh and 2 daughters Eliza Ann and Mary Jane. Mary Jane married John Scott and their son Hugh Gordon Scott eventually inherited the Gordon family homeplace. Their grave is located close to Hugh and Sarah Gordon's at St. Aidan's, Glenavy.
The violin making and repairing was continued by Hugh's sons, Hugh and James.
Hugh Gordon, junior, who listed as a mechanic in various records, completed some of his father's unfinished violins at the time of his death. Hugh is listed as a mechanic in some of the early records and Michael told me that he worked as a music shop repairman. When Hugh junior himself died we know that he had in his possession a number of both completed and unfinished violins. It appears he left the Stoneyford area and went to Scotland where he met his wife to be Martha Smith. They married in Edinburgh in 1869 and later returned to Belfast, where they can be traced to various addresses from about 1875. At the turn of the 20th century they were residing at 42, Newtownards Road, Belfast - the local post office. The street directories from that era list Hugh as the sub postmaster. Martha and Hugh both died within months of each other in 1924 and they are buried in the City Cemetery, Belfast. A son of Hugh and Martha Gordon, named Hugh Erasmus Gordon died in July 1938 and is buried at Dundonald Cemetery. The engineering traditions appear to have stayed in the Gordon family as at the time of his death he was a member of the Belfast Branch of the Amalgamated Engineering Union. His middle name, Erasmus, has been given to him on account of his grandfather, Erasmus Smith, a seaman from North Leith, Scotland.
Over twenty years ago, Michael interviewed James Crawford, an 86 year-old resident of Tullynewbank, outside Stoneyford. James recalled visiting the home of James Gordon at the Wye Bridge Road, in about 1911 and could remember him sitting by the fireside scraping at the belly of a fiddle with a piece of glass and sandpaper.
Michael's passion for the subject was blatantly obvious when he told me that he would love to go back to the 1830's to meet Hugh Gordon to have a conversation with him. That may be an impossibility now, but the possibility of someone turning up with another Gordon fiddle, that has perhaps been stored and forgotten about in someone's attic would make Michael's day. Michael would love to hear from you if you are in possession of one of these instruments. That would add to his in depth knowledge of the subject and assist in piecing together some more of the Gordon fiddle jigsaw. Some of the fiddles have turned up in Canada and America recently. No doubt some of the local emigrants in the 19th century, regarded them as prize possessions, and took them across the Atlantic.
Website Publicity
The following was published in the Ulster Star on 9 November 2007. The article has been transcribed below.

Ulster Star write-up 2007
Transcription:
Popular columnist launches Glenavy history website
ONE of the Ulster Star's most popular columnists has launched a new website with the aim of providing an insight into the "rich history of the village and surrounding district of Glenavy".
www.glenavyhistory.com is the brain-child of "The Digger", who fears ongoing development in the area will "sweep away former homesteads, farms, buildings and green pastures" confining them to memory.
The idea was formulated after he became involved in research being carried out by an Australian woman into her family history.
Web designer Vicki Strickland asked her husband Tom to visit some local headstones relating to the Oakmans during a trip to Europe.
"Vicki had got information which unfortunately included some misleading details about the location of graves in the area," The Digger explained.
"Tom was, however, spared a fruitless and disappointing visit. Prior to his departure from Australia I found Vicki's own website relating to the Oakman family and made contact with her."
During a two day "whistle-stop tour" Tom and The Digger managed to visit six properties formerly owned by the Oakman family, two graveyards and a place known as Oakman's Hill.
As a way of thanking our columnist for his help Tom offered Vicki's services to set up a website to provide a forum for the large amount of historical material he has accumulated on the area over many years of research.
His Ulster Star articles can also be accessed through the site.
The Digger explained GlenavyHistory.com aims to "capture the days of yesteryear", and "piece together the jigsaw of past generations using a variety of sources to include newspapers, photographs, postcards, local ballads, poems and memories. Surfers will find tales of ancient times, ring forts, folklore, folk charmers and water diviners.
"Presently you can read about the 1829 affray in Glenavy, the violin maker Hugh Gordon who is buried in the Parish Church, Sergeant Samuel Hill, a native of the area who was awarded the Victoria Cross in 1858 in relation to acts of bravery the previous year in India and other long forgotten events. I can foresee a time when the site will be an invaluable tool for those wanting to explore their family history," he said.
If you have any material of a historical nature relating to the Glenavy area (photographs / postcards / memorabilia / memories) that you would like to share with others please contact The Digger at: diggerarticle@hotmail.com









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