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Abbey Bridge Traditional Geocache

This cache has been archived.

Jack Aubrey: The water has dropped and the nettles have risen. sadly the cache had not survived. We found the top and bottom of the box, much the worse for a dunking, but no contents.

Time to put this one to rest!

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Hidden : 2/4/2006
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:

An easy cache to take in during a circular walk along the River Tyne from Haddington. On the way you will discover why there is what looks like half a church on the north side of the A199 beside Amisfield Cottages. You must email me with the explanation for your log to stand!

The Abbey Bridge where the cache is concealed takes a minor road over the Tyne. You could easily drive pretty much up to the box. So in addition to finding the physical cache I want you to solve the mystery of that bisected church and email me with the single compound word that explains its purpose. The answer is contained in an information board about Amisfield Park which is …… well, somewhere along the route described below.

The best starting point is to come over the Victoria Bridge in Haddington. There is roadside parking on Whittinghame Drive just beyond Bermaline Mills. Follow a tarmac path across the playing fields which follows the boundary of the cemetery to lead you to a footbridge across the Tyne. Turn right and follow the path along the north bank of the river. As you look across the fields to the north you can see the line of the new A1 “Expressway” and the old road (now the A199) just beyond it. And there is that odd “half church” – all the frontage but none of the depth, for all the world like something from a film set.

The path takes you to the point where the mediaeval Abbey Bridge crosses the Tyne. Follow the road over the bridge and then take the path through the wall on the right into Amisfield Park. The old estate grounds are now Haddington Golf Course. The path running through the Course is a public right of way. Once you reach the Clubhouse the path becomes a tarmac drive which will bring you back to Whittinghame Drive close to the ruins of St Martin’s Church, possibly the oldest church in Scotland, which are worth a visit and which have a cache of their own before you return to your car and or refreshment in Haddington.

The Abbey Bridge

The bridge is now the only physical reminder of the presence here of a nunnery founded in the 13th century and which stood here for 400 years. It was used in 1548 as the meeting place for the Scots Parliament which agreed to the marriage of Mary Queen of Scots to the Dauphin. In Knox’s thunderous phrases: "Thus was she sold to go to France, to the end that she should drink of that liquor that should remain with her all her lifetime for a plague to the realm and for her final destruction."

Amisfield Park

Known in the 1680s as Newmilns, the park was then the property of Sir James Stansfield, who was a Colonel in Cromwells Army. He came north after the Battle of Dunbar and founded a wollen mill here. Stansfield may have been an upright man but his son Philip was a sad disappointment to him. “Although his father had given him a liberal education, he had taken ill courses, and been detained prisoner in the Marshalsea, in Southwark, and in the public prisons of Antwerp, Orleans, and other places, from whence his said father had released him; and that notwithstanding, he fell to his debauched and villainous courses again.”

Sir James resolved to disinherit Philip and settle his estate on his younger son. Philip’s response was to cut his father’s throat and deposit the body in the Tyne in an attempt to make it appear that he had drowned himself. Not a very cunning plan you might think; and made all the more transparent by the evidence adduced at his trial that “within an hour after his father was brought from the water he got the buckles off his shoes and put them on his own.” Sir James’ body was examined by a surgeon at Morham Kirk, and the surgeon’s evidence at the trial contained the grisly story of the wounds reopening and bleeding afresh when Philip handled the corpse.

The account of Philip’s trial concludes:

“ The assize finding him guilty, the Lords of Justiciary ordered him to be hanged on the 15th of February, at the Cross of Edinburgh, and his tongue to be cut out for cursing his father, and his right hand to be cut off for the parricide, and his head to be put upon the East Port of Haddington, as nearest to the place of murder, and his body to be hung up in chains betwixt Leith and Edinburgh, and his lands and goods to be confiscated for the treason.”

“All this was rigorously put into execution. “Some thought," says Lord Fontainhall, a contemporary judge, "if not a miraculous, yet an extraordinary return of the imprecations was the accident of the slipping of the knots on the cross, whereby his feet and knees were on the scaffold, which necessitated them to strangle him, bearing therein a near resemblance to his father's death; and a new application having been made that they might be allowed to bury him, Duke Hamilton was for it, but the Chancellor would not consent, because he had mocked his religion. So his body was hung up, and some days after being stolen down, it was found lying in a ditch among some water, as his father's was; and by order was hung up again, and then a second time was taken down."

Amisfield passed into the hands of “the infamous gambler and rake” Colonel Francis Charteris, whose daughter married James, 5th Earl of Wemyss (1699-1756). He named the estate Amisfield after his lands in Dumfriesshire. Amisfield House, regarded as the finest example of Orthodox Palladianism in Scotland, was built c.1755 by Isaac Ware for Francis Charteris of Wemyss, who inherited the estate, but not the title, from his father. It was extended in 1785, but was demolished in 1928. Some of the sandstone from this house was reused to build a school at Prestonpans, Longniddry Golf Clubhouse and the Vert Memorial Hospital at Haddington (which has since been converted into flats, one of which houses a certain “Jack Aubrey”.) A stable block and a folly in the form of a Grecian Temple remain. The folly has been recently restored. The land was sold to Haddington Town Council in 1960 for £49,000. A snip!

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

...haqrearngu gur nepurf....

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)