Hello ROSSGEN List, Please find below some information on my new book, "1851 Exiles". I have posted the information because I think it might be of interest to the group, given the publication's subject matter and connection to the Isle of Lewis. 1851 Exiles by Angus Macleod Since the release of my CD, "The Silent Ones, A Legacy of the Highland Clearances", I have been asked repeatedly about authoring a book on the Isle of Lewis Settlement of Huron Township. I am pleased to announce that a limited print run of such a book is now available. Entitled "1851 Exiles", the paperback tells the story of Huron Township, Ontarios Lewis Settlers. Victims of Scotlands infamous Highland Clearances, the settlers were evicted from their crofts on the Hebridean island of Lewis in 1851 by landlord James Matheson and then transported overseas where they put down roots together in a block of farms in the centre of Huron Township, Bruce County. The group was successful in maintaining their Gaelic language and culture well into the 20th century. "1851 Exiles" includes a number of stories and anecdotes from the settlement never before published plus a complete history of the Isle of Lewis from pre-history to the Matheson Clearances. In addition, there is information on the Lewis Community in the Eastern Townships of Quebec and 39 breathtaking original colour photos by Leodhas Macleod taken in the three main locations of the story the Isle of Lewis, Eastern Townships of Quebec and Huron Township, Ontario. 1851 Exiles also contains some wonderful rare old photos recently restored especially for the project. A large portion of the book deals with the day to day lives of Huron Townships Lewis folk and was drawn from a variety of sources including personal correspondence, interviews, and family histories made available to me by descendants. The book also contains some interesting new information on Matheson Clearances obtained from recent interviews with sources on the Isle of Lewis. 1851 Exiles is an excellent companion piece to my CD, "The Silent Ones, A Legacy of the Highland Clearances." Chapter Titles are as follows: The Schoolmaster Eilean Leodhas Farewell to the Stones The Woods of Huron Pride, Poverty and the Presbyterian Church A Faded Memorial Scattered Seeds 1851 Exiles is available from my website located at www.torquil.net or by sending a cheque or money order to Torquil Productions P.O. Box 303 Kincardine, Ontario N2Z 2Y8 Email: info@torquil.net Toll free telephone: 1-877-489-4693 1851 Exiles is $29.99 including taxes, shipping and handling. All the best, Angus Macleod Excerpt from Angus Macleods "1851 Exiles" Here lies my dear wife and child They to me, were dear and lovely Their time with me was short but sweet But now they are gone and I am lonely. So reads one of the stones in the Huron Presbyterian Church Cemetery or Old Lewis Cemetery as it is sometimes called - the inscription - a sad and lonely tribute from a husband to his dearly departed wife and child. The husbands obvious grief at the untimely death of his young family is reflected in the simple but poignant verse engraved on the tombstone. The words are faded now, weathered by age and the harsh Southwestern Ontario environment. The other stones in the cemetery are in a similar condition or worse. Wild flowers and tall grass cloak the entire area leaving the site almost invisible to the human eye. An old gate, once polished and ornate, rests precariously against a solitary tombstone situated at one end of the graveyard, at its feet remnants and pieces of tombstones litter the area. Picking up a remnant, one can only identify the prefix Mac etched thinly into its surface. The old Lewis cemetery, now long abandoned, has a truly desolate and empty feeling to it. When within its confines, one has the feeling of being total isolated from the rest of the world. Looking at the gravestone erected for the prematurely diseased wife and child, it is easy to wonder when the husbands heartrending inscription was last read and if, in fact, it will ever be viewed again. -