John Cairns

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1856-1938

In 1915, John was senior bailie (magistrate) of the town council and co-owner of Ford mill with his brother James (1861-1924).

Their woollen mill business was started by their father James (1831-1905), a former mill manager in Galashiels who bought the Ford Mill in Langholm in 1889.

Ford Mill, c. 1870

John moved initially from Galashiels to Peterhead, Aberdeenshire, where he married Charlotte Darg, the daughter of a ship’s captain. Her father John Darg had his master’s licence withdrawn for six months for a shipwreck in 1876 off the Isle of Wight when returning with a cargo of wool from Australia. Charlotte’s brother John was a ship’s carpenter on a vessel to Rangoon, Burma, which disappeared in 1883, presumed wrecked, when he was 26.

John and Charlotte relocated to Langholm in around 1890, moving house a couple of times before settling in Holmfoot in 1907.

Holmfoot House, with an early motorcar by the front steps

Their eldest daughter Joey was an enthusiastic member of the Langholm Amateur Dramatic Society and married the town clerk, George Irving Bell. Their younger daughters, Bessie and Lottie, were very active in wartime fundraising for soldiers’ comforts and were a cook and nurse respectively at the Langholm Red Cross Hospital.

John succeeded Thomas Easton as provost, holding the position from 1919 to 1931. In the course of his lifetime, he was an elder of the Church of Scotland’s Langholm parish church; a founding member, captain and vice-president of the Langholm Golf Club; a member of the Langholm School Board; a vice-president of the Langholm Rugby club; and a keen bowler and angler.

In October 1920, he hosted Earl Haig in an impromptu caeremony after Haig had stayed with the Duke of Buccleuch at Langholm Lodge over a weekend.

Left to right: Cairns, Haig, Buccleuch

John Cairns’s daughter Bessie married Major Edward Bell, son of Arthur Bell, woollen mill manufactuer, when she was 51 and he was 64.

Bessie at front centre and Edward Bell at back left, 1930