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The Church at War
Within
South Leith Church can be seen memorials of past campaigns from around
the world in which members of the congregation have taken part, from the
battle of Prestonpans up to the Second World War.
Going
further back in history, however, the church has seen the coming of the
armies of Edward I and later his son Edward II, after and before the
battle of Bannockburn, at which he was defeated by Robert the
Bruce.
Later,
the church was burnt by Edward Seymour, Lord Protector of England in
1544 and again in 1547, the year in which the Scottish army was defeated
at the battle of Pinkie (near Musselburgh). Later, the town of Leith was
laid siege to by the Lords of the Congregation and an English army under
Lord Gray, against the French who were holding Leith. It was during the
siege that a cannon ball came through the east window and out by the
west window during an Easter Mass. Fortunately nobody was killed.
During
the Cromwellian Period the church was used as a meeting place between
the covenanters and the royalists in an attempt to reach a compromise
rather than war with one another. Unfortunately these diplomatic
attempts failed and the Covenanters and Royalists warred for
approximately six years. During the war the church was used as a
munitions dump for Oliver Cromwell's army whilst the citadel was being
built in North Leith under General Monk.
One of
the greatest tragedies to beset Leith was the Gretna Rail disaster of
1915 in which two companies of Royal Scots (raised in Leith) in an
express troop train collided with a local train standing on the track,
after which another express train crashed into the wreckage. 215 men
were killed and 191 men were seriously injured. This is believed to have
been the worst railway disaster in British railway history. Many of the
dead were buried at Rosebank Cemetery and the Company colours now fly
within the church as a memorial to those who lost their lives.
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