I HAVE written before on my special interest in the subject of the Stone of Destiny, having been a first-year student at Glasgow University in 1951 when was the Stone was recovered (not “stolen”) from Westminster Abbey by four university students, while my father was head of the Glasgow Police Special Branch responsible for finding and recovering it.
But I have never before seen the photograph in today’s Herald of the Stone being carried from Arbroath Abbey, in which my father is clearly seen as one of those in attendance ("Views sought on Stone of Destiny museum move", The Herald, August 16).
Asthe Stone of Destiny was originally quarried near Errol, Perthshire and stolen from the royal palace at Scone, Perthshire in 1296 by the marauding English King Edward 1, it is most appropriate that it should be the centrepiece of the exhibits in the new museum to be built in the city of Perth. This is clearly the most appropriate final resting place for one of Scotland’s most interesting historic relics.
Iain A D Mann, Glasgow G12.
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