Tofterå Slettemoen genealogy

Laird Robert Dinsmoor

Laird Robert Dinsmoor

Male Abt 1622 - Abt 1667  (~ 45 years)

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  • Name Robert Dinsmoor 
    Prefix Laird 
    Born Abt 1622  Scotland Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Died Abt 1667  Achenmead on the River Tweed, Scotland Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I27841  Tofterå Slettemoen
    Last Modified 14 Dec 2018 

    Children 
     1. John Dinsmoor,   b. Abt 1650, Peebleshire, Scotland Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Bef 1749, Ballywattick, Ballymoney, County Antrim, Ireland Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 98 years)
    Last Modified 14 Dec 2018 
    Family ID F7816  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • "Laird Achenmead, the progenitor, and earliest known ancestor of the Dinsmoors, was a Scotchman, born in Auld Scotia certainly not far from the year 1600. The fact that he was called Laird would indicate that he was a man of some note and consequence in his locality. He was a farmer, had tenants under him, and dwelt on the bank of the flowing Tweed, at a place which tradition has variously called Achenmead, Auchinmede, Aikenmead, and other variations of the name. This spot has not been identified and located by his inquiring and investigating descendants. Tradition asserts that he was a follower and adherent of Douglass, and as one of those powerful chiefs had his home in a fortress, whose walls were of wondrous thickness and strength, placed on a projecting rock in a fiercely wind-swept and narrow defile, on the north bank of the River Tweed, known as Neidpath Castle, near the City of Peebles, it is not amiss to hazard the conjecture that Laird Dinsmoor's home was in the immediate vicinity.

      ** Leonard Allison Morrison, Among the Scotch-Irish: and a Tour in Seven Countries, in Ireland, Wales, England, Scotland, France, Switzerland, and Italy; with History of Dinsmoor Family (Boston, Massachusetts: Damrell & Upham, 1891)

      Auchinmede is in the parish of Kilwinning, in the district of Cunningham, in the County of Ayr (Ayrshire), southwest of Glasgow (not on the River Tweed).
      "In forming the road to Auchinmede a stone coffin was discovered containing human bones." The New Statistical Account of Scotland: Ayr" MDCCCXLV (1845).
      Spelling variations: Auchinmede, Auchinmaid, Auchinmead, Auchenmead: Ayrshire OS Name Books, 1855-1857, parts being the property of the Earl of Eglinton at that time:
      https://scotlandsplaces.gov.uk/digital-volumes/ordnance-survey-name-books/ayrshire-os-name-books-1855-1857/ayrshire-volume-41/38
      The Auchenmade quarry is a large Limestone Quarry used for various purposes. The Property of the Earl of Eglinton.