The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Church is presented with lifesaving legacy

FORFAR: New defibrilla­tor gifted by parishione­r through fund set up in memory of his late wife

- JANET THOMSON jathomson@thecourier.co.uk

A lifesaving defibrilla­tor is available seven days a week in an Angus town centre church, thanks to the generous donation of a member of the congregati­on.

A £1,000 cheque presented by Forfar man Stewart Davidson from a fund set up in memory of his late wife, Lorna, has enabled the East and Old Parish Church to purchase the kit which is positioned prominentl­y in the foyer.

The gift is one of many made by Mr Davidson through the Lorna Davidson Memorial Fund which, over the last five years, has donated £32,000 to a variety of worthy causes.

Mr Davidson, 73, said: “My son Mark and I set up the fund when my wife died of pancreatic cancer.

“We set it up to raise funds for the needy, to do something in Lorna’s memory.

“She was very thoughtful and looked to the future. When she died I found an envelope she had left with £1,000 which she asked to be used to help children’s causes.”

Mr Davidson and his son organise an annual golf competitio­n and in the past have given money to Lippen Care and pancreatic cancer, diabetes and local children’s charities.

This year they donated £1,000 to pancreatic cancer, diabetes and the East and Old Church for the defibrilla­tor.

The 2018 golf competitio­n attracted 24 teams, including one from Mr Davidson’s church, with the majority of the funds raised through a raffle supported by local businesses and individual­s.

An annual charity music night at The Black Abbot in Montrose also boosts the fund.

Modest in his fundraisin­g efforts and his donation to the church, Mr Davidson said: “If this is never used in the next 100 years, great, nobody needs it, but it is there for somebody who may need it.

“The support we have had over the years has been superb.”

The Rev Barbara Ann Sweetin welcomed the donation of the lifesaving defibrilla­tor.

She said: “Our prayer is the defibrilla­tor will never be used because hopefully no one will ever have need of it, but if someone is in need then we as a church are here to help.

“George Mclean from the St Andrew’s Ambulance Associatio­n sourced our defibrilla­tor and is coming to train seven members of the kirk in how to use the machine and give us a course in emergency first aid.”

The donation is the second life-changer donated to the East and Old following the recent gift of a £50,000 minibus from church member Eleanor Stewart.

It has been named in memory of the widow’s daughters, Hazel, who died in December 2017, and Joyce, who died when she was an infant.

If this is never used in the next 100 years, great, nobody needs it, but it is there for somebody who may need it. STEWART DAVIDSON

 ??  ?? Stewart Davidson hands the defibrilla­tor to the Rev Barbara Ann Sweetin of East and Old Church.
Stewart Davidson hands the defibrilla­tor to the Rev Barbara Ann Sweetin of East and Old Church.

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