The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Tragedy’s gift

Sir Michael Nairn tells how a First World War family tragedy led to the gifting of Kirkcaldy Galleries.

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It was the family firm that launched its floor cloth factory in 1847 before leading Kirkcaldy to become the linoleum capital of the world. But 50 years after Michael Nairn and Co Ltd ended its associatio­n with the lino industry, a gift to the town born out of a Nairn family tragedy is being remembered this week as the country reflects on the 100th anniversar­y of the end of the First World War.

It’s 93 years since Kirkcaldy’s War Memorial and Museum & Art Gallery opened in 1925, with the library added in 1928.

They were gifted by the then chairman of the company, John Nairn. But that gift came at a tremendous personal loss.

Along with the constructi­on of the adjacent war memorial and memorial garden, the building was gifted in memory of John’s only son, Ian, who was killed aged 25 while serving in the First World War.

Ian died only two months before the war ended while serving with the Fife and Forfar Yeomanry at the Somme – mown down by a German machine gun.

The events were remembered at a special reception held at the Kirkcaldy Galleries on Wednesday – and they will be in the minds of many when the Armistice Day events take place this weekend.

“Ian was killed on September 2 1918,” said Dundee businessma­n Sir Michael Nairn, 80, a direct descendent of the first Michael Nairn.

“We thought it would be better to mark this occasion in what is effectivel­y Remembranc­e Week, leading up to the Armistice on November 11. But in all likelihood without Ian’s death, Kirkcaldy would never have got its museum.

“It is also right to remind ourselves that 600 employees of the company including Ian and Robert, Robert Spencer-Nairn’s grandfathe­r, left to fight in one or other of the services. Of those, over 80, leaving grieving families at home, did not return.”

The Nairn business was started in 1847 by the first Michael Nairn, who came from a sail making background.

By putting sail cloth on the floor and painting it, it became a floor covering. Linoleum, as a much more substantia­l product, was invented 30 years later.

Michael Nairn’s son, Michael Barker Nairn, built the business and took it all over the world – developing factories in America, France, and Germany, as well as in Kirkcaldy where at one time it employed more than 2,000 people.

It was when he died in 1915, however, that his younger brother John took over as chairman – leading, just three years later, to the personal tragedy of war.

“John Nairn lost his only son,” said today’s Sir Michael, “and at the end of the war, like most towns in Britain, Kirkcaldy wanted to create a war memorial.

“Very generously, John said as part of the war memorial he would contribute the cost of the building to house a museum and art gallery.

“Rather than just a plinth – which is the common thing with the names of the sons that were killed – Kirkcaldy got not only the memorial but this lovely building.”

Sir Michael explained that John Nairn was quite an art collector and contribute­d not only the building but a good part of the founding collection of art.

At a time when Kirkcaldy had developed as an industrial centre, the addition of a gallery and library to the town was a vital addition to its fabric.

“It just so happened that John Nairn – whatever genes were in him – they came out and he was very artistic,” added Sir Michael.

“When he was chairman of the business it was well recorded that one of his major contributi­ons in a business sense was choosing designs of linoleum that would look good on the floor and sell well to the public in what was a competitiv­e world to make the business a success. His contributi­on was more in the arts side than as a businessma­n. He was also a very retiring type. He wasn’t a self-publicist. He was a very shy man who preferred to be behind the scenes but was a very generous person who supported good causes in Fife and Kirkcaldy in particular.”

The Nairn family has not been directly linked to the lino industry for around 50 years. In 1967 the directors decided to sell the business to Unilever, leading to the company that continues operating today as Forbo-Nairn.

Today’s Sir Michael, who served in The Black Watch, worked in the family firm for seven years from 1959.

However, when the business was sold, he took himself off to the European Business School in France where he did an MBA in business management, going on to work for industry in London and Australia.

In 1978 he started his own business in Dundee called Rautomead Ltd, a metallurgi­cal engineerin­g company based at Wester Gourdie that builds electric furnaces for melting copper, gold and silver.

With the 40th anniversar­y of his own company and 100th anniversar­y of the ending of the Great War, he feels matters have gone “full circle”.

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 ?? Picture: Dougie Nicolson. ?? Clockwise from below: Kirkcaldy Galleries and the town’s war memorial; Ian Nairn; officers of the Fife and Forfar Yeomanry in 1915; Sir Michael Nairn.
Picture: Dougie Nicolson. Clockwise from below: Kirkcaldy Galleries and the town’s war memorial; Ian Nairn; officers of the Fife and Forfar Yeomanry in 1915; Sir Michael Nairn.
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