The Scotsman

Old photos by postman who walked 18 miles a day on show

- Sarah Ward scotsman.com

Photograph­s by a postman who documented life in rural Scotland between the 19th century and the Second World War will go on display this week.

Images from the 1890s until the 1940s captured blizzards, the first military funeral of the First World War in Cupar, Fife, and even a circus elephant.

George Normand, who was born in Cupar, started taking pictures in the 1890s when he was covering 18 miles a day on foot in the surroundin­g area.

The postman was aged 18 and did four rounds a day, starting at 6am and finishing at 9pm.

He photograph­ed farm labourers, Crail fishermen and traders, as well as freak weather including a huge snowdrift.

During his rounds, Normand battled through blizzards in 1916,andwadedth­roughwaist­deep, flood water to reach the Post Office at Pitscottie in 1917.

The water was within half an inch of the counter top but despite the risks, Normand captured these moments on film.

The photograph­s, taken over 50 years, will go on display at theduncani­nstitute,incupar, which has recently been refurbishe­d and is run by Onfife.

Andrea Mcmillan, Onfife's local studies supervisor, said: "George Normand's photograph­s offer us a rare glimpse into the lives of ordinary people over 50 years as they go about their daily business.

"As we look into the eyes of his subjects, we feel a deep connection to those who lived here more than 100 years ago."

Normand joined the Army in 1917 and served overseas in the Army Veterinary Corps for two years.

Returning to Fife, he was promoted to the position of supervisin­g postman in Cupar and remained in this job until retiring in 1935.

Normand went on to use a pony-and-trap to complete his rounds, before using a bicycle, and worked as a postman for 46 years.

He died aged 102 on Christmas Day, 1976.

The absence of traffic in the rural idyll now seems striking, and castles and churches as well as shopping streets show how the area developed.

Landmark events such as the announceme­nt at Cupar Cross of the Relief of Mafeking on May 17 1900, and Cupar's first military funeral of the 1914-18 war, were caught on film.

Portraits of workers and local dignitarie­s are on display, as well as informal moments in rural life such as skaters and curlers on frozen ponds, Sunday school children on summer picnics and farmhands seeking work at Cupar's biannual hiring fair.

Normand shared his imag

es with local people using his Magic Lantern - bought for £22 15s in 1898 - to project his glass slides on to a linen screen.

The slides have now been preserved as more than 200 digital images, making them accessible to anyone with an interest in history and photograph­y.

Some photograph­s have an artistic quality, such as a Crail fisherman mending creels wearing a black hat and smoking a pipe, which evokes Vincent van Gogh's self portrait.

The images will be displayed by Onfife, which runs the Duncan Institute, and will be exhibited on Thursday.

 ?? ?? A First World War funeral in Cupar, Fife, taken by George Normand
A First World War funeral in Cupar, Fife, taken by George Normand

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