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THOUGH born in Glasgow during a temporary residence there of his father in 1845, Mr. Strang was bred in the parish of East Kilbride, in which all his ancestors had resided for over three centuries, and in which he himself holds the small ancestral estate of Millhouse. Originally the Strangs seem to have been Armstrongs, who came into the parish on the execution of Johnnie Armstrong and the break up of his Border clan by James V. in 1529. Mr. Strang is sixth in direct descent from Christopher Strang, the Covenanter, laird of the small estate of Lickprivick, who took part in the Pentland Rising, and, after receiving quarter at Rullion Green, was executed at Edinburgh, 7th December, 1666. The head of the Covenanter, after standing on Hamilton Tolbooth for twenty-two years, lies with three others in Hamilton Kirkyard under a quaint memorial which Mr. Strang has taken pains to preserve. From James, the son of the martyred Covenanter, most of the name of Strang in the world claim descent; though Dr.
John Strang, believed to be a cousin of the martyr, who was Principal of
Mr. Strang received his elementary education in the
Besides acting as law agent for several agricultural societies, and as legal correspondent for the Scottish Farmer, he is Secretary and Treasurer for the East Kilbride Open Cattle Show Society, the oldest organisation of the kind, which has the best one-day show in Scotland.
In his youth Mr. Strang excelled in athletic sports, and was considered a champion all-round amateur athlete. Of upwards of fifty prizes which he carried off, about thirty-five were firsts. But at the age of twenty-four he ended his athletic career by accidentally breaking the muscles of his right shoulder. He is a member of the Church of Scotland, and has been an elder for over seventeen years. He resides at Bosfield House, East Kilbride, on a small estate which has belonged to his wife's family for several generations. It is interesting to recall the fact that the beautifully wooded glen on his own estate of Millhouse was the scene of many Covenanters' conventicles, and of one great Sunday gathering in particular, attended by several thousand worshippers, at which upwards of sixty children were baptised in the River Cart.
Mr. Strang is the recognised modern historian of the parish.
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