Name Beith's name is thought to emanate from
Ogham, which is sometimes referred to as the "
Celtic Tree Alphabet", ascribing names of trees to individual letters.
Beithe in
Old Irish means
Birch-tree (cognate to Latin
betula). There is reason to believe that the whole of the district was covered with woods. The town of Beith itself was once known as 'Hill of Beith' as this was the name of the feudal barony and was itself derived from the
Court Hill near
Hill of Beith Castle. Alternatively, Beith may be derived from
Cumbric *baɣeδ, 'boar' (
Welsh baedd). The local pronunciation of the name would favour this theory. The Wood of Beit, now the 'Moor of Beith', has been identified as an Arthurian site where according to
Taliessin in a poem under the name of 'Canowan' it was the site of a
battle in the wood of Beit at the close of the day. Saint Inan Beith is said to have been the occasional residence of
Saint Inan, a confessor of some celebrity, whose principal place of abode was
Irvine. He flourished about 839. Although he is said to have been a
hermit, according to tradition
Saint Inan often visited Beith, frequenting Cuff Hill with its Rocking Stone and various other prehistoric monuments. A cleft in the west-front of Lochlands Hill is still known as "''St. Inan's Chair''" and said to have been used by the saint as a pulpit. An unsuccessful search for the saint's writings which were said to be preserved in the library of Bonci,
Archbishop of Pisa, was made by Colonel Mure of Caldwell in the 19th century.
Saint Inan is said to have preached to the assembled people from the chair on the hill. There was not a great population in the area at that time and the people were located not in Beith, but up on the top of the Bigholm near to the old Beith water
dams. The first settlements were in the heavily wooded areas around the dams where people were safe from attack and could get food from the land, and fish in the lochs. The Saints of old went where the people were, and they also tended to go where there had been worship of heathen gods. It has been suggested that High Bogside Farm, which used to be called Bellsgrove, was really "
Baalsgrove", which fits in with the story of
Saint Inan going to where the
pagan gods were. There is an annual civic fete held in the town bearing
Saint Inan's name.
Alexander Montgomerie The sixteenth century poet
Alexander Montgomerie was probably born in Hazelhead (now
Hessilhead) Castle, which is on the outskirts of Beith, beyond
Gateside. Montgomerie is regarded as one of the finest of
Middle Scots poets, and perhaps the greatest
Scottish exponent of the
sonnet form.
Smugglers Beith has a historical connection to
smuggling and built a reputation during the 18th century as being a town which harboured those whose intentions were not always lawful. In 1733 forty or fifty Beith smugglers sacked the
Irvine Customs House, escaping with a rich booty of confiscated contraband goods and by 1789 a company of 76 soldiers were quartered in the town dealing with the continuing illicit trade in tea, tobacco, and spirits. This caused great inconvenience to the law-abiding citizens on whom the soldiers were billeted. The town was policed in this fashion for some time thereafter. Hence, the Main Street's popular public house is still called the Smugglers Tavern, recalling the days when Beith's location between the coast and
Paisley and
Glasgow, made it a convenient stopping off point for those involved in nefarious activities. A possible relic of the smuggling days of Beith is the
ley tunnel that is said to run from Eglinton Street to Kilbirnie Loch.
Morrishill and James Montgomery Now a small housing estate, the house and land of Morrishill stood a short distance south of Beith. It commanded an excellent view and was well sheltered with trees. Owned by Robert Shedden, who purchased the land in 1748, it is notoriously linked to the case of James Montgomery. James Montgomery, an enslaved
African, was brought from
Virginia to Beith by Shedden. He wanted Montgomery, then called "
Shanker", apprenticed to a joiner so that he would learn a skill and could then be sold for a large profit back in
Virginia. James was trained in carpentry by Robert Morrice, husband of Shedden's sister Elizabeth Montgomery. When
Shanker was baptised in Beith Parish Church (by the
Rev. John Witherspoon In 1745 he led the men of Beith to Glasgow to defend King George III against the Young Pretender in the '45 rebellion. Despite receiving orders to return to Beith, Witherspoon carried on, was captured at the
Battle of Falkirk and imprisoned for a time in
Doune Castle. He died in 1794 on his farm that he had built"
Tusculum," just outside
Princeton, and is buried in the
Princeton Cemetery. –His direct descendants include actress
Reese Witherspoon, and he is commemorated by statues in
Washington D.C., at the
University of the West of Scotland in
Paisley, and a plaque, placed by DSDI in 2009 in Beith town centre.
Robert Tannahill The Scottish Poet
Robert Tannahill's relatives lived at
Boghall Farm near
Gateside. His mother, Janet Pollock, came from Boghall although she spent much of her life at the home of her uncle, Hugh Brodie, who farmed at Langcroft at the foot of Calder Glen, near
Lochwinnoch.
Robert Tannahill (3 June 1774 - 17 May 1810), was known as the 'Weaver Poet', his music and poetry is contemporaneous with that of
Robert Burns and they both died when relatively young.
Henry Faulds Henry Faulds, the originator of the concept of forensic use of
fingerprinting, was born in Beith in 1843. A well-travelled man, he explained the suitability of
fingerprinting for the identification of criminals and also wrote to
Charles Darwin to forward his ideas. The letter was never published and he died in 1930, aged 86, bitter at the lack of recognition he had received for his work. His work in
Japan is remembered by a memorial stone in
Tokyo. In 2007 a memorial was also placed in view in
Woolstanton near to St Margaret's churchyard, where he was laid to rest. On 12 November 2004 a substantial memorial stone with interpretation plaques were dedicated to his memory in Beith town centre close to the site of the house in New Street where he was born.
Robert Aitken Aitken was a land surveyor and cartographer who published in Beith a New Parish Atlas of Ayrshire in 1829. ==Industry==