As a suicide, Tannahill was buried in an unmarked grave in the burying ground adjacent to the West Relief Church (now
Castlehead Cemetery) on Canal Street in Paisley. In 1866 a granite monument was erected there by public subscription, marking the growing recognition of the poet's importance. The centenary of his birth was marked in 1874 by an edition of his
Poems and Songs and by a procession to the
Gleniffer Braes, one of the most frequently mentioned landscapes in his work, attended by 15,000 people. A series of annual concerts at which his songs were performed were held on the Braes between 1876 - 1936. The penny admission charge went towards paying for
David Watson Stevenson's statue of Tannahill that was erected in the grounds of
Paisley Abbey in 1883. A memorial well was also built in the glen, although now it is much neglected. Likenesses of the poet all seem to have stemmed from a pencil sketch made the day after his death by local artist John Morton. The first copperplate engraving of this appeared as the frontispiece of
The Harp of Renfrewshire in 1819 and later accompanied editions of the poems in 1822, 1825, 1838, and 1846. Later came bust-size portraits in oil, of which one was made in 1833 by William Beith, a Paisley flower painter. Another by Thomas Carswell, a Greenock artist, was made for Mr. Marshall of Ladyburn, who had been at school with Tannahill. This was partly done from the engraved portrait in the
Harp of Renfrewshire and checked against Marshall's remembrance of his old school-fellow. Still another by Alexander Blair was engraved by Samuel Freeman for the
Biographical dictionary of eminent Scotsmen (see above). A bust of the poet was sculpted by John Fillans in 1845, again using Morton's drawing as a basis, and this was presented to Paisley Museum in 1873. Elsewhere, a bust of the poet was included in the
Wallace Monument’s Hall of Heroes in 1869. And in 1889 his portrait appeared among others in the stained glass windows at Lamlash House commissioned from Stephen Adam. Tannahill is one of the sixteen writers and poets depicted on the lower sections of the
Scott Monument on
Princes Street in
Edinburgh. He appears on the right side of the southern face. After a period of intermission, the Burns Club he helped found now meets during the winter months in the old Tannahill cottage. The Scottish folk music group the
Tannahill Weavers, active since 1976, are named after Robert Tannahill, and have recorded several of his songs. == See also ==