. Records of the Lanarkshire and Renfrewshire Hunt . ourse of the past twenty years, and how he so successfully carried on underthe stress of war-time conditions, when the prospects for future huntingwere so gloomy, will be long remembered. As the outcome of his in-domitable courage and perseverance in this respect, he can find some satis-faction in the fact that he vacated the Mastership at a time when the Huntwas never in a more flourishing condition. Born in i860, Mr. Barclay was a son of the late Mr. John Barclay ofGateside, and he resides at Thornhill, near Johnstone. During the longperio


. Records of the Lanarkshire and Renfrewshire Hunt . ourse of the past twenty years, and how he so successfully carried on underthe stress of war-time conditions, when the prospects for future huntingwere so gloomy, will be long remembered. As the outcome of his in-domitable courage and perseverance in this respect, he can find some satis-faction in the fact that he vacated the Mastership at a time when the Huntwas never in a more flourishing condition. Born in i860, Mr. Barclay was a son of the late Mr. John Barclay ofGateside, and he resides at Thornhill, near Johnstone. During the longperiod he was at the head of affairs he not only enjoyed the esteem offollowers of the sport, but he was especially popular with the farmers overwhose land we hunt, and such cordial relations must inevitably tend towardsthe prosperity of foxhunting. The portrait here given is a reproduction of the painting in oils byW. Carter (painted in 1914), presented to the Master by the members ofthe Hunt in 1920, in recognition of his long and honourable Mr. G. BARCLAY.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjecthorses, bookyear1921