Stuart MacGregor (writer) explained

Stuart MacGregor
Birth Date:1 September 1935
Birth Place:Edinburgh, Scotland
Death Place:Jamaica
Occupation:Writer
Nationality:Scottish
Alma Mater:Edinburgh University
Genre:Scottish literature
Notableworks:The Sinner, The Myrtle and The Ivy

Stuart MacGregor was a Scottish poet, novelist and songwriter.

MacGregor attended medical school in Edinburgh and held several hospital positions in the city before being called up for National Service. He later taught social medicine, both in Scotland and the West Indies. MacGregor died in a car crash in Jamaica in 1973, aged thirty-seven.[1] Following his death, a Stuart MacGregor Memorial Prize was established by Edinburgh's Department of Community Health.[2]

In 1958, with Hamish Henderson, MacGregor co-founded the Edinburgh University Folk Society and was its first President.[3] He wrote a number of widely recorded folk songs about Edinburgh life including the humorous "Sandy Bell's Man" about dating medical students, and the romantic "Coshieville."

MacGregor's poetry appeared in an anthology published by Reprographia in 1970, Four Points of a Saltire. This featured the work of four Scottish poets, the others being Sorley MacLean, George Campbell Hay and William Neill. MacGregor's two novels were The Myrtle and Ivy (1967) and The Sinner (1973), both set in the Edinburgh folk scene.[4] A radio play, The Month of Mary Paterson, was broadcast by BBC Scotland in 1968.[5]

Selected bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. MacDougall, M. (1973) "Stuart MacGregor. The Sinner. London. Calder and Boyars Ltd. 1973. 256 pp. £2.50.," Studies in ScottishLiterature: Vol. 11: Iss. 4, 256–258.
  2. http://www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poetry/poets/stuart-macgregor Scottish Poetry Library
  3. Edinburgh University Folk (Song) Society 50th Anniversary Celebrations Programme, 2008
  4. MacDougall, M. (1973) "Stuart MacGregor. The Sinner. London. Calder and Boyars Ltd. 1973. 256 pp. £2.50.," Studies in ScottishLiterature: Vol. 11: Iss. 4, 256–258.
  5. http://www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poetry/poets/stuart-macgregor Scottish Poetry Library