The Ettrick Forest Archers

Archers from the Ettrick Forest
Archers from the
From early times, archery was a skill practiced locally in what later became the Royal Hunting Demesne of Ettrick Forest around Selkirk. There was consequently little problem in choosing a name for the new long bow archery club we formed in Selkirk in January 2007.
In 1660, partly to emphasise the importance of archery in warfare and partly, then as now, to encourage visitors to the Burgh, Selkirk commissioned a silver arrow prize to be made in
Amongst the ‘Walter Mason Papers’ discovered in the 1990s, was the tiny original letter from 1660 requesting the arrow to be made from silver (probably stolen), confiscated from an ‘Egyptian’ (Gypsy), who had tried to sell some to a Selkirk merchant.
Archery diminished in importance and the annual competition ceased by 1675, as firearms became easier to train potential soldiers to use. The arrow was kept safe but largely forgotten in a trunk.
In 1818, Sir Walter Scott, then Sheriff of Selkirk and a member of the Company of Archers - the Monarch’s acknowledged bodyguard in
In 2006, by a happy arrangement with the Royal Company the Silver Arrow did come back and is now shared equally and on display in the Town Hall (Sir Walter Scott’s Courtroom).
After a lapse of hundreds of years and following upon the Arrow’s recovery, in January the Ettrick Forest Archers were revived to encourage the use of the long bow and to restore the competition held locally for the Arrow.
This form of archery has proved surprisingly popular and the club now has its own archery equipment. Those who have never tried long bow can ‘come and try’ at practice bow meetings held at the Philiphaugh Salmon Viewing Centre on Wednesdays at 7pm during the summer.
The level of competence of the archers is increasing week-by-week and so if
Membership costs £25 annually with special rates for family membership and under 18s. New ‘triers’ are welcomed and the first month is free!
Lindsay Neil, Secretary – 01750 20841.
