A Tribute to Wendy Gear

Wendy Gear passed on recently in February, age 92. She’d been a regular researcher, lightsome, informative, and productive, in the Archives in ‘90s and early 2000s, often with her friend Mairie Anderson. In the beginning, along with Susan Cooper and Jane Manson, she explored the work of John Walker, the Aberdonian factor of the Garth Estate, in the 1860s and 1870s. No-one could fault John Walker for energy and application, but how he deployed those qualities was the problem. Communities in Bressay, Delting, North Yell and Unst found they had to seek their futures elsewhere as Mr Walker, making use of the rights of property as they stood then, laid out sheep farms.

Wendy had learned a special story as a young girl. Jane Mary Spence, age six weeks, daughter of Wendy’s great-grandparents Margaret and William Spence, died following a December boat journey from Basta Voe to Reafirth, Mid Yell, in 1868, despite being protectively enclosed in a leather bucket. The Spences had been moved on in favour of Cheviots and Leicesters.

The story of Jane Mary was a motivator and Wendy kept on exploring the story of the factor, who was happily a great producer of records, and a vigorous correspondent. Many of those have survived in Gardie House, Bressay. Apart from his work for the Gardie estate, he became involved in School Boards, mining, and fishing. Leaving Shetland in 1872, he was to live well for a while, until bankruptcy intervened.

Businesses and business failure followed, including a spell in South Africa. He’d had a pre-Shetland career in Australia (his diary of the voyage survives) and Wendy went there to seek information. John Walker died, after his various adventures, in College Bounds, Aberdeen’s university quarter, with very little wealth. A lot of Shetlanders have passed the site unknowingly, in their higher education years, including Wendy and myself, and many of the descendants whose lives he disrupted in the islands.

In 2005 Wendy’s book came out – John Walker’s Shetland – one of the best books about Shetland in recent decades, a joy to see. It had many a quotation from John Walker. Hay Williamson, a tenant in Quoys of Garth, Delting, dug in his heels, but died suddenly. In a letter to his employer, John Walker says – Your troublesome tenant Hay Williamson is dead. – He must have been seized with a fit whilst at the ebb and drowned in the tide. The book is still available if you want to know more.

John Walker was a difficult act to follow. Wendy did pursue other interests after that, one was known as Mad Neven, an 18th century Yell magnate with issues. Pre-Covid she had thoughts of exploring the history of Hascosay, where some of her ancestors came from. It was easy to find something to interest Wendy. A rule book for the Bruce Hostel for Girls sparked off a reminiscence about a sleep-walking (and disturbing) matron, and a short article in Shetland Life magazine No. 314. The regime was strict for the girls in the late 1940s. She told about the sheer joy of being allowed out for Up Helly Aa, and remarked that they had to study as so little else was allowed.

That habit of study, inculcated in the peerie lass who arrived in an unfamiliar Lerwick in 1946 to be educated in the Anderson Institute and stay in the town for weeks at a time, paid off in her retirement, with her biography of John Walker that grew from the kernel of the story of Jane Mary Spence’s short life.

Related Posts

Celebrating Valda Grieve this International Women’s Day

Valda was an incomer to Whalsay in 1933, when she moved there with her young son Michael to join her husband. Born in Cornwall in ...

Read more

Outwith: Valda, MacDiarmid and Whalsay - Event Programme

The story of Hugh MacDiarmid and Valda in Whalsay continues to inspire nearly a century on. Discover their legacy through a vibrant ...

Read more

We are hiring!

If you’re passionate about Shetland’s cultural heritage and want to make a real difference helping to protect, celebrate and share ...

Read more

Terms of Endearment

February, so far dim and wet, but also the Valentine month, perhaps a chance to seek warmth outwith the weather. Cards and flowers, ...

Read more

The Telegrams - Up Helly Aa

Lyndon Nicolson, Guizer Jarl, in the person of Knut the Great, visited the Museum and Archives yesterday. It was a fine occasion, ...

Read more

New exhibition celebrates gifted Shetland craftsman, Bobby Simpson

A special exhibition celebrating the life and crafting skills of Robert Gilbert Blance Simpson (1928 – 1974) opens at Shetland ...

Read more

Up Helly Aa 2026 - what's on at the Shetland Museum

Join us at the Shetland Museum & Archives as we celebrate Up Helly Aa 2026 with extended opening times, Origins of UHA tours, a food ...

Read more

Shetland Amenity Trust unveils Up Helly Aa 2026 events

The fiery season will soon return and Shetland Amenity Trust​​​​​​​ is preparing a varied programme of events and ...

Read more

Cauld Wadder

So it’s been snowing. Temperatures below zero, minus two, or minus four. It depends on where you are, a little altitude matters at ...

Read more

A Sixpence Sized Challenge

Sometimes an archival discovery resonates far beyond the documents themselves. In this blog, Cultural Heritage Officer Eileen ...

Read more

November Round Up

From heritage events and restoration projects to new additions in the archives and activities from schools and families, here's a look ...

Read more

Lights Up: Archiving miscellaneous Islesburgh Drama Group papers

With the panto season upon us, we thought it would be timely to share this blog post from our Archives Volunteer, Amber Paton. After ...

Read more

A Treasure Arrives at Shetland Archives

We’ve just received one of our most beautiful donations - a stunning collection of 19th-century papers including two intricate ...

Read more

Remembrance, 1925

In 1925, Shetland urged ex-servicemen to attend the Armistice parade just as they were - work clothes and all - so they could honour ...

Read more

September & October Monthly Round-Up

What a whirlwind the past couple of months have been at the Shetland Amenity Trust. From welcoming school groups to hosting tours to ...

Read more

Join our mailing list

Sign up for our newsletter to receive the latest news, events, exhibitions and behind-the-scenes stories from Shetland Amenity Trust.

Sign up