Finlay J. MacDonald

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Finlay_J._MacDonald an entity of type: Thing

Finlay John Macdonald (Scottish Gaelic: Fionnlagh Iain MacDhòmhnaill; 4 July 1925 – 14 October 1987) was a Scottish journalist and radio and television producer and writer. Born and raised on Harris in the Outer Hebrides, and a native Gaelic language speaker, was an important figure in Gaelic radio and television broadcasting, founding the . He co-founded the quarterly Gaelic magazine Gairm in 1951 with Derick Thomson and served as its chief editor until 1964. He was a radio and television producer. He wrote three books of memoirs that recall his childhood on Harris: rdf:langString
rdf:langString Finlay J. MacDonald
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rdf:langString Finlay John Macdonald (Scottish Gaelic: Fionnlagh Iain MacDhòmhnaill; 4 July 1925 – 14 October 1987) was a Scottish journalist and radio and television producer and writer. Born and raised on Harris in the Outer Hebrides, and a native Gaelic language speaker, was an important figure in Gaelic radio and television broadcasting, founding the . He co-founded the quarterly Gaelic magazine Gairm in 1951 with Derick Thomson and served as its chief editor until 1964. Macdonald edited A Journey to the Western Isles (1983), in which he "retraced" the 1773 tour of Scotland by Samuel Johnson and James Boswell by providing the text of Johnson's A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland along with his own commentary and numerous colour and black-and-white photographs. He was a radio and television producer. He wrote three books of memoirs that recall his childhood on Harris: * Crowdie and Cream (1982) * Crotal and White (1983) * The Corncrake and the Lysander (1985). These have been cited as providing a valuable insight into life in the Outer Hebrides in the inter-war years.
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