Scottish Pet Portraits
True dog stories (9) Greyfriars Bobby of Edinburgh


hand painted logo of collie, paints and brushes

(1) A Working Colley
(2) Patsy Ann - 'Official Greeter of Juneau, Alaska'
(3) Beckett
(4) Eric Knight - creator of 'Lassie'
(5) Stickeen by John Muir 1909
(6) Balto
(7) Old Yeller
(8) Old Shep
(9) Greyfriars Bobby
(10) A Little Hero



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Pen and ink drawing of a German Shepherd dog Pen and ink drawing of an Irish Setter dog Pen and ink drawing of two Borzois dogs Pen and ink drawing of a Dalmation dog Pen and ink drawing of a Japakitas dog Wash drawing of a jack Russell dog



Greyfriars Bobby


John Gray, a gardener, together with his wife Jess and son John, arrived in Edinburgh around 1850. Unable to find work as a gardener he avoided the workhouse by joining the Edinburgh Police Force as a night watchman. To keep him company through the long winter nights John took on a partner, a diminutive Skye Terrier, his 'watchdog' called Bobby. Together John and Bobby became a familiar sight, trudging through the old cobbled streets of Edinburgh. Through thick and thin, winter and summer, they were faithful friends.

The years on the streets appear to have taken their toll on John, as he was treated by the police surgeon for tuberculosis. He eventually died of the disease on the 15th of February 1858 and was buried in Greyfriars Kirkyard. Bobby soon touched the hearts of the local residents when he refused to leave his master's grave, even in the worst weather conditions. The gardener and keeper of Greyfriars tried on many occasions to evict Bobby from the Kirkyard. In the end he gave up and provided a shelter for Bobby by placing sacking beneath two tablestones at the side of John Gray's grave.

Bobby's fame spread throughout Edinburgh. It is reported thst almost on a daily basis the crowds would gather at the entrance of the Kirkyard., waiting for the one o'clock gun that would signal the appearance of Bobby leaving the grave for his midday meal. Bobby would follow William Dow, a local joiner and cabinet maker to the same coffee house that he had frequented with his now dead master, where he was given a meal.In 1867 a new bye-law was passed that required all dogs to be licensed in the city or they would be destroyed. Sir William Chambers (the Lord Provost of Edinburgh) decided to pay Bobby's licence and presented him with a collar with a brass inscription "Greyfriars Bobby from the Lord Provost of Edinburgh 1867 licenced". This can be seen at the Museum of Edinburgh.

The kind folk of Edinburgh took good care of Bobby, but still he remained loyal to his master. For fourteen years the dead man's faithful dog kept constant watch and guard over the grave until his own death in 1872.

Baroness Angelia Georgina Coutts, President of the Ladies Committee of the RSPCA, was so deeply moved by his story that she asked the City Council for permission to erect a granite fountain with a statue of Bobby placed on top.

William Brody sculptered the statue from life, and it was unveiled without ceremony in November 1873, opposite Greyfriars Kirkyard. And it is with that, that Scotland's capital city will always remember its most famous and faithful dog.

Bobby's headstone reads "Greyfriars Bobby - died 14th January 1872 - aged 16 years - Let his loyalty and devotion be a lesson to us all".
Photo of Greyfriars Bobby




True dog stories (1) A Good Worker
True Dog Stories (2) Patsy Ann - 'Official Greeter of Juneau, Alaska'
True dog stories (3) Beckett
True dog stories (4) Eric Knight - creator of 'Lassie'
True dog stories (5) Stickeen by John Muir 1909
True dog stories (6) Balto
True dog stories (7) Old Yeller
True dog stories (8) Old Shep
True Dog Stories (9) Greyfriars Bobby
True Dog Stories (10) A Little Hero



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