"During the last three months (loth February 1839) 
                    the fishermen and potters living in Prestonpans have been 
                    in a very destitute condition, the former partly from the 
                    very boisterous weather which has prevented their going regular 
                    to sea, and the latter from the closure of the potteries at 
                    which they were employed. During that time, these two classes 
                    of people have been suffering much from fever, about ten of 
                    their number having died in that short period; while the people, 
                    amounting to 750 including children, connected with Prestongrange 
                    colliery, who are well employed, well paid, and well fed, 
                    though inhabiting the same locality, and the houses stretching 
                    from Prestonpans to Musselburgh Links, have been almost free 
                    of that disease, fever having affected two of these families 
                    only in the course of the same time; and while fever is still 
                    prevailing extensively among the potters and fishermen, the 
                    people connected with the colliery have been entirely free 
                    of that disease since about the seventh of last December. 
                    On these facts I am well informed, being the medical attendant 
                    of the colliery. " 
                     
                    LORD WESTHALL AND WESTHALL HOUSE. 
                    Westhall House, now Dovecot, is a long rambling block, with 
                    few outside adornments, but inside full of curious nooks and 
                    whirling boutgates, which, though they might drive the artist 
                    into fits who tried to sketch them, does no less thrill with 
                    delight the soul of the antiquarian who tries to penetrate 
                    their curious windings. 
                    Lord Westhall was a Dairymple, connected with the families 
                    of North Berwick and Newhailes. He was a Judge Ordinary in 
                    1778, and resided here for many years. Lord Westhall was an 
                    elder in the church during the incumbency of Dr M'Cormac. 
                    There is, or was lately, a pane of glass in one of the room 
                    windows with " Miss Dalrymple " scratched on it. 
                    On the decease of Lord Westhall, during the early part of 
                    the 19th century, one Smith, a shoemaker, purchased the building 
                    and put the curious upper storey on it. It now belongs to 
                    Mr. J. B. Taylor, S. W. M., and is presently occupied by his 
                    brother Mr William, a worthy villager indeed. 
                     
                    PROFESSOR ROBERT OLIVER CUNNINGHAM. 
                    Among the distinguished living of the ancient village, we 
                    are pleased to mention the three sons of the late Rev. Mr 
                     
                    Bruce Cunningham. Mr Robert, the eldest, was born in 1841. 
                    He received his school and college education in Edinburgh, 
                    and graduated as Doctor of Medicine at the University of Edinburgh 
                    in 1864. 
                    In January 1866 he was appointed Professor of Natural History 
                    in the Royal Agricultural College at Cirencester, Gloucestershire; 
                    and in June of the same year resigned the appointment in consequence 
                    of being appointed by the Admiralty, Naturalist on board H. 
                    M. S. " Nassau " then commissioned for the survey 
                    of the Straits of Magellan and West Coast of Patagonia. 
                    Returning home in 1869, he was appointed by the Crown to the 
                    Chair of Natural History in Queen's College, Belfast, which 
                    he still holds. 
                    He is author of a variety of scientific papers, and of a separate 
                    work on the Natural History of the Straits of Magellan. 
                    PROFESSOR DOUGLAS CUNNINGHAM. 
                    David Douglas Cunningham, a younger son of the late minister, 
                    entered the Indian Medical Service in 1868, and a few years 
                    subsequently was appointed Professor of Physiology in the 
                    Medical College, Calcutta. 
                    He was much engaged in the investigation of cholera, and has 
                    published many papers on that and kindred subjects. He retired 
                    from the service in 1897. 
                     
                    DR JAMES BANNERMAN CUNNINGHAM. 
                    The third son of the Rev. W. Bruce Cunningham is Dr. James 
                    Bannerman Cunningham, M. B., CM. He graduated at Edinburgh 
                    in 1878. He practised for a time in his native village and 
                    afterwards proceeded to England. He is still in practice at 
                    Ruyton, near Shrewsbury. 
                    MR WILLIAM BROWN—A SUCCESSFUL MERCHANT AND 
                    BENEVOLENT GENTLEMAN. 
                    Mr Brown was a gentleman who never seemed to care that his 
                    one hand knew what the other hand was doing. His mother was 
                    a Taylor (Isabel), of that genuine old stock who still form 
                    a strong connecting link between West Seton and the village 
                    of Prestonpans. He had his upbringing, for the most part, 
                    between the two places. 
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