The
Selkirk Silver Arrow was a prize inaugurated by the Royal Burgh of Selkirk
in the year 1660. It was to be competed for annually by local archers using
longbows and the winner was given the honour of attaching his personal
medallion to the chain attached to the Arrow, whereupon it was kept in the
Burgh, there for all to see.
The competition, about which no details are
known, apparently ceased in 1674 the date of the last of nine original
medallions. The Arrow was thereafter safely stored in the Selkirk charter
chest where it was known to be in 1747.
In 1818, Sir Walter Scott, the noted writer
and Sheriff of Selkirk, unearthed the largely forgotten Arrow and arranged
for an invitation to be issued to the Royal Company of Archers to come to
Selkirk and compete for it against local archers. A member of the Company of
Archers won it in 1819 and it was then taken by them to Edinburgh where it
has since been safely kept.
Royal Company of Archers, by now appointed
the Sovereign’s personal bodyguard in Scotland, agreed to this. However,
Baillie Clarkson of Selkirk, ordered by the Burgh Council to fetch the Arrow
from Edinburgh, inexplicably came back without it and the Arrow is not
referred to again in the surviving records.
In the intervening decades, the RCA have
periodically returned to Selkirk with the Arrow, and, with much colourful
ceremony, currently compete for it amongst themselves every six years.