This photo captures High Street in Dumfries, Scotland, and offers a glimpse into the past. The esteemed historian George Fraser Black has documented Andersons as burgesses not only in Peebles but also in the county of Dumfries during the 16th and 17th centuries. This digital reproduction is a photograph showcasing the Dumfries Old and New Bridges, taken by James Valentine. Historians have documented Andersons living in Dumfries since at least the 1500s. This photograph, captured by Ian James Leggate, provides a glimpse of Moffat, Dumfries, and Galloway during the 1930s. This photograph features the picturesque River Tweed in Peebles, Scotland. Peebles has been home to Andersons going back to the 1500s. This photograph displays a map of Glasgow dating back to 1832, which clearly depicts the Stobcross estate's location. This estate served as the residence of the Andersons of Dowhill and Stobcross until the 1730s. This photograph captures Stobcross House, the former residence of the Andersons of Dowhill and Stobcross. The land on which the house once stood is now a part of Glasgow, though the house itself no longer exists. This unattributed image, with no specified date, offers a glimpse of Inchyra House in Perthshire. This house was constructed around 1810 for John Anderson, who was an Edinburgh lawyer. This undated image shows Strathdon Church, located near the former Anderson estate of Candacraig. Notably, the entrance porch features an oak tree crest, which corresponds with the Oak Tree Proper crest of Clan Anderson. Legend has it that the inaugural Laird of Candacraig, Patrick Anderson, came into possession of the property in the mid-1500s after discovering silver beneath a boulder. The Anderson family lived at Candacraig for 10 generations. They sold the estate in 1866.