Louise Yeoman

She worked for a year at the National Archives of Scotland and for a short time at Glasgow University Library.

[3] In 1992 she became curator of early modern manuscripts and cataloguer of the Wodrow Collection at the National Library of Scotland.

[5] In 2014, interest in Lilias Adie's story encouraged Yeoman and Douglas Speirs, an archaeologist at Fife Council, to look for her burial site.

Using 19th-century historical documents, they found a seaweed-covered slab of stone exactly where the documents described: in a group of rocks near the Torryburn railway bridge lay "the great stone doorstep that lies over the rifled grave of Lilly Eadie", and a rock with "the remains of an iron ring".

[6] Yeoman is now a producer and presenter at BBC Radio Scotland, where she works on programmes including Time Travels[7] and the Witch Hunt podcast series with Susan Morrison.