Marion Campbell (archaeologist)

[2] Following her military service, Campbell returned to Kilberry where she operated and managed several farms on her estate.

[3] Campbell was involved in local politics, and she served as a district councillor and a member of the Scottish National Party for 20 years beginning in 1955.

[4] The survey was published in volume 95 of the journal Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland (PSAS) in 1962.

[1] Campbell's work included the first survey of Kilmartin Glen; it also created direction for many later archaeological studies of Mid Argyll.

[5] In 1951, she donated the stones to the Ministry of Works, which displayed them in a new, separate structure on Campbell's estate.

[3][9] Campbell's account of Scottish history and pride was well-received, with three separate editions appearing in print since its original publication.

[2] She compiled a decades-worth of research into the biography Alexander III, King of Scots, published shortly before she died in 1999.

[12] In 1971, she became the founding editor and a regular contributor to the Mid Argyll Society's journal The Kist.

Her children's historical novel The Wide Blue Road was published in 1957 and was her debut fictional work.

Standing stones at Kilmartin Glen , where Campbell completed much of her professional work.
The Kilberry Sculptured Stones in the structure built by the Ministry of Works.