The high place
Forfarshire takes on the list of Scottish counties is largely due to
the fact that its industries are so varied. It has a long seaboard
with several good harbours and aluable fishing-stations. The estuary
of the Tay, though not without its dangers to navigation, has had
its natural facilities carefully fostered by the harbour authorities
of Dundee, and occupies the third place in Scotland for
ship-building and the harbourage of vessels, being excelled only by
the Forth and the Clyde.
Angus has played no
inconsiderable part in the general history of the country. If one
hears less of its battle-fields than of others, it was on at least
one occasion the scene of a conflict—that of Nechtan’s Mere—decisive
in shaping the trend of subsequent events in Scotland; if it has not
the fame of the Border, its proximity to the Grampians, a boundary
line far more momentous than the Cheviots, as marking the limits of
Celt and Saxon, laid it open to incursions quite as formidable and
quite as resolutely repelled as the raids of the southron into
Scotland. Its sons have made for themselves a name by both flood and
field and also in the more useful if less showy pursuits of peace.
The county contains
many relics that point back to the dawn of civilization in these
islands : its ancient forts and camps belong to a time when history
was yet unwritten. Its ruined castles and strongholds are intimately
associated in song and story with the wild warfare of clannish and
feudal days. Its abbeys, cathedrals, and other religious foundations
are proof of its wide influence in the ecclesiastical affairs of a
bygone age.
The regional
characteristics of Forfarshire, ranging from the mountainous
district of the Grampians in the north through the fertile plain to
the alluvial and sandy shores of the Tay and the rockbound coast,
with its marvellous caves between Arbroath and Montrose, provide the
botanist and the geologist with an unusually varied field. Nor are
its scenery and other kindred attractions any less diverse. The
rocks and tarns, the corries and passes on its northern frontier
attract the cragsman and the sportsman.
Its mineral wealth,
though less by the absence of coal and iron deposits than several
more favoured districts of Scotland, is very considerable, for its
quarries yield a valuable supply of building stones and paving
stones. But it is to the quality and abundance of its agricultural
produce, and still more to the extent and pre-eminence of its
textile manufactures that Forfarshire owes its importance in
population and industry. Strathmore, a large part of which is within
its boundaries, is one of the most fruitful farming districts in the
country; and the linen and jute fabrics of Dundee and a whole circle
of smaller towns in Angus find a world-wide market. |