Montrose, which, in
spite of its “gable-endies,” has often been regarded as the most
inviting in appearance of the towns of Forfarshire, has some fine
public buildings. Its broad High Street is certainly one of the
handsomest thoroughfares in the county. Projecting into the street
is the town-hall, a large building of four storeys with arcade below
and balustrade above, and decorated in front with the armorial
bearings of the burgh. Other noteworthy buildings are the Museum and
the Academy. Two fine public statues are those of Peel and Joseph
Hume, M.P.
Arbroath possesses examples of fine
architecture in its Town-hall, Trades-hall, and Guild-hall. In
Brechin the new Municipal Buildings, erected 1894-5, which contain
the council chambers and court room, are an elegant pile; and the
Mechanics’ Literary and Scientific Institute has long been regarded
as the finest specimen of architecture in the city. The gift to the
community of Lord Panmure, this handsome Tudor edifice is adorned
with a finely proportioned central tower 80 feet high, and a
castellated parapet ornamented with pinnacles.
Forfar, the county
town, has some good public buildings, of which may be specially
mentioned the new County Buildings, the Town-hall, the Reid Hall,
and the Town Cross, an octagonal turret which marks the site of the
ancient castle.
Apart from the Old
Steeple, the ancient buildings of Dundee, mostly town residences of
the county nobility, are fast disappearing. One interesting relic of
the past, renovated in 1877, remains in the Cowgate Arch, from
which, during the plague in 1544, George Wishart is said to have
preached to the stricken inhabitants. Over the Howff, or ancient
burying-ground of the city, Dundonians keep jealous watch lest its
crumbling wall and interesting old-world monuments fall a prey to
the modern improver. In its immediate vicinity are the handsome Post
Office and the newly-opened Reading Room, a particularly graceful
building. Hard by in Albert Square are the High School, with a fine
Doric portico, the ornate and costly Girls’ High School, and the
Albert Institute, a Gothic building. Adjoining this is the Royal
Exchange and the new Technical College. The west central part of the
city possesses the handsome group of buildings that form University
College, an affiliated college of St Andrews University. The Town
House (1743), a venerable building with a fine spire 140 feet high,
is far from adequate to modern requirements.
The Court House, like
some other public buildings in Dundee, suffers from its site and
surroundings. Of the other schools the fine edifice of Morgan
Academy is noteworthy. The Royal Arch commemorates the visit to
Dundee of Queen Victoria in 1844. An interesting relic of the past
is the ancient Town Cross, a slender stone shaft surmounted by a
unicorn bearing a shield with the Scottish lion between its fore
feet. |