Wednesday, 31 August 2016

Comrie and our new home


After some 30 years residing in our flat in Crieff  we have now  moved to the little village of Comrie  some  7 miles  to the west . Here are  some pictures  of the village , its  surroundings  and its past .
































Wednesday, 31 December 2014

The Strath in all seasons

Market Park looking towards Glen Turret 

The Old Relief Kirk hidden in the gardens of High Street - closed 1854 ! 

The Earn on the Muthill Walk

Sorry , game's off ! 

 The beautiful Earn from Lady Mary's Walk
Eppy Callum's Oak some 400 years old !


The old railway line from Crieff to Comrie
Glen Turret

           Glen Turret from Comrie Street

 Ford Road 


St Michaels and St Andrews Strathearn Terrace
Ducks in the Cemetery !

Toll House Kinkell
The Earn at Kinkell Bridge

Kinkell Bridge
Old Churchyard at Kinkell 
Former church near Kinkell

Gravestone in old churchyard Kinkell


Toll House Kinkell



Tuesday, 13 May 2014

MacRosty Park Crieff


JAMES MACROSTY

James Macrosty  was born in Crieff in 1824 , the son of a  weaving  agent Alexander MacRosty in the Bridgend area of Crieff . In the early 19th century hand loom  cotton  weaving was the largest employer of people in the town and Alexander MacRosty was one of a handful of men  who bought and sold  the cotton webs to the weavers . James  grew up at the local school where he did  well and  on leaving entered the  legal firm of Gowans in the town  . He  became a Bank Agent  for the British Linen Bank at  time prior  to Banks  having resident managers .. He  became involved in the politics of the town and was  elected chief magistrate . He married Lilias Brough Kay  from Edinburgh and had a large  family by her . Tragedy struck when a number of his  children pre deceased him . James MacRosty  died  in 1906 . He gave to the town ground on the Comrie Road  which he had laid  out as a park . 




In 1906 his brother Alexander  donated the bandstand  which still stands in the Park . It is in fact a listed  building and has been painstakingly renovated  during the overall refurbishment , back to its  original state but  enhanced  with the  addition  of electricity to facilitate performances  slightly  different to those of the brass bands of yesteryear ! 

In 1908 his daughter  Lilias donated the  art decor  tea room ( see below ) which stood on an elevated position  until its  condition deteriorated  so much that it had  to be demolished in 1971 . There  now  stands in its  place an attractive pergola ( see below ) .










The Park benefited from further additions  when 1922 former  Provost Walter Mungall donated  the ground on the other  side of the Turret Burn which was duly named Mungall Park . In 1925 , the Town Council added  ground on the Crieff side  of the original donation  and  erected  tennis courts and a pavilion thereon . In 1938  ex Councillor Taylor gifted  the field adjoining the Milnab Mill and this has  become Tay;or Park . The Fifth and last acquisition was the woodland  stretch joining Mungall Park  with MacRosty Park near the Turret Weir . The access to this  is now   is  by means of a  wooden Bridge constructed in the 1990s by Territorial Army engineers. This  was  known originally as Morgan's Wood  after the  saw mill of that name  which  was on the  site  of the  modern chalet  development off Turretbank Road .




Morgan's Wood



The Lade and adjoining pathways  in a somewhat less manicured form than at 
present !




Milnab Mill and the field that is now Taylor Park



The Recreation or Play Area 














TheTurret Burn







Spring In The Park








The Bandstand









Dogs Trees and Things 















If you would like to see and read  more about our wonderful MacRosty Park have a look at the web site  of The Friends of MacRosty Park  : https://sites.google.com/site/macrostypark/