Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Forres Tolbooth is a municipal building on the High Street in Forres in Scotland. The building, which is used as a visitor attraction, is a Category A listed building . [ 1 ]
The first municipal building in the town was the Forres Tolbooth in the High Street which was completed in the mid-16th century. [2] [3] It was primarily used as a prison and was rebuilt to a design by William Robertson in the Scottish baronial style in 1839. [4]
High Street, Anderson's Primary School, (Front Block Facing High Street Only) Gatepiers And Railings 57°36′40″N 3°36′35″W / 57.611044°N 3.609769°W / 57.611044; -3.609769 ( High Street, Anderson's Primary School, (Front Block Facing High Street Only) Gatepiers And
The high street of Forres, 2004. Forres is situated on the A96 trunk route connecting the cities of Aberdeen and Inverness. The River Findhorn was originally crossed by fording near Waterford Farm. A suspension bridge was opened in 1831 to cross the river at the west end of the town. This bridge was replaced by the current bridge in 1938.
50-52 High Street Elgin 99] 30780: Upload Photo: South Villa Elgin, Moss ... Forres, High Street 107] 31692: 102 High Street, Bank of Scotland ...
The first railway station in Forres was located at the end of Market Street. On the OS map for 1863, this road is named appropriately "Old Station Road". The station building was located between the current track and signal box, and the former goods loop (which was the original main line, before the junction was constructed). This served trains ...
Forres Tolbooth. Forres Tolbooth on the High Street was erected in 1838, but replaced an earlier tolbooth of a similar design on the same site. [51] Cluny Hill College, originally a hydropathic hotel dates to 1863 and "has a rambling skyline of dutch gables, ordinary gables, chimneys, parapets and bays". [52]
Split into two halves by Ainslie Place, this street is named after the Earl's family name of Stuart and his additional title of Baron Stuart (granted in 1796). It forms the links between the main sections of the estate. It is the only north-south street in the New Town which numbers from the north (probably because building began at the north end).