Verdant Works, Dundee

Introduction

The photograph on this page of Verdant Works, Dundee by Chris Allen as part of the Geograph project.

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Verdant Works, Dundee

Image: © Chris Allen Taken: 21 Oct 2016

Now a museum of the jute industry. A former flax and jute spinning mill of 1833. This is the main block with the floors largely stripped out. The floors were wooden supported on iron columns and with a later 1852 gothic mansard cast-iron roof. At the bottom is the re-erected Boulton and Watt beam engine. The engine was installed at William Sandeman's Douglasfield Bleachworks in Dundee, It was ordered in 1801 and installed in 1802 at a cost of £517. The engine is believed to have worked for most of the century and was purchased and gifted to Dundee's Free Library Committee in 1898. It was displayed in a new museum at Dudhope Barracks from 1900 to 1939 when WWII intervened. The museum never reopened and the engine was dismantled in 1960s for display in Edinburgh but this too never happened and the engine returned to Dundee in 1975 and remained in store until 2012 when work started on a plan to conserve and display it at Verdant Works. This is a very late example of the type as at about the same time all iron engines with conventional cranks were starting to be built. This is the only surviving Boulton & Watt engine to have worked in Scotland and to be displayed close to where it originally worked.

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Image Location

coordinates on a map icon
Latitude
56.461755
Longitude
-2.983056