1
Montrose
Image: © Ann Harrison
Taken: 11 May 2009
0.01 miles
2
Castle Street, Montrose
This was viewed from the junction with Balmain Street.
Image: © Walter Baxter
Taken: 19 Apr 2013
0.01 miles
3
Red brick delight
This wonderful little building, located in Bridge Street dates from about 1900. Recently the Montrose Tourist Office, it is listed, category C(S) and details are at: http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/sc-46171-castle-place-tourist-information-office-i#.V4Jy7zU5t8E
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 13 Jun 2016
0.02 miles
4
Carnegie Library, Montrose
Image: © Leslie Barrie
Taken: 6 Apr 2013
0.02 miles
5
Castle Place, Montrose
The buildings on the left are all Category B listed. The red sandstone building on the right is the Category A listed [http://portal.historicenvironment.scot/designation/LB38051] Public Library [http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/1061740].
Image: © Richard Sutcliffe
Taken: 28 Sep 2017
0.02 miles
6
Castle Place building
This delightful bank building dates from 1900 and is listed, category B, with details at: http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/sc-38098-14-and-15-castle-place-#.V4J0mDU5t8E
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 13 Jun 2016
0.03 miles
7
Mill Road at Montrose
Image: © Ann Harrison
Taken: 11 May 2009
0.03 miles
8
Montrose Library site; the birthplace of Robert Brown, Angus
The accompanying photo shows a north-northeast view of Montrose Library on Montrose High Street. The site of this building was formerly the cross shaped house where the renowned Montrose botanist Robert Brown was born. In the first half of the 19th century, he became the most celebrated botanist in the world and in his memory there is a bust of him in the entrance to the library. This heavy, bronze bust which was donated by his relative Miss Hope Paton and unveiled on the 18th October 1895 was originally placed on an ornamental shelf in the house where Brown was born but it now sits on the left side of the entrance to the library where it may be thought to greet all who enter the building.
Robert Brown (21 December 1773 – 10 June 1858) was the son of James Brown a minister in the Scottish Episcopal Church and his mother Helen Brown (née Taylor) who was the daughter of a Presbyterian minister. Their home was the manse of the Episcopal Church in Montrose and Rev. James Brown preached in the house owing to the fact that he would not pray for King George III. James Brown’s father was a Forfarshire (Angus) farmer at Bolshan who was killed at Culloden while fighting for Prince Charlie. Young Robert attended what is now Montrose Academy until the age of 14 before proceeding to study medicine at Marischal College in Aberdeen and then from 1790 at Edinburgh University. In June 1795, he was appointed as a Surgeon’s Mate in the British army and he served in Northern Ireland. However, he is better known as Robert Brown FRSE, FRS, FLS, MWS, and he is best remembered as a botanist and palaeobotanist who made important contributions to botany through his pioneering use of the microscope. His contributions and discoveries include one of the earliest descriptions of the cell nucleus and cytoplasmic streaming; early work on the plant pollination and fertilisation including being the first to recognise the difference between gymnosperms (conifers and their allies) and angiosperms (flowering plants); some of the earliest studies in palynology; numerous contributions to plant taxonomy and the discovery of Brownian motion.
Although a man of quiet manners, Robert Brown was adventurous and when an expedition was organised to survey the coasts of New Holland (Australia) under Captain Matthew Flinders, he was at a great advantage for the appointment of botanist as he was recommended to the Admiralty by Sir Joseph Banks. They sailed from Spithead on board the ship HMS Investigator for Australia at 11.00am on the 18th July 1801 and made an historic voyage in that they were the first to circumnavigate the coast of that great island. Brown remained in Australia collecting plants until his return in October 1805. He returned with about 4,000 species of plants, most of which were new to science. A few months after his arrival, he was appointed Librarian to the Linnean Society and in the following years he devoted himself in a painstakingly accurate way to the study of Australian plants.
In 1811, Mr Brown was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. Sir Joseph Banks bequeathed his herbarium and library to the British Museum, but reserved the right to Mr Brown the free use of both for life. After negotiations with the Trustees, Mr Brown transferred the collections to them and he was appointed Keeper of its newly formed botanical department in 1827. Mr Brown was President of the Linnean Society from 1849 – 1853; he was a Fellow of the principal scientific societies of the world, and he had the degree of D.C.L. conferred on him by the University of Oxford. The Copley Medal, which is the oldest and most prestigious award in the United Kingdom awarded annually by the Royal Society of London “for outstanding achievements in research in any branch of science” was presented to Brown in 1839. Baron Humboldt styled him as the “facile Princeps Botanicorum” and Bonaparte wanted to make him a Count.
In addition to the moss (Tetrodontium brownianum) a species that he discovered growing at Roslin near Edinburgh while still a student, Brown’s name is commemorated in the Australian herb genus Brunonia and also numerous Australian species including Eucalyptus brownie and Banksia brownii. In addition to this, a number of places are also named after him including Brown’s River south of Hobart, Mount Brown and Point Brown in South Australia and Mount Brown in British Columbia, Canada.
On the 26th January 1792, Robert Brown read his first botanical paper to the Edinburgh Natural History Society on the subject of “The Botanical History of Angus.” In this paper he referred to local plants and noted, for example, that Eryngium maritimum, or sea holly grows plentifully on the sandy beach near Montrose….” Although he lived in Sir Joseph Bank’s house at 17 Dean Street, Soho Square, London, he never lost interest in the plants of Scotland and he often returned to Montrose; aged 80, in 1835, he climbed Lochnagar, a mountain on which he had botanized sixty years earlier.
Dr Brown was a tall, imposing figure who possessed a dry wit. He was kind, generous and unassuming in manner and he particularly enjoyed the company of close friends such as members of the Scottish MacLeay family and Dr Francis Boott. He had few near relatives and he never married. He died in Sir Joseph Bank’s house at 17 Dean Street, Soho Square, and he was buried in Kensal Green Cemetery, London.
Image: © Adrian Diack
Taken: 29 Jun 2023
0.03 miles
9
Sub-station
This sub-station is located off Mill Road.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 13 Jun 2016
0.03 miles
10
Mill Road at Montrose
A quaint old lane leading up to the town centre.
Image: © Ann Harrison
Taken: 11 May 2009
0.03 miles