1
M & S at night
Newly opened Marks and Spencer Simply Food in the Gallagher Retail Park
Image: © jamesnicoll
Taken: 15 Jan 2012
0.03 miles
2
Olympia, Dundee
By East Port Roundabout.
Image: © Stanley Howe
Taken: 9 Apr 2015
0.03 miles
3
Bookstore within shopping complex
Photo acquired from the site of a nearby petrol station.
Image: © C Michael Hogan
Taken: 19 Jul 2008
0.04 miles
4
East Port Roundabout, Dundee
On East Marketgait (A991). East Port Gate visible on extreme left.
Image: © Stanley Howe
Taken: 9 Apr 2015
0.05 miles
5
Wishart Arch, Dundee
Dates probably from early 16th century, repaired in 1592, 1650-51 (by
John Mylne the Elder) and 1824 and restored in 1877.
Also known as the Cowgate or Cowgait Port, this is the only remaining part of Dundee's city walls and one of only two burgh gates in Scotland. The port was more a customs port than a serious piece of fortification.
See also http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2176447 for image of plaque on the arch.
George Wishart, the Protestant Reformer and martyr, is said to have preached from here to plague victims in 1544.
Image: © Becky Williamson
Taken: 16 Feb 2010
0.05 miles
6
Plaque on the Wishart Arch, Dundee
Wishart Arch, DundeeDates probably from early 16th century, repaired in 1592, 1650-51 (by
John Mylne the Elder) and 1824 and restored in 1877.
Also known as the Cowgate or Cowgait Port, this is the only remaining part of Dundee's city walls and one of only two burgh gates in Scotland. The port was more a customs port than a serious piece of fortification.
See also http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2176446 for image of the arch.
George Wishart, the Protestant Reformer and martyr, is said to have preached from here to plague victims in 1544.
Image: © Becky Williamson
Taken: 16 Feb 2010
0.05 miles
7
East Port, Cowgate
The view from the town side.
The official listed buildings record contains the following note:
"The only remainder of Dundee's town walls and one of only 2 burgh gateways in Scotland. Dundee did not have a continuous walled rampart, but relied for a boundary on back dykes of houses. The Cowgait Port was more a customs post for the collection of revenue than a serious piece of fortification. After the last siege of a town in Britain and Dundee's brutal sacking in 1651, General Monck ordered the slighting and demolition of the towns defensive works. The Cowgait Port was spared, presumably because of its association with the protestant reformer and martyr George Wishart. According to Knox he preached to plague victims in 1544 from "the East Port", which could refer to the larger port on the Seagate or the lesser one in the Cowgate. The latter, adjacent to the old St Roques Chapel, burying ground for plague victims and site for the Old Wishart Church, seems more likely. It has been argued that Dundee's fortifications were extended in 1650 in anticipation of attack by Cromwell and that the Cowgate Port was then moved to its present position. But a stone gateway would have been no use in an artillery siege, so in all probability this is the site from which Wishart preached."
Image: © kim traynor
Taken: 22 May 2011
0.08 miles
8
East Port, Cowgate
This is the view from without the old burgh port. The plaque above the central arch reads:
"During the Plague of 1544 George Wishart Preached from the Parapet of this Port
The People standing within the Gate and the Plague stricken lying without at Booths
"He sent his word and healed them" Psalm cvii
Restored 1877"
Image: © kim traynor
Taken: 22 May 2011
0.08 miles
9
Wishart Memorial Church, Cowgate
Church named in honour of the Protestant martyr George Wishart who was accused of heresy and burned at the stake in St. Andrews in 1546. The reason for its location is revealed by a plaque on the East Port which stands close by.
Image
Image: © kim traynor
Taken: 22 May 2011
0.08 miles
10
Lower Dens Mill, St. Roques Lane
The mill, which is easily identified by its distinctive cast-iron bellcote, was built in the 1850s, by which time the working of jute had become Dundee's main industry, supplanting earlier linen production. However, the Dens mill continued as a flax mill for its whole existence. Baxter Brothers & Co. built their first mill on the Dens Burn in 1822. Subsequent enlargement made it the largest factory in the city and the first to introduce power-looms in 1836.
"In 1846 the firm had in operation in Lower Dens Mills one engine of ninety horse power, driving 3028 spindles; and in the Upper Dens Mills two engines, equal together to 105 horse power, and driving 8,000 spindles. In the power-loom department they had two engines of thirty horse power each, and 256 looms, with accommodation for nearly double that number. They had also a calendering shop with a ten horse power engine." -- David Bremner, The Industries Of Scotland, 1869
Image: © kim traynor
Taken: 22 May 2011
0.08 miles