1
Batchen Street, Forres
Image: © Richard Webb
Taken: 26 Sep 2021
0.01 miles
2
Wall opposite Number 6 Milnes Wynd
Image: © thejackrustles
Taken: 12 Apr 2021
0.04 miles
3
OS Cut Mark - Forres, Number 6 Milnes Wynd
https://www.bench-marks.org.uk/bm61441
Image: © thejackrustles
Taken: 12 Apr 2021
0.04 miles
4
OS Cut Mark - Forres, Milnes Wynd
Image: © thejackrustles
Taken: 12 Apr 2021
0.04 miles
5
St Leonard's Church spire
High Street, Forres.
Image: © Stanley Howe
Taken: 7 Oct 2009
0.04 miles
6
Forres, Milnes Wynd
Image: © thejackrustles
Taken: 12 Apr 2021
0.04 miles
7
Ep Clear
We spotted this unusual piece of road marking. Extended Play? An Episode? Boringly, it was not hard to deduce that when the council had to provide an access ramp to the doorway, they had built the pavement out over the K and E, but had not bothered to try to repaint the rest of the road marking.
Image: © Anne Burgess
Taken: 9 Nov 2016
0.05 miles
8
St Leonard's Church Interior
The kirk stands on a site which was part of Tulloch Park, and was donated by William Forsyth, flesher, to the United Free Church. The architect was William Wardlaw Sclanders, an assistant in the Inverness practice of Ross and Macbeth. The memorial stone was laid in 1902 by Lord Strathcona, a native of the burgh who also donated £1600 for the completion of the steeple, and the kirk opened in December 1903. It is said to have the largest seating capacity of any church in Moray, and now houses one of two Church of Scotland congregations in Forres.
Image: © Anne Burgess
Taken: 29 Jun 2013
0.06 miles
9
St Leonard's Church
The Victorian gothic kirk stands on a site which was part of Tulloch Park, and was donated by William Forsyth, flesher, to the United Free Church. The architect was William Wardlaw Sclanders, an assistant in the Inverness practice of Ross and Macbeth. The memorial stone was laid in 1902 by Lord Strathcona, a native of the burgh who also donated £1600 for the completion of the steeple, and the kirk was completed and opened in December 1903. It is said to have the largest seating capacity of any church in Moray, and now houses one of two Church of Scotland congregations in Forres. The yellow temporary road signs seem to have considerable potential for causing confusion!
Image: © Anne Burgess
Taken: 29 Jun 2013
0.06 miles
10
Mechanics' Institute Forres
The Category B listed Forres Town Hall has had a colourful history. Originally built for the Freemasons in 1823, it became the Mechanics Institute in 1855. It was used by the Red Cross as a hospital during WW1 in 1914, and a new front was added in 1901
Image: © valenta
Taken: 26 Mar 2018
0.06 miles