1
Masonic Hall, Aberfeldy
Looking south-west.
Image: © Kenneth Allen
Taken: 22 Apr 2008
0.03 miles
2
P & J Haggarts, Ltd., Aberfeldy
Located in Dunkeld Street.
Haggarts of Aberfeldy have been producing traditionally woven Scottish tweeds since 1801.
Image: © Richard Dorrell
Taken: 21 Sep 2009
0.04 miles
3
Dunkeld Street, Aberfeldy
Looking west towards the town centre. The road is the A827.
The garage on the left is selling the lowest-priced fuel in the area.
Image: © Richard Dorrell
Taken: 21 Sep 2009
0.05 miles
4
Inscription on the Breadalbane fountain, Aberfeldy
This plaque is on the memorial fountain located in The Square, Aberfeldy.
Whole fountain -
Image
Image: © Richard Dorrell
Taken: 21 Sep 2009
0.05 miles
5
Haggart's, Aberfeldy
Established 1801, Haggart's tweed is considered to be one of the best sporting and estate tweeds. It is made from wool yarn from Cheviot sheep and has a high oil content. This oil gives it unique properties of warmth and is repellent to water.
The tweed designs represent the character and colours of Scotland as many of the colours had to act as camouflage to a particular estate or area. The tweeds Haggart's uses are all still woven in Scotland and many in Aberfeldy itself.
There is a ghost sign of a former hotel which I am trying to establish.
Image: © Richard Hoare
Taken: 7 Sep 2016
0.05 miles
6
The Main Road Through Aberfeldy
Taken from the Square in Aberfeldy, looking North East.
Image: © Andrew Stuart
Taken: 17 Jun 2007
0.05 miles
7
Three Lemons, Aberfeldy
Image: © Alpin Stewart
Taken: 11 Jun 2016
0.06 miles
8
Alexandra House, 32 Dunkeld Street, Aberfeldy
Dated 1899. Tall 3-storey, 3-bay, rectangular-plan Baronial shop and tenement with single storey wing to rear, on prominent corner site. Red bull-faced rubble and chlorite-slate rubble with red bull-faced dressings. Base course, ground floor cornice, continuous stepped hoodmould to 1st floor and mutuled eaves cornice. Crowstepped gables; channelled dividing piers and pilasters; hoodmoulds; raked cills; timber mullions.
By 1880 the Breadalbane Woollen Mills had been taken over by Messrs P & J Haggart of Keltneyburn Woollen Mills, founded 1801. Some ten years later Haggarts had moved their entire business to Aberfeldy having purchased both the 'Dyer's Mill' (now the 'Tweed Mill', listed separately) and a second mill sited where 'Tayside Cottages' now stand. At that time patrons included Queen Alexandra and King Edward, and latterly the Queen Mother whose arms are still displayed over the shop doorway today (2001). Haggarts showroom in Bank Street was closed with the move to Dunkeld Street in 1899. Although Haggarts passed into new ownership during the 1970s, the company retained its name and still manufactures its own tweed, continuing to attract custom from Highland estates and across the world.
Grade B listed. Listing number LB48850.
Image: © Andrew Abbott
Taken: 17 Aug 2020
0.06 miles
9
Co-operative store, Aberfeldy
Image: © nick macneill
Taken: 7 Sep 2011
0.06 miles
10
The Fountain Public House, Aberfeldy
Image: © Bill Henderson
Taken: 3 Sep 2017
0.06 miles