The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Visitor numbers rocket at Black Watch museum

Increase of 1,248% after 113,000 people view ‘weeping window’ display of ceramic poppies

- STewarT alexander

The Black Watch Castle and Museum recorded a spectacula­r 1,248% rise in visitors last year thanks to the “weeping window” sculpture.

Featuring thousands of handmade ceramic poppies commemorat­ing those who died in the First World War, the installati­on brought an unpreceden­ted 113,000 visitors to Perth over a matter of weeks.

As a focus for The Black Watch whose regimental heartlands are Dundee, Angus, Perthshire and Fife, the castle has always been a place of pilgrimage but the touching presence of the poppies struck a chord with the general public.

The museum was the first location in mainland Scotland to host the sculpture and contribute­d to the announceme­nt by the Associatio­n of Scottish Visitor Attraction­s (ASVA) that visits to its member sites rose notably for the third year running in 2016.

ASVA, which represents the interests of the key visitor attraction­s sector in Scotland, has more than 450 members comprising some of Scotland’s most popular and iconic castles, galleries, museums, historic houses, heritage sites, wildlife parks, gardens and leisure attraction­s.

Analysis of statistics submitted by 249 of the organisati­on’s member sites for its annual visitor trends report confirmed that almost 30 million visits were made to those sites in 2016, a rise of 6% over the previous year’s figures.

The increase comes on top of a 3.4% rise in 2015.

Sectors which fared particular­ly well in 2016 included castles and heritage sites (12%), sports and activities centres (28.7%) and museums and galleries (5.7%).

Edinburgh continued to dominate the marketplac­e, with 11 of the top 20 attraction­s, compared with nine in 2015. The National Museum of Scotland welcomed the most visitors over this period, following the opening of 10 new galleries in July, overtaking Edinburgh Castle as the most visited attraction in Scotland.

“The touching presence of the poppies struck a chord

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