The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Historic lights

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“The Robert Douglas Memorial Institute in Scone still has gas-lights,” writes a Craigie regular. “They don’t work and the lighting throughout the halls is electric, but these wall-fittings are left-overs from the 19th Century when the buildings were new.

“The two I saw in the hallway are quite delicately made, with chains hanging down on either side of the gas mantle, presumably to turn the lights on and off. I am sure collectors and antique dealers would be interested.

“The institute is about to undergo a radical refurbishm­ent of its lighting and heating. Perhaps these last remnants of bygone days will disappear in the renovation­s.

“As I gazed at them, I remembered the old Dundee tenements of my childhood when I used to wander the length and breadth of the city visiting our many relatives and later when I delivered groceries up gas-lit closies.

“One great-aunt lived in Dens Road and, to the end of her life in the 1950s, she had gas lighting and a gas ring on the hearth for heating kettles, while her cooking and baking were done on an open range with a girdle and side oven fuelled by coal.

“Her laundry was done in a communal wash-house out the back where the boiler was fuelled by coal.

“Another great-aunt who lived in Strawberry Bank, on the Perth Road, had similar arrangemen­ts in a tiny flat, yet she still managed to have big family gatherings ben-the-hoose. She was a tailoress working for D.M. Brown’s.”

 ??  ?? “Hercules towered over and drifted past Broughty Ferry last week at high tide,” says James Thomson. “Stunning size it is too.”
“Hercules towered over and drifted past Broughty Ferry last week at high tide,” says James Thomson. “Stunning size it is too.”

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