Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Where did Dundee’s

Landmark made brief return only to disappear

- BY GRAEME STRACHAN

WHAT became of the large wooden eagle that looked down on generation­s of Dundee jute workers?

At its peak, around 40,000 families were dependent on the jute industry and mills dotted the Dundee skyline in the mid19th century.

The eagle was carved by a ship’s figurehead carver called James Law in 1864 and was the centre piece of the Dens Works Foundry on Victoria Street.

At its height, the Baxter family business employed 5,000 people.

The eagle was Law’s trademark. Law ran his business from the three-storey foundry building and employed a number of skilled craftsmen to help carve figurehead­s for Dundee ships.

In those days, of course, there were many shipyards along the riverside.

The eagle moved when Dens Works Foundry was extended to become the main modern jute spinning plant for Low and Bonar Ltd in 1930.

It was the only new mill built between the wars on the site between Victoria Street, Dens Road, Lyon Street and Brown Constable Street.

The industry was hit by a series of booms and slumps before falling into decline in the 20th century.

Eagle Jute Mills closed its doors in 1978.

What happened to the wooden eagle following its closure?

A spokesman for Low and Bonar in 1978 said it went to a now-unknown buyer.

“It’s been sold to someone,” he said.

“All the fittings have been sold and the premises are up for sale.

“The eagle was sold along with the fittings.”

Asked who bought the eagle, he said: “I don’t know. It’s not that I can’t tell you, it’s simply that I don’t know.”

It was strange that such a well-known landmark should disappear so suddenly and the bird’s final nesting place was still being talked about in 1980.

At that time it was at least “alive”, if not looking too well, when a real-life Lovejoy walked into a Perthshire antiques store with the elusive bird.

Ian Imrie, of Imrie Antiques, Bridge of Earn, who was a member of the Civic Trust in Perth, said he was offered the monument but turned it down.

“It was made of timber and was very rotten,” he said.

“It had recently been painted with gold paint, which didn’t help much.

“I have no idea where it might be now.”

The Eagle building was the subject of several unsuccessf­ul planning applicatio­ns.

Ladbrokes wanted to take over part of the building as a new leisure complex and Dundee FC also considered using it for training purposes.

The former mill was bought by Tayside Plumbing and Building Supplies Limited before being filled up by various enterprise­s over the years.

But the wooden eagle never returned to its perch.

By 1991 only four mills remained in Dundee and at that point hardly anyone in the city once called Juteopolis earned a living in the industry.

Tay Spinners, which was the last remaining jute-spinning factory in Europe, closed in 1998 with the loss of 80 jobs.

Mark Watson from Historic Environmen­t Scotland wrote a 1990 book on Dundee’s jute mills but said he has no idea what happened to the eagle.

“It was reposition­ed to look down Victoria Road in 1930 when Eagle Mill was formed there by Low and Bonar, which also then owned Dens Works, as the only new jute spinning mill built between the wars,” he said.

“It flew off in about 1980 when it became a kitchen shop.

“It had lasted well considerin­g that it was wooden and had been exposed to the elements for 120plus years.”

By 2016 inspectors were raising grave concerns about the condition of the Eagle Mills building and it was placed on Historic Environmen­t Scotland’s At Risk register.

 ?? ?? Eagle Jute Mills closed in 1978.
The mill was the only one built between the world wars in “Juteopolis”.
Eagle Jute Mills closed in 1978. The mill was the only one built between the world wars in “Juteopolis”.

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