Posted in Architecture, Art Deco at 13:00 on 11 September 2011
There were some architecturally interesting buildings at Dollar Academy.
The first was a nice 1930s pavilion. This was taken from the approach road.
A further, more modern, but deco influenced building lies just behind it. This is a stitch of two photos. There is another 1930s building to its right in this picture.
All my photos of Dollar are on flickr.
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Posted in War Memorials at 13:00 on 11 September 2011
On Saturday we ended up at Dollar, Clackmannanshire.
This is Dollar’s WW2 memorial, situated in a small memorial gardens just off the main A 91 road. The gardens side has two names for servicemen killed in Northern Ireland. There was no sign of any First World War names.
We walked up the hill beside the burn, over which there are two nice bridges.
The white building behind the second one houses Dollar Museum, which contains, among other things, a display on the Devon Valley Railway (now sadly defunct, victim of the greatest act of institutional vandalism in Britain in my lifetime, the Beeching cuts, though the part to Alloa has been reopened recently.)
We asked the attendant if there was a WW1 memorial anywhere and were told it was in the school grounds.
Of course, Dollar Academy. Lots of former pupils would have served in the wars. The memorial is unusual, showing a figure with outstretched hands.
The main school building can be seen in the first photo. The side facing it seemed to contain names from the parish rather than FPs. Other sides were reserved solely for ex-pupils, with WW2 and later conflicts also commemorated.
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