Sir ,
When writing my
autobiography , I gave a brief account of the remarkable variety of changes
through which this quaint house has passed . Though its probable age is
probably not more than 150 years and its situation at the top of the High
Street must have kept it always prominent in the annals of Crieff , I have been
surprised at the difficulty in obtaining accurate information concerning its
many transformations . To begin with , I was assured on apparently excellent ,
that Dr Malcolm , the original builder , was a medical man , and that his
object was to found a Medical College .I know that he was an LL.D and was for
many years the school master at Madderty . He built this house as a Boarding
School for Boys . He was a student of Persian and wrote several books . He made
the first survey of Crieff which is now at Dollerie .
After his death
, the side wings of the College were tenanted by sixteen families almost all
handloom weavers ( of whom upwards of six hundred were then living in Crieff )
. The central house was divided between the Episcopalians of Crieff and the
police – the former having the large drawing room upstairs a s a week - day
school , while on Sundays services were conducted by Mr Wildman who was curate
to Mr Lendrum , vicar of the Episcopal Church at Muthill . The ground floor was
occupied as a Police Station whilst the basement ( including the present kitchen
, scullery , larder , &c ) was divided into cells for prisoners .
My mention of
this last detail called forth contradictions from various persons , who
maintained that this could never have been the case . I am, therefore , happy to be now able to give details from the
lips of our respected fellow townsman ,
Mr Peter McGregor , joiner , who when as an observant lad , aged about 18 lived
in Dollerie Terrace , close to this college .He tells me that prior to about 1848 , the sole representative of Police was
Fordyce ( without uniform )m and the Police Cells were in Lodge Street where
the Salvation Army now has its quarters . About the year 1848 it was found
necessary to deepen the channel of the River Pow and raise embankments from
Dollerie , Madderty , Millhills and near the present site of Abercairney
Station , to its junction with the Earn . This necessitated the presence of a
large body of Navvies , some being of a very rough type , consequently several
police constables were imported and
stationed in College House , the cells for disorderly prisoners being on the
basement . McGregor vividly remembers seeing them being brought in by the
central gate in the wall which was then in front of College House .
When Mr Lendrum
afterwards transformed the whole building into St Margaret’s College for Girls
, McGregor was employed in building the spire which forms so conspicuous an
object at the top of High Street .
Yours
faithfully
Constance F
Gordon Cumming
There was an
note added by the Editor :
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