Angus HER - NO56SE0107 - 45, 47, 49 HIGH STREET, BRECHIN

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Main Details

Primary ReferenceNO56SE0107
Name45, 47, 49 HIGH STREET, BRECHIN
NRHE Card No.NO56SE159
NRHE Numlink 193467
HES SM No. NULL
HES LB No. 22480
Site Form Standing Structure
Site Condition Complete 2
Details Shop and residential accommodation, dating from late 18th century or early 19th century. A standing building survey was carried out over these properties in February 2011 by Derek Hall in advance of a proposed programme of modernisation. During the survey, careful examination of visible wall elevations suggested that the buildings have quite a complicated history. For example, the fragment of threshold visible in the Southern elevation of no 45 just below ceiling level suggests that the former ceiling / floor level in that building was at least 0.10m lower than it is now. In a similar manner to the blocked doorway that is visible in the Southern internal elevation of room 4 in 49G this threshold may relate to a doorway leading out onto the pend with the stairway that lies on the North side of the building. The two fireplaces side by side in the North elevation of no 45 may relate to its recorded use a bakers shop in the 19th century Brechin Valuation Rolls. A second phase of survey was carried out by Derek Hall in December 2011. The location of further blocked doorways and a single blocked window at first floor level in 49G High Street have further added to the complicated sequence of historic building events on this part of the High Street. The blocked doorway in the Southern elevation of Room 3 presumably leads out into the covered pend that has access to the High Street via a set of stairs and the blocked doorway in the Northern elevation of Rooms 1 and 3 must lead into the neighbouring United Presbyterian church although this must have gone out of use when the subdividing timber laced brick walls were built against it. It is harder to interpret the blocked window in the Southern elevation of Room 3 as this would seem to imply that this wall was formerly an external face to the building. The erection of the United Presbyterian church to the South sometime after 1847 has meant that it is now difficult to interpret the phasing of the construction of the buildings that stood on the site previous to that. The discovery of the timber laced handmade brick internal walls in Room 1 is of interest and is a rare survival of this building technique. Within the garden of No. 49 is a bee-bole of probable 18th century date noted in the 1960s.
Last Update18/07/2022
Updated Bycpalmer
CompilerCH
Date of Compilation16/03/2011

Google Map for NO56SE0107

National Grid Reference: NO 5974 6016



Event Details

Event DateEvent TypeOASIS ID
2011 Building Recording

Excavations and Surveys


Artefact and Ecofact

Ecofact

Samples
Palynology
Ecofact Notes

Monument Types

Monument Type 1Monument Type 2Monument Type 3OrderProbability
BEE-BOLES  C100
SHOPS  A100
HOUSES  B100