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Municipal buildings and Town House, including court houses, and incorporating the remaining part of the 17th century tolbooth. The remains of the tolbooth, which dates from 1615-1627, stands on the site of its predecessor built in 1394. The tolbooth is largely obscured by modern buildings but a square 3-storey, ashlar tower with corbelled bartizans and spire is exposed in Lodge Walk. The belfry and spire were added 1627, although the present spire dates from 1726 when the first clock was installed. The present clock dates from 1817. The main function of the building was as a prison (Wardhouse Tower of the Tolbooth) . The town house itself, which lay to the west, was repaired in 1670 and rebuilt in 1729 when a staircase was added. after Aberdeen was 'liberated' by Cumberland's forces in 1746, the known and suspected Jacobites were brought to the Tolbooth prior to trial In 1818-20 a new court house was built by John Smith to the north of the town house, involving the rebuilding of the south elevation of the Tolbooth and significant internal alterations. See also NJ90NW0688 for attached jail, East Prison. By the second half of the 19th century the accommodation at Aberdeen court house was inadequate and it was recommended that the town house be redeveloped as part of an improvement scheme. Work commenced in 1867 on the demolition of buildings on the site, including the old town house. The present Aberdeen Town House was built 1868-74 by John Dick Peddie and Charles George Hood Kinnear; the City Chambers to Broad Street were added in 1975. The 19th century municipal building is 4-storey with attic, in Scots Baronial style, with an advanced 6-stage corbelled and bartizaned square-plan 5-stage clock tower. It is on a prominent corner site, built of grey granite ashlar. A watching brief in 1989 during consolidation work recorded mortar-bonded walls below the floor of the Old Town House, in the area in which the 17th century tolbooth is incorporated (see NJ90NW1017). Renovation within the Town House since 1989 has enable further below ground evidence of the tolbooth to be recovered. The Aberdeen Town House and extension contains two war memorials, one to the fallen A watching brief in 1990 during continued alterations in and around the 17th-18th century structure recorded previously obscured openings and other details. of the 51st Highland Division for both World War I and World War II, the other in memory of the Royal Field Artillery 1st Highland Brigade killed in World War I, and to 75th Regiments and all gunners based at any time at the former drill hall on Ruby Lane who died in World War II. Also within the Town House is the Royal Navy crest from HMS Scylla presented to the City of Aberdeen to commemorate the adoption of HMS Scylla during warship week 1942.
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