Online Encyclopedia

BROUGHTY FERRY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 656 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BROUGHTY

FERRY  , a municipal and police burgh, seaport and watering-place of Forfarshire, Scotland, on the Firth of
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Tay, 4 M . E. of Dundee by the North
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British railway . Pop . (1901) 10,484 . The name is a corruption of Brugh or Burgh Tay, in allusion to the fortress
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standing on the rock that juts into the Firth . It is believed that a stronghold has occupied this site since Pictish times . The later castle, built in 1498, fell into the hands of the
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English in 1547 and was held by them for three years . Gradually growing more or less ruinous it was acquired by government in 1855, repaired, strengthened and converted into a Tay defence, mounting several heavy guns . Owing to its healthy and convenient situation, Broughty Ferry has become a favourite residence of Dundee merchants . Fishery and
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shipping are carried on to a limited extent . Before the erection of the Tay
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Bridge the
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town was the scene of much
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traffic, as the railway ferry from
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Tayport was then the customary access to Dundee from the south . Monifieth (pop .

2134), 2' M. north-

east of Broughty Ferry, with a station on the North British railway, is noted for its golf links . About 2 M. north rises the conical hill of
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Laws (400 ft. high), on the top of which are the remains of a vitrified fort, 390 ft. long by 198 ft. in breadth .

End of Article: BROUGHTY FERRY
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BARON JOHN CAM HOBHOUSE BROUGHTON (1786-1869)
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