Ardler, Perth and Kinross explained

Static Image:Church and Tavern at Ardler - geograph.org.uk - 177155.jpg
Static Image Caption:Pub and kirk
Country:Scotland
Official Name:Ardler
Coordinates:56.5642°N -3.1976°W
Unitary Scotland:Perth and Kinross
Lieutenancy Scotland:Perth and Kinross

Ardler is a small village in Perth and Kinross, Scotland.[1] It is situated approximately 30NaN0 east of Coupar Angus,[2] and approximately equidistant between the latter and Meigle.[3]

History

The present village evolved from a planned railway village called Washington, planned in 1835 in connection with the Dundee and Newtyle Railway.[4] After initial building works Washington failed to expand as had been expected. In his history of the village Christopher H. Dingwall attributed this to the decline of the rural textile industry and the rapid expansion of railways meaning that Washington quickly lost its advantage of being one of the few settlements in the area connected to a railway. Railway rebuilding as part of the construction of the Scottish Midland Junction Railway led to the removal of the station at Washington village and its replacement with a station called Ardler slightly further away from the village. Following the establishment of a church and the foundation of the Parish of Ardler in 1885, the name Ardler superseded that of Washington.[5]

The church at Ardler was erected in memory of James Drummond Carmichael (1849-1881) by his father Peter Carmichael, a Dundee textile mill manager and senior partner in Baxter Brothers & Co Ltd. Peter Carmichael family had purchased the nearby Arthurstone estate in 1869 and expanded it to include other nearby farms including East and West Ardler.[6] [7]

The village primary school, which dates from the 1830s, closed in the late 1980s. In 2020, a plan to convert the school into two homes was given the go-ahead.[8] [9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ardler from the Gazetteer for Scotland.
  2. Web site: Ardler from The Gazetteer for Scotland. 2021-07-21. www.scottish-places.info. en-gb.
  3. Web site: Google Maps.
  4. Book: Dingwall. Christopher H. Ardler - A Village History. The Planned Railway Village of Washington. 1985. Abertay Historical Society. Dundee. 0-900019-20-4. 25–29.
  5. Book: Dingwall. Christopher H. Ardler - A Village History. The Planned Railway Village of Washington. 1985. Abertay Historical Society. Dundee. 0-900019-20-4. 53–57.
  6. Web site: MS 102 Peter Carmichael of Arthurstone (1809-1891). Archive Services Online Catalogue. University of Dundee Archives. 27 November 2017.
  7. Book: Gauldie. Enid. The Dundee Textile Industry 1790-1885. 1969. Scottish History Society. Edinburgh. 203.
  8. The Courier, 30 March 2020
  9. https://www.investinperth.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/former-ardler-primary.pdf FORMER ARDLER PRIMARY SCHOOL, WALLACE STREET, ARDLER, PERTHSHIRE, PH12 8SS