|
Blackscroft was at one time part of the estate of Craigie, which
belonged to Isabella de Bruce, second daughter of David, Earl of
Huntingdon, and wife of Robert de Bruce, ancestor of King Robert
the Bruce. About 1240 she granted her lands of Craigie to the Abbey
of Lindores, which her father had founded.
In 1340 the estate belonged by purchase to Walter of Balmossie;
and on his resignation, in 1378, it was granted by Robert II to
Patrick of Innerpeffer, who died in 1390. After his death at Falkland
of the hapless Duke of Rothesay, his father, Robert III, assigned
part of this property to the Altar of St. Salvador in the Church
of St. Mary of Dundee, so that prayers might be put up for his murdered
son.
The Abbot of Lindores held the property in feu till 1540, at which
time it was tenanted by David Wedderburne.
The river-side part of the estate was then possessed by George
Rollok, and he feued it to Patrick Black, wright. This Patrick Black
was entered as a Burgess in 1524, and was employed to repair the
carpenter-work at the Church of St. Mary, his payment being deducted
from his rent of this part of Craigie estate. His son, George, succeeded
him, and in 1581 the name of “Blackscroft” first appears
in the accounts of the Hospital-master.
The ground came into possession of the Kyd family, and in 1684
Kyd sold Blackscroft to David Lyon, who disposed it to James Ross.
In 1730, Ross disposed the property to the Nine Trades of Dundee.
After various attempts to feu the ground, the Nine Trades ultimately
sold it to James Guthrie, Jun., of Craigie, in 1766. Guthrie began
at once to feu out the land for building, and it was then that the
first buildings on Blackscroft were erected. At that time the gardens
of these houses extended to the margin of the river; but the reclamation
of ground from the Tay altered the whole appearance of the locality.
By 1858 a vast tract had been reclaimed; Camperdown Dock and Victoria
Dock had been constructed; East Dock Street formed; the Railway
Mineral Depot laid out south of Foundry Lane; and the whole vacant
space north of Blackscroft had been closely built upon. One of the
peculiarities of the Blackscroft houses was that because of the
declivity towards the river the main entrance from Broughty Ferry
Road was by a short flight of steps, while the gardens to the south
sloped gently to the Tay.
Some of the older houses were acquired by the Town Council, and
removed to prepare a site for St. Roque’s Library and Reading-rooms,
erected in 1911 as part of the Carnegie Library Gift to Dundee.
Source: 'Glimpses of Old and New Dundee' - A.H. Millar, January
1925
|
|