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The Bonnet-hill, or Hilltown, was so called because it was chiefly
inhabited by bonnet-makers, who frequently plied their vocation
when seated outside of their dwellings.
The Bonnet-maker Trade was the fifth in the order of the Nine Trades;
and though the early documents before 1600 have been lost, it is
probable that 1529 was the date of its institution. Though now a
continuous street in a populous locality, there were few houses
on the Bonnet-hill a hundred years ago, and these were of humble
appearance. Almost every building of an earlier time has been cleared
away, and the name “Bonnet-hill” is a misnomer. In 1832
there was only one surviving bonnet-maker who plied the knitting
needles as in the olden time, and he died in 1848, on the verge
of his hundredth year.
The Bonnet-makers still hold rank among the Nine Trades of Dundee.
The manufacture of bonnets of the Dundee kind was transferred to
Kimarnock.
Source: 'Glimpses of Old and New Dundee' - A.H. Millar, January
1925
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