Cathedral Street, Dunkeld

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cathedral_Street,_Dunkeld an entity of type: Thing

Cathedral Street is an historic street in Dunkeld, Perth and Kinross, Scotland. It connects High Street and The Cross to the east and Dunkeld Cathedral to the west. Since 1954, the National Trust for Scotland has restored eleven of its properties dating to the 17th and 18th centuries. Several of the buildings are original, having survived the 1689 Battle of Dunkeld. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Cathedral Street, Dunkeld
rdf:langString Cathedral Street
rdf:langString Cathedral Street
xsd:integer 70238151
xsd:integer 1094921979
rdf:langString Looking east to High Street and The Cross
rdf:langString East
rdf:langString Dunkeld, Perth and Kinross, Scotland
rdf:langString Location within Dunkeld
rdf:langString The Cross and High Street
rdf:langString Cathedral Street is an historic street in Dunkeld, Perth and Kinross, Scotland. It connects High Street and The Cross to the east and Dunkeld Cathedral to the west. Since 1954, the National Trust for Scotland has restored eleven of its properties dating to the 17th and 18th centuries. Several of the buildings are original, having survived the 1689 Battle of Dunkeld. According to Parliamentary Papers of 1956, "these houses form a picturesque group on the approach to Dunkeld Cathedral and are of great interest as an example of street architecture of the early 18th century". Grants of £2,500 were made during 1954 and 1955. Fourteen properties on the street are now Category B listed buildings or structures, including the gates to the cathedral. Number 19, Dean's House (the original manse for the cathedral), was the home of poet and scholar Gavin Douglas (1474–1522). It was consecrated by the Bishop of Dunkeld in 1516. The house also survived an attack on Dunkeld by the New Model Army in 1654. Number 9, meanwhile, was formerly the home of Alexander Mackenzie (1822–1892), the first Liberal Prime Minister of Canada, who was born in Logierait. The monks of the Culdee Monastery, which formerly stood on the site of today's cathedral, in various forms, between the 6th and 13th centuries, brought supplies up the street from the adjacent River Tay via the perpendicular Water Wynd that still exists today.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4807
xsd:string East

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