60%

Dumfries High Street Scotland Antique Picture Print 1900 SIS#155

Share On:

Original price was: $4.41.Current price is: $2.65.

Category:
Meta:
Original/Licensed Reprint : Original
Item Length : Approx 27.5 cm Width x 21 cm Height inc border
Artist : From Photo by Unknown
Material : Paper
Year of Production : 1900
Image Size : Approx 8.75 Inches x 6.5 Inches
Production Technique : Lithography
Features : Original 1900 Bookplate
Item Width : Approx 10.75" inc border
Type : Print
Culture : British
Theme : Cities & Towns, Famous Places, Topographical
Subject : Landscape, Scotland, Dumfries
Item Height : Approx 8.25" inc border
Time Period Produced : 1900-1924
Size : Small
Region of Origin : United Kingdom
Source : Disbound Antique Book Published 1900
Style : Realism

Dumfries High Street Scotland 1900 Antique Print A print from a disbound book of Scotland published 1900. Blank on the reverse, this has been trimmed from the original page size to fit boarded envelope, scan shows the trimmed page being sold. Suitable for framing, the average page size is approx 10.75″ x 8.25″ or 27.5cm x 21cm, including text and border. Average image size approx 8.75″ x 6.5″ or 22.5cm x 16.5cm This is an antique print not a modern copy or reproduction and can show signs of age or previous use commensurate with the age of the print, please view the scans as they form part of the description. 1900 is the printing date, the original date of creation can be earlier. All prints will be sent bagged and in a boarded envelope for maximum protection. While every care is taken to ensure my scans or photos accurately represent the item offered for sale, due to differences in monitors and internet pages my pictures may not be an exact match in brightness or contrast to the actual item. Text description beneath the picture (subject to any spelling errors due to the OCR program used) DUMFRIES: HIGH STREET. This important town has a considerable manufacture of tweeds and woollens, and is also a great centre for the sale of sheep, to England and elsewhere. It is well placed on high ground ten miles from the mouth of the Nith, and has been the scene of stirring incidents. Edward’s old castle has been replaced by the Greyfriars Church, whose steeple can be seen at the top of the street, and it was in the old Greyfriars’ Monastery that Bruce and Kirkpatrick murdered the Red Comyn. Another prominent object in the view is the “mid steeple ” or tower of the Town Hall. In Burns Street is the house in which the poet lived three years till his death in 1796, having lived eighteen months previously in Bank Street: and his remains rest in St. Michael’s burial-ground.