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Kirriemuir Old Parish Church

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Archaeologists believe that the ground on which the Old
Parish stands has been the site of Christian Worship for over 1000 years.
The excavation of Pictish gravestones is the basis of this belief. Indeed
the Cross that we use as the symbol of our church today (top left hand
corner of the page) was found on a recently excavated gravestone which is
believed to date to the 9th or 10th Century AD.
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T he current building was erected in
1787/88 after it had been decided that the existing one was in a very bad
state of repair and it was much too small to accommodate the membership of the rapidly growing
town. The new church was designed by James Playfair, father of the architect
of the New Town of Edinburgh. The building is of major architectural
importance and was the subject of a unique court case shortly after
completion when the gallery collapsed!
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The church is noted for its stained glass windows. The triple window in the
East wall, behind the pulpit, depicts the Last Supper. It was made in
Germany and installed in 1884. The two windows flanking it probably came
from the same studio and were presented in memory of the long-serving elders
James Harris and Alexander Lawson. In 1914, two memorials to the members of
the family of Joseph Alexander were placed in the South wall. Most of the
modern windows were the work of William Wilson. The most recent, on the
South side of the gallery, was presented by the 1st Kirriemuir Co. of the
Boys’ Brigade to mark the union, in 1973, of the Barony Church (as this
church was known from 1929) with St Ninian’s. Since then the Church has been
known as Kirriemuir Old Parish Church.
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The Names of estates at the end of the pews e.g. Kinnordy,
Ballinshoe etc. remind us that the pews were under the jurisdiction of the
Heritors (landowners). They controlled the allocation of seats and charged
rent to members of the congregation.
The kirkyard contains some very ancient gravestones, the
earliest legible one being the memorial to Magrata Tamsone who died in 1613
at the age of 72. The kirkyard closed for burials when the cemetery on the
hill opened in 1858.
The steeple, built in 1790, was a personal gift of Charles Lyell, Laird
of Kinnordy. The original bell came from the old church but unfortunately
cracked some years later and in 1839 was replaced by the present bell which
was cast in Dundee.
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