History in Structure

St Ronan's Well, Well's Brae, Innerleithen

A Category B Listed Building in Innerleithen, Scottish Borders

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Coordinates

Latitude: 55.6238 / 55°37'25"N

Longitude: -3.0675 / 3°4'3"W

OS Eastings: 332872

OS Northings: 637209

OS Grid: NT328372

Mapcode National: GBR 730D.PV

Mapcode Global: WH6V6.VXG2

Plus Code: 9C7RJWFJ+GX

Entry Name: St Ronan's Well, Well's Brae, Innerleithen

Listing Name: Wells Brae, St Ronan's Well, Former Pump Room, Bottling Plant, Ancillary Buildings and Boundary Walls

Listing Date: 23 February 1971

Category: B

Source: Historic Scotland

Source ID: 379403

Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB34970

Building Class: Cultural

Also known as: Innerleithen, Well's Brae, St Ronan's Well

ID on this website: 200379403

Location: Innerleithen

County: Scottish Borders

Town: Innerleithen

Electoral Ward: Tweeddale East

Traditional County: Peeblesshire

Tagged with: Well

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Description

William Playfair, 1826; reconstructed 1896 with additions. Single storey, 5-bay, symmetrical, pedimented open loggia pavilion with flanking, recessed, bowed conical-roofed bays and long plain wings extending to sides. Small wing to rear forming T-plan. Later large single storey and attic, 4-bay, piended roof former bottling plant attached to rear at SE corner. Chamfered timber colonettes and timber boarding to pavilion; painted render to ancillary wings with smooth red sandstone margins to conical bays; painted margins elsewhere. Royal Crest to pavilion pediment. Canted corner to bottling plant with former delivery door (now infilled) and hoist over.

Predominantly 9-pane over plain glazing pattern in timber sash and case windows; plain glazing to rear. Fixed 18-pane timber casements to former bottling plant. Grey flagstone floor to pavilion. Grey slate roof with timber bracketed eaves and decorative clay ridge tiles; corniced square brick chimney stacks; cast-iron rainwater goods.

INTERIOR: pavilion interior converted to form caretaker's accommodation with Edwardian style timber chimneypiece. Some white glazed brick walls to bottling plant.

BOUNDARY WALLS: tall rubble walls with cement copes to N and W. Low rubble wall to E with cast iron gates and gatepiers.

Statement of Interest

St Ronan's Well is an interesting example of an early 19th century spa. The well played an important part in the development of Innerleithen from a small hamlet to a larger town. The buildings are prominently sited over the town on steeply sloping ground with the well head sited behind.

The waters of St Ronan's Well were renowned to have healing qualities since the 18th century. The first St Ronan's Well pavilion was built in 1826 to a design by William Playfair for the 7th Earl of Traquair for the public to take in the waters. This building was built with subscription reading rooms as a result of a rise in the wells celebrity after of Sir Walter Scott's novel 'St Ronan's Wells', written in 1824. The St Ronan's Games which still continue today were also established in 1827; together signalling the beginning a prosperous time for the Burgh. At this time it was also known as the 'Doo-well' because of the many pigeons around the well head.

The popularity of the Well declined from its 1840's heyday, partly due to the dilution of the spring and its healing qualities. The opening of the new Peebles Hydropathic in 1881 so nearby also significantly undermined its popularity.

In 1896 there was a scheme to revive the Well by a new public company, the St Ronan's Well Mineral Water Co. This involved the building of the new pavilion with waiting rooms, retiring rooms and baths pumped with water from the sulphurous spring. The opening ceremony took place on 10th September 1896.

At the same time a new saline spring was aerated and the bottling plant was built. It was the first pure mineral water to be bottled in the UK and the plant is said to have been capable of producing 1500 bottles a day. The business was sold to Harry Rawson of Joppa in 1906; the Royal Warrant coat of Arms was added to the pediment in 1913. During the 2nd World War production slowed and the building was used as sleeping accommodation for troops after which time it fell into disrepair. In 1954 a caretaker was appointed and a programme of improvements was carried out which included the removal of all the redundant machinery; by this time the business was under the name of Cairns and Rawson of Edinburgh.

The buildings were again refurbished 1991 at which time the former bottling plant was converted for use as a community fitness centre. The buildings are now under the control of Scottish Borders Council and the former bottling plant currently houses a museum covering the wells and local history (2007).

List description revised 2008.

External Links

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