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Latitude: 58.5903 / 58°35'24"N
Longitude: -3.3851 / 3°23'6"W
OS Eastings: 319581
OS Northings: 967751
OS Grid: ND195677
Mapcode National: GBR L600.VFB
Mapcode Global: WH6CQ.ZB7Y
Plus Code: 9CCRHJR7+4X
Entry Name: The Old Reading Room, Castletown
Listing Name: Castletown, the Old Reading Room
Listing Date: 9 February 1998
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 391696
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB44957
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Castletown, The Old Reading Room
ID on this website: 200391696
Location: Olrig
County: Highland
Electoral Ward: Thurso and Northwest Caithness
Parish: Olrig
Traditional County: Caithness
Tagged with: Architectural structure
Dated 1866. Single storey gabled reading room and cottage, 5-bay, grouped 3-2, lower bays of cottage to right. Squared, snecked and stugged stone with ashlar dressings, chamfered arrises.
READING ROOM: 3 bays to left with pedimented and pilastered door to centre, with fanlight (blocked), with 'AMT' carved in flowing script above. flanked by broad gabled panel to left with 5-light bowed window, ashlar aproned with stone mullions and half-conical roof, quatrefoil in gablehead;
flanked to left by narrower gabled panel with pedimented window, oval panel in gablehead carved with shield and motto.
COTTAGE: 2 lower bays to right ; 2 advanced gabled bays, narrow to left with corniced window to front, arched arrowslit and datestone in gablehead, door on return to left; bay to right wider with canted window and round panel in gablehead, carved with key motif.
REAR: 4 tall windows to reading room, 2 windows to lower cottage with brick lean-to in re-entrant angle of slight recess masking window to right.
Windows currently blocked (1997). Graded grey slate roof. Stone finials to gableheads. Ashlar coping to steep gablehead skews and ashlar stacks.
INTERIOR: not seen 1997.Low coped rubble wall to front, harled to side. Short flight of steps with gablet coped dwarf wall between terraced levels.
Sited on road corner by Stangerhill Bridge. The reading room was gifted to the town in the will of Miss Margaret Traill, and opened on New Year?s day 1867. Caldwell described it as 'a boon and ornament to the locality'.
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