Dollar, Clackmannanshire
{{Short description|Town in Clackmannanshire, Scotland}}
{{Multiple issues|
{{More citations needed|date=July 2021}}
{{Lead too short|date=March 2023}}
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{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2024}}
{{Use British English|date=May 2025}}
{{Infobox UK place
| country = Scotland
| official_name = Dollar
| population = {{Scottish locality population|name|POP=Dollar}}
| population_ref = ({{Scottish settlement population citation|year}}){{Scottish settlement population citation}}
| os_grid_reference = NS964978
| map_type = Scotland
| coordinates = {{coord|56|09|46|N|3|40|29|W|display=inline,title}}
| gaelic_name = Dolair
| scots_name =
| unitary_scotland = Clackmannanshire
| lieutenancy_scotland = Clackmannanshire
| constituency_westminster = Dunfermline and Dollar
| constituency_scottish_parliament = Clackmannanshire and Dunblane
| post_town = Dollar
| postcode_district = FK14
| postcode_area = FK
| dial_code = 01259
| static_image_name = Dollar - geograph.org.uk - 294410.jpg
}}
Dollar ({{langx|gd|Dolair}}) is a small town in Clackmannanshire, Scotland, with an estimated population of {{Scottish locality population|name|POP=Dollar}} in {{Scottish settlement population citation|year}}. It is {{convert|12|mi|km|abbr=off}} east of Stirling.
Toponymy
The name is unrelated to the dollar currency name. Possible interpretations are that Dollar is derived from Doilleir, an Irish and Scots Gaelic word meaning dark and gloomy, or from various words in Pictish: 'Dol' (field) + 'Ar' (arable) or Dol (valley) + Ar (high).{{cite web |last=Baillie |first=Bruce |date=19 August 2024 |url=http://home.btconnect.com/dollarmuseum/derivation.html |title=Derivation of 'Dollar' |publisher=Dollar Museum |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120918025021/http://home.btconnect.com/dollarmuseum/derivation.html |archive-date=18 September 2012 }} Another derivation is from Dolar, 'haugh place' (cf Welsh dôl 'meadow'. This word was borrowed from British or Pictish into Scottish Gaelic as dail 'water-meadow, haugh').{{cite web |url=http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/vli/language/gaelic/pdfs/placenamesC-E.pdf |title=Iain Mac an Tàilleir: Scottish placenames, 2003 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070317013236/http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/vli/language/gaelic/pdfs/placenamesC-E.pdf |archive-date=17 March 2007 }} John Everett-Heath derives it as 'Place of the Water Meadow' from the Celtic dôl 'water meadow' and ar 'place'.{{cite book |title=The Concise Dictionary of World Place-Names |chapter=Dollar |edition=2 |publisher=Oxford University Press |date=2012 |isbn=9780199580897 |url=https://www.oxfordreference.com/display/10.1093/acref/9780199580897.001.0001/acref-9780199580897-e-8538?rskey=2DcKF5&result=2&q=Dollar |access-date=6 May 2024 }}
History
File:(Castle Campbell, Dollar, Scotland) (LOC) (3450349000).jpg of Castle Campbell, Dollar, Scotland]]
The 500-year-old Castle Campbell stands overlooking the town, sitting on a forward projection of rock on the south side of the Ochil Hills. The castle was the lowland seat of the Duke of Argyll, where Mary, Queen of Scots once stayed in the 16th century.
The original town (of which parts still survive) stands on the sloping ground beneath the castle, in what is now the northeast section of the town. Buildings here are generally stone built and two stories high. The oldest buildings date from the mid-17th century and several 18th-century buildings exist. Development spread to the west and south through the 19th century.
Around 1840 the construction of a new road to Muckhart on the lower ground south of the original route, created the current main east–west street. This quickly became the new "town centre" and the focus of shops and public activity.
The town has two war memorials, one for each world war. In the grounds of Dollar Academy, a bronze figure with outstretched hands by George Henry Paulin faces westwards and commemorates the fallen of the First World War. This also has names added for Northern Ireland.Inscription on Dollar War Memorial
A small museum run by volunteers contains a collection of local items, and much information about the former Devon Valley Railway, which closed to passengers in 1964. The town is now largely a dormitory community for people who work in Stirling and further afield (e.g. Glasgow and Edinburgh).
Location and transport
It is one of the Hillfoots Villages, situated between the Ochil Hills range to the north and the River Devon to the south. Dollar is {{convert|12|mi|km|abbr=off}} east of Stirling on the A91 road to St Andrews. The Devon Valley Railway linking Alloa and Kinross closed to passengers in 1964 and to freight in 1973.
Economy
Attempts were made to mine lead and copper in Dollar Glen from the 18th century and possibly earlier, but these were of no economic significance. Coal mining in the area began around the same time and, until 1973, supplied the Kincardine Power Station, and later, the Longannet Power Station with coal from the Upper Hirst seam. A tiny private non-NCB coal mine operated from the Harviestoun estate from the mid-1970s, partly filling the gap that the closed NCB left, whilst there was still local demand for coal.
In common with the other Hillfoots Villages, the textiles industry played an important part in the town's development. The Harviestoun Brewery was established west of Dollar in 1985, before its move to Alva.
Governance
From 1891 to 1975 the town had its own council.{{cite web |title=Dollar Town Council |url=http://www.dollarcommunity.org.uk/DollarTownCouncil.aspx |website=DollarCommunity.org.uk |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190120042632/https://www.dollarcommunity.org.uk/DollarTownCouncil.aspx |archive-date=20 January 2019 }} It is now within Clackmannanshire council area. It forms part of the Clackmannanshire East ward which includes Clackmannan, Comely Bank, Dollar & Muckhart. In the 2017 local elections, residents of the ward elected three councillors—one each from the Scottish National Party, the Labour Party and the Conservative Party.{{cite web |title=Clackmananshire Council Elections 2017 |url=https://www.clacks.gov.uk/council/electionresults/?election=38&constituency=33 |access-date=6 May 2024 }}
Provosts
Dollar had a provost from 1891 to 1975. The provosts were:
- James Beveridge Henderson (1891–1893)
- David Westwood (1893–1896)
- Richard Malcolm (1896–1899)
- John Drysdale (1899–1902)
- M Fisher (1902–1908)
- James Benson Green (1908–1913) and (1919–1925)
- Lavinia Malcolm (1913–1919), wife of Richard Malcolm (above), the first and only female Provost
- Captain Stewart Fairweather Butchart (1925–1931)
- C Allsopp (1931–1937)
- R Waddell (1937–1939)
- J Scott (1939–1943)
- P Walton (1943–1946)
- Alexander McLean Cowan (1946–1950)
- J Crawford Shaw (1950–1953)
- J Hewitt (1953–1956)
- J Muckersie (1956–1962)
- J M Miller (1962–1965)
- H Moss (1965–1968)
- Dr William Young Galloway (1968–1971) the town GP
- E M M Breingan (1971–1975)
Notable people
- William Auld (1924–2006) poet and Esperanto author, nominated three times for the Nobel Prize in Literature, lived in Dollar until his death
- According to the Pictish Chronicle, Amlaíb Conung, the first Norse king of Dublin, was killed in a battle fought at Dollar around 874, when Constantine I was the king of Scotland.
- David Taylor (1817–1867) illegitimate poet in the Scots tongue born in Dollar
- James Legge, Scottish sinologist{{cite journal |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/40726188 |last=Wong |first=Y. T. |date=1974 |title=Reviewed Work: Between Tradition and Modernity: Wang T'ao and Reform in Late-Ch'ing China. Harvard East Asian Series, No. 77 by Paul A. Cohen |journal=Monumenta Serica |volume=31 |pages=619–620 |jstor=40726188 |url-access=subscription }}
- File:Playfair Building profil gauche.jpg building)]] Dollar Academy was founded in 1818 with a bequest from a Dollar native, Captain John McNabb, who had allegedly made his fortune in the slave trade. Amongst the many notable pupils at the academy are James Dewar, the inventor of the vacuum flask; the grandsons of Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia; the second Presiding Officer (Speaker) of the Scottish Parliament, George Reid; BBC Gaza correspondent Alan Johnston; and political journalist for The Scotsman, the News of the World and The Spectator magazines, Fraser Nelson.
- Lavinia Malcolm, Provost of Dollar between 1913 and 1919, was both the first lady provost and first female town councillor in Scotland (see [https://web.archive.org/web/20110706063313/http://www.dollarcommunity.org.uk/DollarTownCouncil.asp Dollar Town Council 1891–1975]).
- Alan Longmuir, of Bay City Rollers fame, lived just east of Dollar and owned and operated the Dollar Arms public house for a time.
- In the late 1990s, Michael Kulas and Saul Davies, musicians in the English rock group James, also resided and worked out of the old Tea House Cottage, now known as Brewlands, next to Castle Campbell.
- The Scottish author Iain Banks studied at the nearby University of Stirling and, in an interview for The South Bank Show in 1997, spoke about using the landscape above Dollar as inspiration for his novels (in particular A Song of Stone).
- The biologist Alan Grafen
- Patrick Syme was an art master at Dollar Academy, and died in Dollar.{{cite DNB |wstitle=Syme, Patrick |volume=55 }}
- Internationalist footballer, Steven Caulker's eligibility to play for Scotland is from his grandmother Jessie hailing from Dollar
- Rev James Aitken Wylie, minister of the Secessionist Church in Dollar from 1831 to 1843
- Jazz pianist Fergus McCreadie grew up in Dollar.{{cite web |last=Morris |first=Hugh |date=26 July 2022 |title=Fergus McCreadie Interview: 'Jazz is kind of a folk music in itself' |website=Jazzwise |url=https://www.jazzwise.com/features/article/fergus-mccreadie-interview-jazz-is-kind-of-a-folk-music-in-itself |url-access=registration |access-date=20 November 2022 }}{{cite news |date=27 July 2022 |title=Fergus McCreadie: I'm not even dreaming about Mercury Prize win |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-62308762 |access-date=4 May 2024 |work=BBC}}
Sport
Dollar is home to the Dollar Glen Football Club, the Dollar Golf Club—a 9-hole golf course (formarly 18 but was closed and reopended as 9 holes just before lockdown{{citation needed|date=November 2024}}) notable for its steep inclines and lack of bunkers (a decision made by Ben Sayers),{{cite web |title=Dollar Golf Club |url=https://www.scottishgolfcourses.com/clackmannanshire/dollar.html |website=ScottishGolfCourses.com |publisher=PSP Media Group |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230524151537/https://www.scottishgolfcourses.com/clackmannanshire/dollar.html |archive-date=24 May 2023 }} a tennis club, a squash club, a bowling club, and a cricket club. The Ochil Hills that overlook Dollar provide opportunities for mountain biking.
Religion
File:The ruins of Old Dollar Parish Church.jpg
There are three churches, one Church of Scotland, one Scottish Episcopal Church and Ochil Hills Community Church which meets in the Civic Centre.
Twin towns
Dollar is twinned with the French town of La Ville-aux-Dames, which lies just outside Tours in the Loire Valley.
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category}}
{{Wikivoyage|Dollar}}
- [http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/place/place_page.jsp?p_id=16884&st=dollar Historical information on Dollar from the Vision of Britain website]
{{Hillfoots Villages}}
{{Clackmannanshire Towns & Villages}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Mining communities in Scotland