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St Bernard's Well. Water of Leith.

St Bernard's Well. Water of Leith.

941 14

Lawson McCulloch


Free Account, Musselburgh, Scotland

St Bernard's Well. Water of Leith.

This mineral water well is on the south bank of the Water of Leith, on an estate once known as St Bernard's. Just below a footpath is St Bernard's Well (55°57′19.1″N 3°12′41.4″W); the well-house was originally built in 1760. The waters of the well were held in high repute for their medicinal qualities, and the nobility and gentry took summer quarters in the valley to drink deep draughts of the water and take the country air. In 1788 Lord Gardenstone, a wealthy Court of Session judge who thought he had benefited from the mineral spring, commissioned Alexander Nasmyth to design a new pump room. The builder John Wilson began work in 1789. It is in the shape of a circular Greek temple supported by ten tall Doric order columns, with a statue made in 1791 from Coade stone of Hygieia, the Greek goddess of health, in the centre. St Bernard's F.C., a once successful Scottish team but now defunct were named after the famous well and played in Stockbridge.

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Information

Section
Vu de 941
Publiée
Langue
Licence

Exif

APN NEX-7
Objectif Sony E 18-55mm F3.5-5.6 OSS
Ouverture 8
Temps de pose 1/60
Focale 18.0 mm
ISO 100