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Newhaven fishwives - Mrs Hall and unknown woman
Hill, David Octavius, 1845, Calotype, Photograph
Newhaven fishwives - Mrs Hall and unknown woman
Newhaven fishwives - Mrs Hall and unknown woman
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Item no
37457
Title
Page from Leith Miscellany, volume V, Newhaven fishwives - Mrs Hall and unknown woman
Artist / maker
Hill, David Octavius
Date
1845
Type
Calotype
;
Photograph
Newhaven was founded by James IV in 1504 as a royal dockyard. It became an important fishing village, famous initially for oysters and later herring. An indoor fish market was built there in 1896. Newhaven fishwives, with their distinctive striped clothes, sold their goods around Edinburgh. David Octavius Hill and Robert Adamson famously photographed these fishwives and other Newhaven residents in the 1840s. The area now has a population of roughly five thousand.
South Leith Church, in Kirkgate, originated as a chapel dedicated to St Mary in 1483. It was used as Leith's parish church after the Reformation of 1560, when the General Assembly ordered the previous parish church, Restalrig Church, to be demolished, although this was only confirmed in 1609. The steeple, which had been built in 1674, was demolished in 1836 because it was at risk of collapsing. Further major renovations were made from 1847-1848, by the architect Thomas Hamilton.
Bernard Street runs from the junction of Constitution Street and Baltic Street to the Water of Leith at The Shore. It was named after Bernard Lyndsay, Chamberlain to James VI of Scotland and First of England.
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