Atheneaum

The Athenaeum opened in 1817 as a private library and meeting rooms for Stirling’s wealthier inhabitants.

The Athenaeum was designed by architect William Stirling I from Dunblane and built by Allan Johnstone on the site of a meat market. It opened in January 1817 as a reading room and library, with a ground floor shop. The library had an annual subscription of 15d in 1866 (around £6 in today’s money) and non-members were welcome free of charge for up to a month.

This was not the only hub of learning on King Street at the time, a further library opened at 10 King Street in 1855, the Macfarlane Free Library, established by John Macfarlane. In 1859 the statue of local hero William Wallace, by renowned sculptor Handyside Ritchie, was added alongside the porch, and from 1875 it was used as offices for the Burgh Council.

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