Listed Building

The only legal part of the listing under the Planning (Listing Buildings and Conservation Areas) (Scotland) Act 1997 is the address/name of site. Addresses and building names may have changed since the date of listing – see 'About Listed Buildings' below for more information. The further details below the 'Address/Name of Site' are provided for information purposes only.

Address/Name of Site

7-11 (ODD NUMBERS) BUCCLEUCH STREET, PETER SCOTT'S FACTORYLB51195

Status: Designated

Documents

There are no additional online documents for this record.

Summary

Category
C
Date Added
18/11/2008
Local Authority
Scottish Borders
Planning Authority
Scottish Borders
Burgh
Hawick
NGR
NT 50050 14430
Coordinates
350050, 614430

Description

1897-1923, with core of circa 1816. Extensive complex of mill buildings with long, 3-storey and attic elevation to Buccleuch Street and tall chimney, boiler house, storage blocks and weaving sheds in roughly triangular site to rear.

BUCCLEUCH STREET BLOCK: Long street frontage of different dates, comprising 10-bay, ridge-roofed section to left, 14-bay mansard-roofed section to centre and single-bay, gabled, pedimented section to right.

Earliest section, 10 bays to left, built in 2 stages (7 right bays first; 3 left bays later). Squared, coursed whinstone with polished yellow sandstone ashlar dressings (some painted) to street elevation; yellow sandstone and whinstone rubble to rear. Base course; 2nd-floor and attic band courses; tall blocking course with modillion cornice. Tripartite, stone-mullioned windows with projecting cills. Ridge roof. 4 marble steps to door of ground-floor shop to 3-bay left section; broad, 2-leaf, timber-boarded gate to pend entrance at left of 4-bay central section; 4 granite steps to recessed central door in plain, corniced architrave to 3-bay right section.

14-bay central section, Charles Brown, 1910; 2nd floor and attic added by James Pearson Alison, 1923. Continuous strip windows divided by stone mullions, and 4 evenly spaced, flat-roofed dormers. Squared, coursed yellow sandstone with polished ashlar dressings; yellow sandstone and whinstone rubble and brick to rear. Cill courses; dentilled eaves course. Stop-chamfered margins to ground and 1st floors; 2nd-floor windows recessed behind pilaster mullions. Raised door to left of centre and round-arched window to outer left at ground floor. Full-height, M-gabled wing to rear.

Tall, single-bay, gabled block to right, James Pearson Alison, 1923, with quadripartite window at ground floor and tripartite windows above, rising to Diocletian window at attic and broken pediment. Yellow sandstone ashlar to street elevation; rendered to side (W); yellow sandstone rubble to rear. Channelled pilaster quoins.

Plate glass in timber sash and case windows to principal block predominantly 6-pane fixed glazing with tilting upper panes to blocks to right. Grey slate roof with metal ridge and ridge vents. Ashlar-coped skews. Coped ashlar stacks with octagonal, buff clay cans. Cast-iron rainwater goods.

CHIMNEY AND BOILER HOUSE: Tall, octagonal, tapered, painted brick chimney with banded detailing. Roughly rectangular-plan boiler house block in tooled, squared yellow sandstone at base of chimney, with 3-leaf, timber-boarded doors; and various additional brick and timber structures to roof.

STORAGE BLOCKS AND KNITTING SHEDS: 3-storey, roughly rectangular-plan canteen and stock-room block diagonally adjoining rear of E end of Buccleuch Street block; extensive, single-storey, weaving sheds with linked piended roofs. Brick, rendered to stock-room block. Strip skylights throughout.

Grey slate roofs with metal ridges and ridge vents.

INTERIOR: Late 1950s decoration to ground-floor boardrooms and offices at No 11 Buccleuch Street, with light wood panelling inlaid with strips of dark wood; some panelling to 1st-floor offices. Regularly spaced cast-iron columns with simple capitals supporting ceilings throughout most buildings.

Statement of Special Interest

A substantially structurally unaltered, early-20th-century textile mill complex with a prominent, well-proportioned elevation to Buccleuch Street, tall boiler-house chimney with a dominating presence on the Hawick skyline, and extensive ancillary structures.

Textile manufacturing plays a key role in the history of Hawick. Conveniently situated for water-powered milling at the meeting of the River Teviot and the Slitrig Water, Hawick became one of the richest burghs per capita in Scotland as a result of the industry. During the 19th century, water power was superseded by steam power, and tall chimneys came to dominate the town's skyline. The chimney of Peter Scott's is the only such structure remaining today.

The hosiery (and later knitwear) manufacturing firm of Peter Scott & Company has its origins in the partnership of Adamson & Scott, who commenced business nearby in 1878. The partnership split in 1884, and in 1897 Peter Scott moved his firm to Buccleuch Street, to occupy a building believed to have been constructed shortly after the street was first laid out in 1815. Over the next 30 years, the property was greatly extended and altered, including the gradual construction of a new façade on Buccleuch Street and the building of numerous knitting sheds on the awkwardly shaped site to the rear. The majority of the extensions were designed by Charles Brown, Burgh Surveyor; but the upper storeys of the long strip-windowed Buccleuch Street section and the giant-pilastered terminal block are by James Pearson Alison (1862-1932), Hawick's most prominent architect. Born at Eskbank but raised partly in Hawick, Alison had commenced practice in the town in 1888 and remained there until his death in 1932, during which period he was responsible for a large number of buildings of widely varying types and styles, including a considerable proportion of the burgh's listed structures.

A former yarn store at the south-west corner of the site, originally part of the Peter Scott's complex, was due to be sold with planning permission for conversion into flats at the time of resurvey (2008).

References

Bibliography

Plans in Aitken Turnbull archive, Hawick and in Heritage Hub, Hawick. Buildings on this site shown on 1st Edition Ordnance Survey map (1857). David Roemmele, The Industrial Archaeology of the Tweed and Hosiery Textile Mills of Hawick (1997), unpublished BA (Hons) thesis, pp62-7.

About Listed Buildings

Historic Environment Scotland is responsible for designating sites and places at the national level. These designations are Scheduled monuments, Listed buildings, Inventory of gardens and designed landscapes and Inventory of historic battlefields.

We make recommendations to the Scottish Government about historic marine protected areas, and the Scottish Ministers decide whether to designate.

Listing is the process that identifies, designates and provides statutory protection for buildings of special architectural or historic interest as set out in the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) (Scotland) Act 1997.

We list buildings which are found to be of special architectural or historic interest using the selection guidance published in Designation Policy and Selection Guidance (2019)

Listed building records provide an indication of the special architectural or historic interest of the listed building which has been identified by its statutory address. The description and additional information provided are supplementary and have no legal weight.

These records are not definitive historical accounts or a complete description of the building(s). If part of a building is not described it does not mean it is not listed. The format of the listed building record has changed over time. Earlier records may be brief and some information will not have been recorded.

The legal part of the listing is the address/name of site which is known as the statutory address. Other than the name or address of a listed building, further details are provided for information purposes only. Historic Environment Scotland does not accept any liability for any loss or damage suffered as a consequence of inaccuracies in the information provided. Addresses and building names may have changed since the date of listing. Even if a number or name is missing from a listing address it will still be listed. Listing covers both the exterior and the interior and any object or structure fixed to the building. Listing also applies to buildings or structures not physically attached but which are part of the curtilage (or land) of the listed building as long as they were erected before 1 July 1948.

While Historic Environment Scotland is responsible for designating listed buildings, the planning authority is responsible for determining what is covered by the listing, including what is listed through curtilage. However, for listed buildings designated or for listings amended from 1 October 2015, legal exclusions to the listing may apply.

If part of a building is not listed, it will say that it is excluded in the statutory address and in the statement of special interest in the listed building record. The statement will use the word 'excluding' and quote the relevant section of the 1997 Act. Some earlier listed building records may use the word 'excluding', but if the Act is not quoted, the record has not been revised to reflect subsequent legislation.

Listed building consent is required for changes to a listed building which affect its character as a building of special architectural or historic interest. The relevant planning authority is the point of contact for applications for listed building consent.

Find out more about listing and our other designations at www.historicenvironment.scot/advice-and-support. You can contact us on 0131 668 8914 or at designations@hes.scot.

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