Dingwall Other Societies

Attribution: unknown (Greenhill street  in Dingwall looking North)

Dingwall & District Arthritis Care

This branch opened in 1990 with help from branches in Tain, Elgin and Nairn and from the central office. Membership has increased steadily and now stands around 70.

An average of 35 members meet monthly in Ross County Social Club. Some attend the local Rheumatology Hospital in Dingwall, a very special facility. Some are transported to meetings. A few meetings includes health and subjects to help deal with arthritis. There are summer outings and Christmas dinner as club activities.

There is a registered visitor who makes home visits offering help and support to arthritis sufferers. Recently a course called ‘Challenging Arthritis’ was begun and has been very helpful. The purpose of the branch is to offer such support and share problems with fellow sufferers and help all to come to terms with their pain and rise above it. Most fund raising is done by the branch although some local organisations such as Moray Firth Radio do make contributions as well as individuals.

Many members of the group enjoy and benefit from visits to the Hydrotherapy pool in Dingwall where a physiotherapist advises on the best exercises for affected joints.

– Linda Holroyd

Citizens Advice Bureau

There is a branch of the Citizens Advice Bureau in Dingwall, staffed by volunteers. The aim of the organisation is to ensure that people have access to reliable information on all subjects, and know their rights. Advice is avaliable if required.

Help is given with filling in forms, contacting Goverment agencies, and negotiating with creditors.

This service is free, confidential, avaliable to anyone, and independant of outside influences. Because of its special knowledge of the difficulties people face, the CAB feed back information to the policy-makers so that problems thus identified may be dealt with.

Interior of the Dingwall Citizens Advice Bureau office

Attribution: unknown

Dingwall Community Centre

Dingwall Community Centre is an independent registered charity no SC021857 based in a property owned by Highland Council, but independently run by a Management Committee of local people. We aim to provide a friendly, welcoming environment in which to facilitate community development for the benefit of the whole community.

Dingwall Community Centre has its own website. To find more information about the Community Centre click on the button below:

Front view of Dingwall Community Centre

Attribution: unknown

The Dingwall Initiative

The Dingwall initiative, as it is known, is part of a larger organisation known as The Inner Moray Firth Towns’ group. This group is dedicated to the regeneration of the towns involved and is backed by the development department of Highland Council.

Projects involved range from the renewal of pedestrianised areas for shoppers, the reclamation of derelict land, the encouragement of civic pride and interest through national and international contacts, and a wide variety of specifically local aims suggested by the residents of the particular town. The initiative has been in existence for about three and a half years, and overall consultants to the group are W. S.Atkins & Co. who have offices all over Scotland.

Naturally all of this costs money and one of the major aims of the initiative, once it has identified a local need, is to raise the necessary funding. Sometimes this funding is provided locally by the Highland Council, but increasingly the main source is funding from the European Union.

In Dingwall the Initiative is at the stage of preparing what is called a “demonstration project which, in this case, is the upgrading of the main routes into the town from North, South and West. This is an ongoing project. We have already established contact with similar initiatives in Finland, Sweden and Norway, thus emphasising the European Wide relevance of the concept.

(August 2000)

Contributed by Bill McKenzie, Aultgowrie House, Aultgowrie, by Muir of Ord, IV6 7XA

The Dingwall Association

The Dingwall Association is a strictly local organisation with an open membership to any citizen of Dingwall, or anyone with an interest in the town. It has a annual fee, and these fees are the sole income of the group, apart from some grant aid from the local area committee of the Highland Council, and some funding from the Dingwall Common good fund. Projects undertaken by the Association include Dingwall’s Christmas Lights, provision of new street signage, and a wide variety of smaller local projects. The Dingwall Association welcomes new members and advertises its meetings in the local press to encourage as much participation as possible.

(August 2000)

Contributed by Bill McKenzie, Aultgowrie House, Aultgowrie, by Muir of Ord, IV6 7XA

Lodge Fingal

Lodge Fingal was established in Dingwall in February 1826 and over the past 170 years or so has been a strong influence in Freemasonry in the area. Lodges are composed of men of good-will, of good character and of good reputation, who believe in God. The mission of Masonry is to help to build a better world through the process of building better men to live in it. The principles of Masonry are proven and tested and inculcates in each of its members the duties of Loyalty and Citizenship. No one is invited to become a Mason. Every man who enters the Lodge does so of his own free-will and accord, not at the urging of another. Lodge Fingal meets in Dingwall on the second Tuesday of September to April.

– John Noble, Master Mason

Lodge Fingal

Attribution: unknown

The R.N.L.I.

The R.N.L.I. is a charity founded in 1824 dedicated to saving lives at sea around the coast of the British Isles. It operates a fleet of fast, modern lifeboats operating from 223 stations, of which 45 are in Scotland. The crews are all highly trained local volunteers. Reliant entirely on public donations, we have a network of voluntary Fund-raising Committees including Dingwall, and elsewhere in Ross & Cromarty.

For further information see our website at www.rnli.org.uk or telephone RNLI (Scotland) on 0131 557 9171, or write to The National Organiser (Scotland), RNLI, Bellevue House, Hopetoun Street, Edinburgh, EH7 4ND.

The Rotary Club of Dingwall

The Rotary Club of Dingwall was founded in 1954. Members meet each Tuesday evening, 5.30 for 6.00 at the town’s Tulloch Castle Hotel, Tulloch Castle Drive, Dingwall, IV15 9ND.

Great Feil Maree

Attribution: unknown

Dingwall S.W.R.I.

Dingwall S.W.R.I. was founded in 1946 and has been going strong ever since. With a current membership of 37, we are now one of the larger institutes in the Ross-shire Federation which consists of over 30 similar groups.

The Women’s Institute was actually founded as a movement in Outario, Canada in 1897. The aim was to provide educational opportunities and fellowship to women of all ages from 16 years upwards. That aim still exists today.

Each month at our meetings from September to May, we have a speaker or demonstrator. Over the years we have learned a great deal from topics such as “Antiques”, “Chiropody”, “Alternative Medicine”, “Japanese Life” and enjoyed demonstrations of embroidery, ceramics, silk painting, cooking etc.
We also participate in the two annual showcases of W.R.I. skills – the Bulb and Baking show and the Handicrafts Show.

Contrary to popular belief, no-one needs to be an expert at knitting or jam making to become a member. The companionship shared at meetings over a cup of tea is just as valuable as possessing housewifely skills.

The W.R.I. is now a world-wide organisation of which we are proud to be a small part.

Christina ?.

The Puffin Hydrotherapy Pool

The Puffin Hydrotherapy Pool, adjacent to Rheumatology unit was officially opened in August 1996 by HRH Princess Alexandra after a 5 year fund-raising campaign to provide special facilities for the treatment and recreation for the disabled. The project cost was £375,000. The running costs of the Hydrotherapy Pool are significant, around £80,000 per year or £320 per day. The number of people that can use it at one time is quite small, as the best results come when disabled people are not crowded or rushed through. Running costs are met by grants from the Highland Health Board and the Highland Council, by the pool charity shop staffed by over 50 volunteers, by Pool Fund-raisers and by friends of the Puffin Pool in addition to the fees paid by users. Many donations are received.

There are probably 20,000 disabled adults in the Highlands and Islands. Most of those suffer from arthritis, backache or illnesses like stroke, multiple sclerosis and cerebal palsy. Hydrotherapy is a kind of physiotherapy and a specialist treatment to ease pain and increase mobility for people suffering from these illnesses.
Hydrotherapy is a type of exercise carried out in a specially heated pool. The buoyancy of the water and the extra heat relax the body’s muscles and ligaments allowing pain relieving exercises and improved fitness.

Sessions usually last for around an hour and are often carried out in groups and are fun as well as being good for health.
The Puffin Hydrotherapy Pool has been built by a registered charity for the people of the Highlands and Islands.
Dingwall Puffin Hydrotherapy Pool, Ferry Road, Dingwall, IV15 9QS. Tel: 01349 864414.

Visit their Web Site at www.puffinpool.co.uk

The Puffin Hydrotherapy Pool sign

Attribution: unknown

The WRVS

The WRVS in Ross and Cromarty has been operating since the 1960s.

Currently we run Meals-on-wheels in eighteen towns and villages, Lunch Clubs and Over 60 Clubs, an inspection service for the Highland Helpcall – an alarm for the elderly – and volunteers man the WRVS shop at Raigmore.

WRVS has meant more Highland Helpcall inspections, social transport requests and the setting up of Sheriff Court teabars, but sadly has also meant the closure of clothing stores and local hospital trolley shops.

An important part of our work is an emergency back-up service to provide refreshment for the emergency services as well as opening rest centres in the case of an evacuation.

WRVS soup kitchen in the Old Academy grounds c.1950

Attribution: unknown

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Dingwall » Dingwall Places
11 Dingwall Places
11 Dingwall Places
Territorial Army building on Ferry Road.
10 Dingwall Places
10 Dingwall Places
Territorial Army building on Ferry Road.
13 Fingal Lodge
13 Fingal Lodge
Freemasons Lodge at west end of Dingwall.
21 Dingwall Places
21 Dingwall Places
Aerial view of Church Street.
16 Dingwall Places
16 Dingwall Places
Nicol's Court
06 Dingwall Places
06 Dingwall Places
Hill Street
02 Dingwall Places
02 Dingwall Places
Dingwall and the Black Isle from Dochcarty. [Photo Dingwall Camera Club]
Dingwall Places
Dingwall Places
A snowy Ferry Road.
22 Dingwall Places
22 Dingwall Places
Church Street at ground level, looking towards High Street.
27 Dingwall Places
27 Dingwall Places
In Tulloch Street, across the road from St Clement's, stands the Old Academy complex and in this building is the Community Centre.
07 Dingwall Places
07 Dingwall Places
Park Street with Free Church in background.
08 Dingwall Places
08 Dingwall Places
Railway Station
15 Dingwall Places
15 Dingwall Places
Older properties include Lochiel Place.
31 Dingwall Places
31 Dingwall Places
At the start of Craig Road is the canal built by Thomas Telford.
28 Dingwall Places
28 Dingwall Places
"Over the fence" from the Old Academy lies the site of the former Dingwall Castle including its Doocot, seen here surrounded by scaffolding and awaiting repairs to its structure.
33 Dingwall Places
33 Dingwall Places
A short distance away, on your left, is Pefferside Park and boating pond, gifted to the town by Dingwall Fire Brigade Club.
29 Dingwall Places
29 Dingwall Places
A short distance from the Doocot is the Episcopal Church.
25 Dingwall Places
25 Dingwall Places
St Clement's Church
26 Dingwall Places
26 Dingwall Places
St Clement's church adjacent to the marts' site, now Tesco.
04 Dingwall Places
04 Dingwall Places
Towering above Dingwall is the Macdonald monument, built to honour Major General Sir Hector Macdonald, a local man who rose from Private through the ranks of the British Army. He was victor of the battle of Omdurman in the Sudan war. His monument is surrounded by the local cemetery known as Mitchell Hill.
03 Dingwall Places
03 Dingwall Places
Macdonald Memorial.
30 Dingwall Places
30 Dingwall Places
At the top of Tulloch Street is the Bank of Scotland.
37 Dingwall Places
37 Dingwall Places
To the left of Tulloch flats is Dingwall Primary School, originally part of Dingwall Academy but now a separate building.
36 Dingwall Places
36 Dingwall Places
On the road to Tulloch Castle hotel are the Tulloch flats, once known as Mackay Hostel, the home of boys from the west coast who attended Dingwall Academy.
14 Dingwall Places
14 Dingwall Places
Houses in Boggan Bank, opposite Fingal Lodge.
18 Dingwall Places
18 Dingwall Places
Looking down the "close" adjacent to Munro's butcher's shop towards the windows of Dingwall Camera Club's base.
19 Dingwall Places
19 Dingwall Places
The mechanism of the Town Clock, now redundant following renovation of the town hall tower.
01 Dingwall Places
01 Dingwall Places
Ben Wyvis 3432 ft (1046m) as seen from south entrance to Dingwall. Petrol station forecourt no longer exists and the building formerly known as The Park (out of sight) is now a local authority office. [Photo J W Bruce, 2001]
34 Dingwall Places
34 Dingwall Places
Behind the pond could be seen Dingwall Academy, opened in 1939, with its extensive playingfields in front, on which the "new" Dingwall Academy now stands.
23 Dingwall Places
23 Dingwall Places
Reith & Anderson's auction mart at the foot of Church Street with Ian Tolmie on the rostrum.
32 Dingwall Places
32 Dingwall Places
A less attractive photo of part of the canal with the Cromarty Firth in the background. [Photo source unknown]
24 Dingwall Places
24 Dingwall Places
At the foot of Church Street, Hamilton and Reith & Anderson auction marts, now combined and operating on a site outwith Dingwall.
20A Dingwall Places
20A Dingwall Places
Beside Dingwall Museum is Eagle Close, above which is the headquarters of Dingwall Camera Club.
03 Dingwall Places
03 Dingwall Places
The Cromarty firth and Black Isle taken from the old ferry crossing Dingwall - Alcaig.
05 Dingwall Places
05 Dingwall Places
The Macdonald Memorial in course of construction [F W Urquhart photograph]
12 Dingwall Places
12 Dingwall Places
Police Station, adjacent to Fingal Lodge.
20 Dingwall Places
20 Dingwall Places
For a few years the Mercat Cross was sited outside the Towh Hall but due to deterioration it was moved into Dingwall Museum.,
02 Dingwall Places
02 Dingwall Places
The Black Isle from Cluny Hill.
35 Dingwall Places
35 Dingwall Places
At the foot of 'Kinnairdie brae' the home and garden of Mr William Logan whose construction firm built the Tay Road Bridge, several of the hydro dams and power stations around the Highlands. His firm employed mainly local labour.
17 Dingwall Places
17 Dingwall Places
Across the High Street from Nicol's Court was Woolworths store which closed, nationally, in 2008 and became the Factory Shop in 2010.

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