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Alfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection (page 5)

Historic and individualistic images form one of the pioneers of panoramic photography

404 items

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Lincluden Abbey

Lincluden Abbey
July 1927: The ruins of Lincluden Abbey at Dumfries, Nithsdale. The abbey was founded in the 12th century as a Benedictine convent and later became a collegiate church

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Harbour At Rothesay

Harbour At Rothesay
circa 1925: The harbour at Rothesay in Argyll and Bute. Rothesay used to be known as Glasgow-by-the-sea but improved transport links encouraged visitors from further afield

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Coast At Mallaig

Coast At Mallaig
circa 1925: Fishing craft off Mallaig in the Highland region. Mallaig is the western end of the traditional Road to the Isles and has a large herring port

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: North Inch

North Inch
29th June 1923: The North Inch at Perth, by the River Tay. Perth, known as the fair city, was the capital of Scotland for over a century until James I of Scotland was murdered there in 1437

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Isle Of Whithorn

Isle Of Whithorn
July 1927: The harbour at Isle of Whithorn in Dumfries and Galloway. Whithorn is the site of St Ninians Candida Casa (White House) which is the earliest Christian settlement in Scotland

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Scottish River

Scottish River
circa 1925: Abbotsford, near Galashiels in the Scottish Borders. The Scottish writer Sir Walter Scott (1771 - 1832) built Abbotsford House between 1811 and 1817

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Dunskey Castle

Dunskey Castle
July 1926: Dunskey Castle, built in 1510 by John Adair, on the coast at Portpatrick in Dumfries and Galloway.. Portpatrick used to be a steamer port, until the harbour fell into disrepair

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Coast At Dunoon

Coast At Dunoon
circa 1925: The coast at Dunoon, Argyll. Dunoon is a popular tourist destination. It has the fragmentary ruins of a castle, which belonged to the Stewarts with the Campbells as hereditary keepers

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Coast At St Monans

Coast At St Monans
circa 1925: The Old Kirk of St Monance on the coast at St Monans in Fife. The church is 600 years old and in stormy weather spray from the sea reaches the old wooden door of the church

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Cauldron Snout

Cauldron Snout
13th June 1907: Cauldron Snout waterfall in Teesdale, County Durham. (Photo by Alfred Hind Robinson/A H Robinson/Getty Images)

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Culloden Moor

Culloden Moor
circa 1925: A monument to those who died in battle on Culloden Moor, in north eastern Scotland near Inverness, also known as Drummossie Moor

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Princes St Gardens

Princes St Gardens
28th June 1923: The Scott Monument, commemorating Scottish writer Sir Walter Scott (1771 - 1832), in Princes Street Gardens in Edinburgh

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Marsden Rock

Marsden Rock
circa 1925: Marsden Rock on the coast at South Shields. (Photo by Alfred Hind Robinson/A H Robinson/Getty Images)

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Pool At Dunbar

Pool At Dunbar
July 1923: Visitors bathing in the outdoor pool at Dunbar, East Lothian. Dunbar Castle, built in the 9th century, was destroyed by Cromwell in 1650

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Edinburgh

Edinburgh
25th June 1928: Edinburgh, capital of Scotland. There is evidence of Iron Age settlement in Edinburgh and the old part of the city developed around the castle within the protective Flodden Wall

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Elgin Cathedral

Elgin Cathedral
circa 1925: The ruins of Elgin Cathedral in Moray. The 13th-century cathedral was damaged in 1390 when the town was attacked by Wolf of Badenoch, the outlawed son of Robert II

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Countryside

Countryside
circa 1925: Egton Bridge at Grosmont in Monmouthshire. (Photo by Alfred Hind Robinson/A H Robinson/Getty Images)

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Bridge At Perth

Bridge At Perth
29th June 1923: Bridge over the River Tay at Perth. Perth, known as the fair city, was the capital of Scotland for over a century until James I of Scotland was murdered there in 1437 and his widow

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Cottages By Road

Cottages By Road
circa 1925: Cottages at Senwick on Kirkcudbright Bay in Dumfries and Galloway. Kirkcudbright, on the River Dee, means the church of St Cuthbert. MacLellans Castle, built in 1582, dominates the town

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Tweed At Coldstream

Tweed At Coldstream
23rd April 1907: The River Tweed running through Coldstream in the Borders region. Coldstream was an important town where English

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Bathers At Heyst

Bathers At Heyst
1909: Bathers on the beach at Heyst. (Photo by Alfred Hind Robinson/A H Robinson/Getty Images)

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Lighthouse

Lighthouse
July 1927: The lighthouse at Southerness in Dumfries and Galloway. Southerness is a popular tourist resort with sandy beaches and golf courses

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Kirkcudbright

Kirkcudbright
July 1927: The town of Kirkcudbright in Dumfries and Galloway. Kirkcudbright, on the River Dee, means the church of St Cuthbert. MacLellans Castle, built in 1582, dominates the town

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Tower In Country

Tower In Country
July 1926: Orchardton Tower near Castle Douglas in Dumfries and Galloway (Kirkcudbrightshire). There is evidence of an Iron Age settlement on artificial islands in Carlingwark Loch at Castle Douglas

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Coast At Arisaig

Coast At Arisaig
September 1923: Coastline at Arisaig in the Scottish Highlands. Original Publication: From the beach at Arisaig, near Mallaig

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: River At Perth

River At Perth
29th June 1923: The River Tay running through Perth. Perth, known as the fair city, was the capital of Scotland for over a century until James I of Scotland was murdered there in 1437 and his widow

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Loch Lomond

Loch Lomond
circa 1925: Loch Lomond, the largest lake in Scotland. Loch Lomond is 23 miles long, between half a mile and five miles wide and is 630 ft at its deepest point

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Monument At Loch

Monument At Loch
circa 1925: The monument at Glenfinnan, at the head of Loch Shiel, Inverness-shire, which marks the spot where Bonnie Prince Charlie (1720 - 1788)

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Linlithgow Loch

Linlithgow Loch
circa 1927: Linlithgow Palace in its loch in Lothian. The palace, built by James I, dates from 1424 and both James V and Mary Queen of Scots were born there

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Priory In Morayshire

Priory In Morayshire
circa 1925: Pluscarden Priory in wooded grounds in Moray. The priory was built in 1236 but Wolf of Badenoch, the outlawed son of Robert II, attacked the building in 1390

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Bridge Over Tweed

Bridge Over Tweed
circa 1925: A bridge over the River Tweed at Kelso in the Borders region. The bridge, built in 1803, was designed by Scottish engineer John Rennie who used it as his model for Waterloo Bridge in

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Kirkcudbright Bay

Kirkcudbright Bay
circa 1925: Kirkcudbright Bay at Nunmull in Dumfries and Galloway at Senwick. Kirkcudbright, on the River Dee, means the church of St Cuthbert. MacLellans Castle, built in 1582, dominates the town

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Threave Castle

Threave Castle
circa 1925: The ruined tower of Threave Castle at Castle Douglas in Dumfries and Galloway (Kirkcudbrightshire). The 14th-century castle, situated on the River Dee

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Tongland Bridge

Tongland Bridge
July 1926: Tongland Bridge near Tongland Abbey at Kirkcudbright in Dumfries and Galloway (Kirkcudbrightshire). Kirkcudbright, on the River Dee, means the church of St Cuthbert

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Carsluith Castle

Carsluith Castle
July 1926: Carsluith Castle near Creetown in Dumfries and Galloway. The 16th-century castle, once owned by the last abbot of Sweetheart Abbey

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Golf Course

Golf Course
circa 1925: Pannal Links. (Photo by Alfred Hind Robinson/A H Robinson/Getty Images)

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Newton Stewart

Newton Stewart
July 1927: The River Cree running through Newton Stewart in Dumfries and Galloway. Newtown Stewarts main industry is its woollen mills where mohair products are made

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Caerlaverock Castle

Caerlaverock Castle
circa 1925: Caerlaverock Castle in Nithsdale in Dumfries and Galloway. The castle, which is surrounded by water, was built around 1280 to control the south west entrance to Scotland across the Solway

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Dunluce Castle

Dunluce Castle
circa 1925: The ruins of Dunluce Castle at Portrush in County Antrim. (Photo by Alfred Hind Robinson/A H Robinson/Getty Images)

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Boating Lake

Boating Lake
circa 1920: The boating lake in Coopers Park at Elgin in Moray. (Photo by Alfred Hind Robinson/A H Robinson/Getty Images)

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Coast At Fort William

Coast At Fort William
circa 1925: The coastline at Fort William. Fort William is at the foot of Ben Nevis which is the highest peak in Britain measuring 4, 406 ft (1343 metres)

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: River Tay At Perth

River Tay At Perth
circa 1925: The River Tay running through Perth. Perth, known as the fair city, was the capital of Scotland for over a century until James I of Scotland was murdered there in 1437 and his widow

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: River At Dumfries

River At Dumfries
circa 1925: The River Nith flowing through Dumfries to the Solway Firth. Robert Burns lived in Dumfries from 1791 until his death in 1796 and wrote some of his most famous songs there

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Alfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950)

Alfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950)
Fine Art Storehouse Photographers: 19th Century Photographers: Alfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950)

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Roman Road

Roman Road
30th May 1922: The Roman road over Wheeldale Moor. (Photo by Alfred Hind Robinson/A H Robinson/Getty Images)

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Carlingwark Loch

Carlingwark Loch
July 1927: Carlingwark Loch at Castle Douglas in Dumfries and Galloway. There is evidence of an Iron Age settlement on artificial islands in Carlingwark Loch at Castle Douglas

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Cows In Field

Cows In Field
July 1927: Cows in a field at Castle Douglas. There is evidence of an Iron Age settlement on artificial islands in Carlingwark loch at Castle Douglas

Background imageAlfred Hind Robinson (1864-1950) Collection: Kirkbean

Kirkbean
July 1927: Kirkbean in Dumfries and Galloway (Kirkcudbrightshire). Kirkbean, a small town on the Solway Firth, was the birthplace of American revolutionary naval hero John Paul Jones (1747 - 1792)



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