Join me for a walk around the gorgeous Granite City of Aberdeen, the third-largest city in Scotland. Famous for its spectacular architecture, thriving oil industry, and a wealth of intriguing tales which speak to the city’s immense local pride and character, there’s so much that makes Aberdeen one of the nation’s greatest cities of all.

On our walk around Aberdeen, we pass a number of captivating landmarks, including the Castlegate, Salvation Army Citadel, Aberdeen Mercat Cross, Aberdeen Town House, the Tolbooth, the Marischal College, the statue of Robert the Bruce, Provost Skene’s House, the Russel Head, the statue of Denis Law, St. Nicholas’ Church (Mither Kirk of Aberdeen), the Smith Screen, Union Street, Belmont Street, Patagonian Court, Aberdeen Art Gallery, Robert Gordon’s College, the Denburn Valley, His Majesty’s Theatre, the statue of William Wallace, Union Terrace Gardens, the statue of Robert Burns, Union Terrace, Aberdeen Music Hall, Union Bridge, Back Wynd Stairs, the Old Kings Highway Pub, The Green, Aberdeen Railway Station, Union Square Shopping Centre, Aberdeen Harbour & Port, Shiprow, Aberdeen Maritime Museum, Provost Ross’s House, the Mannie Well, and Old Blackfriars Pub.

Thank you so much to the following sites for their help in my research of Aberdeen:

https://www.aberdeencity.gov.uk/sites/default/files/2022-10/Aberdeen%20History%20Trail_1.pdf

https://www.aberdeencity.gov.uk/sites/default/files/2021-12/Aberdeen%20Granite%20Trail_0.pdf

Old Aberdeen

https://www.pressandjournal.co.uk/fp/news/aberdeen-aberdeenshire/1895250/salvation-army-celebrates-140-years-in-aberdeens-citadel/

https://www.aberdeenlive.news/news/history/aberdeen-castle-mysterious-structure-gave-7918163

https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/russell-head

https://www.pressandjournal.co.uk/fp/news/aberdeen-aberdeenshire/6301156/the-russel-head/

Upperkirkgate

Heritage: outline history

https://www.pressandjournal.co.uk/fp/news/aberdeen-aberdeenshire/701600/short-history-building-union-street-left-aberdeen-bankrupt/

https://www.aberdeenlive.news/news/aberdeen-news/new-pictures-belmont-quarter-revamp-7066932

Belmont Street

https://www.iwm.org.uk/memorials/item/memorial/5812

https://www.visitabdn.com/listing/war-memorial-lion

https://hiddenscotland.co/william-wallace-and-the-siege-of-dunnottar-castle/

Union Terrace

Retracing Burns’s 1787 Highland Tour: Day Four

https://www.scotsman.com/whats-on/arts-and-entertainment/how-north-east-granite-paved-the-streets-of-london-1476405

https://www.aberdeenlive.news/news/aberdeen-news/birthplace-3000-vessels-aberdeens-proud-6619621

https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/kellys-cats

https://www.visitabdn.com/listing/merchant-quarter

Back Wynd

https://humphrysfamilytree.com/Aedie/house.green.html

https://hiddenscotland.com/listings/the-green-aberdeen

Ten Astounding Aberdeen facts

Shiprow

Mannie Well

0:00 The Castlegate
0:12 Coming up on our walk in Aberdeen…
0:50 The Castlegate
1:03 Salvation Army Citadel & Aberdeen Mercat Cross
2:02 Gordon Highlanders Statue
2:41 The Castlegate
2:57 Aberdeen Town House & Tolbooth
4:37 Union Street
5:09 Broad Street
6:01 Marischal College
7:33 Statue of Robert the Bruce
8:15 Marischal College
8:25 Provost Skene’s House
9:55 Russel Head
10:22 Statue of Denis Law
11:05 Marischal College
12:12 Upperkirkgate
13:22 Bon Accord Shopping Centre
13:34 Upperkirkgate
14:03 St. Nicholas’ Kirk (Mither Kirk)
16:46 Smith Screen
17:14 Union Street
18:10 Belmont Street
18:53 Patagonian Court
19:19 Belmont Street
20:56 Aberdeen Art Gallery
21:10 Robert Gordon’s College
21:56 Triple Kirks
22:13 Aberdeen Art Gallery
22:38 Aberdeen Civic War Memorial
23:30 Denburn Valley
24:00 His Majesty’s Theatre
24:56 Statue of William Wallace
26:10 Union Terrace Gardens
26:50 Aberdeen Sign
27:26 Union Terrace Gardens
29:13 Statue of Robert Burns
29:50 Union Terrace
30:53 Union Street
32:04 Aberdeen Music Hall
32:53 Union Street
34:08 Union Bridge
35:12 Union Street
35:56 Back Wynd Stairs
36:32 The Green
37:50 Stirling Street
38:56 Guild Street
40:13 Aberdeen Railway Station & Union Square
40:55 Station Hotel
41:41 Guild Street
43:02 Aberdeen Harbour
43:48 Market Street
44:02 Shiprow
45:10 Aberdeen Maritime Museum
46:04 Provost Ross’s House
46:38 Shiprow
47:19 Aberdeen Town House
47:57 Mannie Well
48:28 Castle Street
48:48 Old Blackfriars
49:00 The Castlegate
49:52 Thank you for watching!

Welcome to Aberdeen, the third-largest city in 
Scotland – famous for its lively atmosphere, riveting history, and wealth of stunning 
architecture, from mighty medieval landmarks like the sixteenth-century Provost 
Skene’s House to the mesmerizingly beautiful granite-built Marischal College, which stand on 
the captivating streets of a city that’s filled with stories wherever you look, with everything 
from a towering statue of William Wallace, Scotland’s national hero, to a great 
church dedicated to Santa Claus himself, and an array of historic waterside lanes which 
hug the perimeter of the city’s busy port, where huge ships depart for remote oil rigs 
and far-flung islands in the North Sea. All of that and so much more is to come as 
we take a tour of the sights and streets   of Aberdeen on a sunny summer’s day – but we 
begin our walk right at the heart of the city, in an area known as the Castlegate. Focused around this famous square, the 
Castlegate has been at the centre of Aberdeen’s history for well over 700 years 
– as the name suggests, it was here where there once stood Aberdeen Castle, a great 
medieval fortress now consigned to history. In its place, there now stand two famous 
city landmarks – the Salvation Army Citadel, a towering Victorian-era church which 
is actually styled much like a castle   in its own right, and just in front of 
it – Aberdeen’s historic Mercat Cross, one of the oldest structures you’ll find in 
the city today, dating from the year 1686. The Mercat Cross was built as the central feature 
of Aberdeen’s historic marketplace, this square serving as the place where local merchants would 
set up stalls to sell their wares not just to fellow Aberdonians, but also a steady flow of 
international visitors to the city, as Aberdeen developed a strong trading relationship with 
merchants across the sea in continental Europe. When they arrived, those European 
merchants found a bustling city   filled with local pride – just here we find 
a statue dedicated to the Gordon Highlanders, a regiment of the British Army 
which hailed from Aberdeen. Depicting soldiers from different 
eras of the regiment’s history, the statue stands just a stone’s throw 
from where the Gordon Highlanders’   barracks were once located – on Castlehill, 
the site of the original Aberdeen Castle, just behind the spot where the 
Salvation Army Citadel stands now. Now the medieval castle was in truth quite 
short-lived, built in the late 13th century, and destroyed shortly after, having been 
captured by Robert the Bruce, King of the Scots, who successfully expelled an enemy English 
garrison during a vicious siege in the year 1308. But while Aberdeen may no longer 
be home to a great castle,   there are plenty more majestic landmarks 
to marvel at – few more majestic than the great buildings of the city’s main 
street, Aberdeen’s famous ‘Granite Mile’. As we’ll see throughout our walk, many 
of Aberdeen’s grandest landmarks are   built from locally-quarried granite 
stone, which have a rather sleek grey colour – and just here, we’re looking 
across towards the elegant Town House,   another of the most iconic buildings 
of Aberdeen, the Granite City. Famous for its soaring clock tower, Aberdeen’s 
Town House – home to the city council – was built on a grand scale back in 1874, but 
there’s more to it than first meets the eye. It was built in the Victorian era as the 
city’s population began to grow rapidly,   and local officials decided that 
Aberdeen’s former town house, known as the Tolbooth, didn’t 
meet the needs of the modern city. However, rather than demolishing the old Tolbooth,   which was built more than 400 years ago in 
1616, they decided to incorporate it into the new Town House – and behind the spectacular 
Victorian granite façade we’re looking at here, you’ll find the structure of the original 
17th-century Tolbooth still standing. Inside, it’s home to the Tolbooth Museum 
– home to exhibitions on local history,   and the fantastically-preserved remains of 
the Tolbooth’s 400 year-old jail – making it one of the highlights along the length of 
Aberdeen’s main thoroughfare here, Union Street. Running dead straight for about a mile through 
the city centre, Union Street was built to   relieve the strain caused by the cramped, narrow 
and hilly streets and lanes of medieval Aberdeen, and was quite the feat of engineering, cutting 
through hills and bridging deep valleys. Later on in our walk, we’ll see the 
obstacles that Union Street came up against,   and how its construction nearly 
bankrupted the city of Aberdeen, during a period of sweeping change and renewal. As we know, Aberdeen’s history stretches back 
hundreds of years, but much of the city that   we see today is a product of the 19th, 20th and 
21st centuries, a period when Aberdeen’s fortunes rose dramatically, first as a major port where 
shipbuilding and fishing industries prospered, and later as a hub for Britain’s oil industry, 
this city known as the nation’s ‘oil capital’. Situated on Scotland’s northeast coast, looking 
towards the oil fields of the North Sea, Aberdeen is also the most remote major city in the UK 
today, located some eighty miles from the nearest big city of Inverness, and around one hundred 
miles from the Scottish capital of Edinburgh. Despite this geographic isolation, Aberdeen 
has long been a vibrant centre of industry and learning – a truth demonstrated in 
eye-catching fashion by what is surely   the city’s most beautiful building, 
the mesmerizing Marischal College. Again built from Aberdeen’s distinctive 
sparkling stone, the Marischal College is   actually the second-largest granite building 
in the world, and it was built back in the 1830s as the main building of one of what 
were once two universities in this city. That’s right, for centuries Aberdeen was 
home to a pair of rival universities,   the Marischal College based 
here – and the King’s College, based about a mile to the north of 
here in the area known as Old Aberdeen. The King’s College came first, founded in 
1495, and just under a century later the Marischal College was established in 1593. Bear 
in mind at this time, Aberdeen – with its two institutes – had the same number of universities 
as the whole of England, Oxford and Cambridge. Much like Oxford and Cambridge, Aberdeen’s King’s 
and Marischal Colleges were rivals for centuries, but eventually, in the year 1860, the 
two merged to form what we now know as the University of Aberdeen, one of 
the most prestigious in Scotland. The grandeur of the Marischal College’s 
main building here leaves no doubts as to   the university’s acclaim, while just in front of 
it there stands a statue of perhaps Scotland’s most celebrated monarch – Robert the Bruce, 
the 14th-century King of Scots who famously laid siege to Aberdeen Castle to expel the 
English – one of many fatal blows the Scottish King dealt the enemy on his road to victory 
in the First War of Scottish Independence. Befitting one of Scotland’s national 
heroes, this statue of Robert the Bruce   stands proudly before Aberdeen’s most beautiful 
building, a building which may have begun life as the home of the Marischal College, but sadly 
is no longer used for university business. Since 2009, the city council have been leasing 
this famous building from the university to use as part of their headquarters – as the centre 
of education in this city has shifted decidedly to the medieval streets of Old Aberdeen, 
which we’ll talk more about a little later. But speaking of medieval Aberdeen, here in the   city centre, nestled among the granite 
and glass buildings of recent decades, there stands one of the most impressive 
local landmarks of the Middle Ages. This beautiful, four-storey stone building 
is known as Provost Skene’s House, and it was built nearly 500 years ago in 1545.

Ever since then, the house has rather remarkably remained largely intact, now home to a 
museum inside detailing the stories of some of Aberdeen’s most famous sons 
and daughters through the centuries. One of those famous figures was a man 
named George Skene, formerly the Provost, effectively the chairman of 
the local council, of Aberdeen. A well-known face in the city, Provost 
Skene bought this house in the year 1699, and ever since it’s been named after him – 
though there are plenty more intriguing stories associated with this house. In 1746, Scotland was gripped by the 
events of the Jacobite rebellion against the British King George II, and in 
the final stages of the rebellion,   Provost Skene’s House here was used by the King’s 
troops as a base in the weeks before they advanced towards Culloden just outside Inverness, where 
the Jacobite rebellion was famously put down. Here on the corner of the house, meanwhile, is 
a rather frightening metal face – known as the Russel Head. It was the brainchild of a local shop 
owner named George Russel, whose bakery was shut down after complaints from a neighbour – so he 
took his revenge by carving this grotesque image of his own face, so that his neighbour would have 
to look him in the eyes for the rest of his days. Not all the likenesses in this part of town are 
quite so repulsive, though, because here we find a statue of none other than footballing great Denis 
Law, born in the Woodside area of Aberdeen back in 1940, and who rose to international stardom as 
part of the legendary Manchester United Trinity, alongside Sir Bobby Charlton and George Best, 
while also breaking records in 1962, as the most expensive British footballer for his time, and in 
1964 as the first, and to this date only, Scottish player to win the award for European Footballer of 
the Year, an award now known as the Ballon d’Or. Denis Law is one of a long list of 
famous names to call Aberdeen home,   a list that includes everyone from singer 
Annie Lennox to the famed painter William Dyce, who actually studied at the Marischal College 
just before this new granite building was opened. But as we mentioned, this famous city landmark is 
now no longer used for university business – after the merger between the Marischal and King’s 
Colleges, many of the teaching departments   based here began moving to the quieter 
surroundings of Old Aberdeen, a beautiful area of Aberdeen where medieval chapels and 
university halls crowd around narrow, cobbled streets – quite different from the grandeur of 
the modern city centre we’re exploring here. Now we won’t quite have time to visit Old 
Aberdeen on our tour of the city today,   as it’s located a good mile north of where we 
are now, close to the mouth of the River Don, one of two rivers which flank the 
modern city of Aberdeen on either side. Historically, the area of Old Aberdeen was the 
main centre of settlement here – in fact the city’s name, ‘Aberdeen’ literally refers to that 
location, meaning ‘the mouth of the River Don’. But, just a mile south of the Don, 
you’ll find the mouth of another river,   the River Dee, and it was around this 
river mouth that a separate settlement, known as New Aberdeen, grew up later in history 
– as a centre of fishing and cross-sea trade. Over time, Old and New Aberdeen, for a 
long time distinct burghs from one another, merged into one major city – but while 
university life may have shifted decidedly north towards the banks of the River Don, 
the city’s economic hub went the other way, moving south towards the River Dee, 
where the development of a major   port gave birth to the bustling city centre 
that we find ourselves exploring now. Later on, we’ll venture down to Aberdeen’s 
busy port, an integral part of the city’s   economy for centuries, but just here, 
we find ourselves on Upperkirkgate, a street whose profile has been largely 
unchanged since the era of medieval Aberdeen. With the exception of the modern granite buildings 
and Bon Accord shopping centre, you’ll notice that Upperkirkgate gradually winds up and down along 
the natural hills of central Aberdeen – unlike the major Union Street, built to be as straight 
and flat as possible in the 19th century. As we mentioned earlier, the building of Union 
Street was key to relieving Aberdeen’s growing   pains as its old streets and lanes became ever 
more cramped – and so to showcase the difference between this naturally undulating medieval 
street and the more recent main thoroughfare, we’ll now make our way towards Union Street, but 
to get there – we need to make our way through   the grounds of St. Nicholas’ Kirk, known as the 
‘Mither Kirk’, or the Mother Church of Aberdeen. Home to just under 900 years of recorded history,   Aberdeen’s Mither Kirk can trace its 
origins back to the mid-12th century, although the huge church building that stands 
today is an enlarged version of the original – in fact this was the largest burgh church in 
all of Scotland in the late medieval era. Surrounding the impressive church building is a 
rather expansive kirkyard, busy with gravestones and the final resting places of many of Aberdeen’s 
most notable names through the centuries. The vengeful bakery owner George Russel is buried 
here, as is famed local painter William Dyce, and the 19th century architect Archibald 
Simpson, often credited with many of   Aberdeen’s most impressive granite buildings, 
which earned it the nickname of The Granite City. In keeping with so much of the city, 
St. Nicholas’ Kirk here is also built   of granite – although only partially. The side 
of the building that we’re walking around here, known as the West Kirk, is 
actually built of sandstone,   and is the older of what were effectively 
two separate churches in one building. After the Scottish Reformation 
in the late 16th century,   it was decided to split the kirk in two 
to create two separate places of worship, a move that was said to enhance 
participation in religious services. As we see it today, then, the West Kirk dates 
from a rebuild in the 1750s, and the East Kirk, at the far end of the building, was 
reconstructed after a fire in the 1870s. But together, they form Aberdeen’s famous 
Mither Kirk, dedicated to none other than St. Nicholas, a man who’s often 
known more widely as Santa Claus. The association here is rather interesting 
– alongside his yuletide persona,   St. Nicholas is also the patron 
saint of merchants and sailors, and as such was chosen as the patron saint of 
New Aberdeen here, focused around the port. As we mentioned earlier, due to geographic 
isolation with the rest of Britain,   Aberdeen held close trading relationships with 
merchants across the sea in mainland Europe, particularly in the Netherlands, a nation where 
St. Nicholas is also known as Sinter Klaas. It’s from the Dutch Sinter Klaas 
that we get the name Santa Claus,   a more common moniker in Scotland for the 
legendary gift-giver than Father Christmas, a name which originated south 
of the border in England. But Christmas chat seems unusual on a summer’s 
day like this, as the sun beats down over this impressive feature of the Kirkyard, a mighty 
granite screen known as the Smith Screen. It was built back in 1829 as part of the 
wider redevelopment of the city centre, providing a separation between the 
tranquil grounds of St. Nicholas’   Kirkyard, and the action of the 
then newly-built Union Street, the famous main thoroughfare which bulldozes 
its way through the very heart of Aberdeen. Here, we can look all the way down Union 
Street back towards the Castlegate,   where we started our walk , 
and marvel at just how wide, flat and straight it is compared with 
many of the city’s older streets. Named to mark the Union between 
Great Britain and Ireland in 1801,   Union Street – a little quieter than normal 
today due to roadworks – was an immense feat of early 19th century engineering as part 
of the wider project to modernise Aberdeen. That being said, it was an expensive endeavour, 
and one which effectively bankrupted the city, as viaducts were built to bridge 
deep valleys, and rows and rows   of houses were bought up to be demolished, 
making way for the street that exists now. But branching off Union Street even 
today is a network of older streets,   including Belmont Street just here. Recently redeveloped as part of Aberdeen’s 
Cultural Quarter, Belmont Street is home to   a wealth of intriguing spots – including the 
former South Parish Church of 1830 just here, a church which is no longer used for worship 
– and is instead home to a popular city pub! Complete with an eerie interior and some fetching 
Dracula-themed décor, it’s inside what was once one of the city’s many impressive granite churches 
that Aberdonians now down their pints and belt out karaoke tunes on Monday evenings – just a stone’s 
throw away from another point of local interest. According to legend, it was down Patagonian 
Court here that King Robert the Bruce chased   the English after removing them from 
Aberdeen Castle back in 1308, but today, it’s said to be so-named because boats, some 
of which came all the way from Patagonia, at the very southern tip of South America, 
used to moor at the bottom of this staircase, which descends down towards the floor 
of the Denburn Valley, which cuts deep   through what is now the middle of Aberdeen.

Bridging the Denburn Valley, known locally as ‘The Den’ was one of the main engineering challenges 
during the construction of Union Street, but for a long time the valley served as a symbolic 
frontier between the heart of New Aberdeen and the countryside beyond – that was until the city began 
to grow in size around the late 18th century. The beautiful Belmont Street here dates 
from that period, as before the 1780s, this was simply open land used for pasture. Today, however, it’s home to an array of 
eye-catching buildings, among them the former Congregational Church of St. Nicholas here, which 
was built in 1865, but is now used as a nightclub – as Belmont Street has evolved in recent years 
as a central part of Aberdeen’s famous nightlife. But back when the street was first 
laid out in the late 18th century, it was developed as a retreat for some of the 
city’s wealthiest citizens from the hustle and bustle of the Castlegate, with houses built 
overlooking the scenery of the Den down below. However, as the speed of development in the 
city hastened, streets and houses were laid   out far beyond the bounds of the Den, 
the valley instead being converted into an elegant green space then known as the 
Denburn Gardens, and in a few moments, we too will wander down to the valley floor 
to explore what those gardens look like today. For now, though, we’ve reached 
the top of Belmont Street,   across the road from which there 
stand a pair of imposing buildings. Directly in front of us is Aberdeen Art Gallery,   the city’s acclaimed gallery which opened its 
doors back in 1885, and just next door to it, we find the gates of Robert Gordon’s College, 
one of the city’s most prestigious schools. The school is named after Robert Gordon,   an Aberdonian merchant who made his 
fortune trading in mainland Europe, and he returned to his home city here to found a 
school and a university in the mid-18th century. Famously, it was at this school 
that none other than Lord Byron,   the famous Romantic poet, was educated 
in the 1790s, while just outside the school gates – there now stands a statue 
to one Charles George Gordon, a celebrated general of the British Army who’s one of many 
people from this city to bear the Gordon name. As you’ll no doubt know, Scotland is a nation 
of historic clans, and as we look back across the road towards the famous Triple Kirks 
church, one church which split into three   back in the mid-19th century – it was in this area 
of Scotland where Clan Gordon was a leading force. Tracing their origins back to the borderlands 
between Scotland and England in the medieval era, Clan Gordon rose to become one of Scotland’s 
most powerful clans through time, occupying a vast territory in the Highlands, much 
of which is now part of Aberdeenshire. Even today, the clan’s seat is at the beautiful 
Aboyne Castle – just 20 miles upstream along the River Dee from here – and if you’re in 
Aberdeen for long enough, you’re almost certain   to bump into someone with the surname Gordon, 
a likely link to this region’s historic clan. Gordons of all eras have played a part in shaping 
the region and city’s history – including many who lost their lives while fighting 
in the World Wars of the 20th century. They are among more than 5,000 names commemorated   here at Aberdeen’s grand war 
memorial, unveiled back in 1925. Famous for its large granite lion sculpture,   the war memorial stands on the corner of the 
Cowdray Hall, a large concert hall opened in the same year by King George V – one of 
a number of impressive structures in this area that were designed to ‘encourage a taste 
for art and music in the city of Aberdeen’. The concert hall, alongside 
Aberdeen’s Art Gallery,   stand on one side of the Denburn Valley, which 
we can see stretching out before us just here. The valley takes its name from the Den Burn, 
a small stream which flows through Aberdeen at this point, although now inside an underground 
culvert beneath the road, which runs alongside a railway line, and the grounds of what 
were once known as the Denburn Gardens. We’ll drop down to take a walk around 
the modern gardens in a second,   but standing tall above them on this side of 
the valley, we find His Majesty’s Theatre, a beautiful Edwardian-era playhouse 
that was opened back in 1906. It’s a theatre of true splendour both 
inside and out – comedian Billy Connolly once described a gig there as like 
‘performing inside a wedding cake’,   a wedding cake with room for an audience 
of more than 1,400 people – making it the largest performing arts venue 
in the northeast of Scotland. Over more than a century of history, 
a wide variety of plays have graced the stage at His Majesty’s Theatre, 
everything from modern West End and   Broadway productions to Shakespearean 
classics – speaking of the Bard, his famous play Macbeth is based on the 
tale of the real-life King of Scotland, whose story came to an end when he died in 
battle at Lumphanan, just 25 miles from Aberdeen. Macbeth is of course a world-famous 
figure of Scottish history, but far   from the only one – because here in front 
of the theatre there stands a huge statue of none other than William Wallace, 
one of Scotland’s national heroes. Best-known for his military genius, and leading 
an underdog Scottish army to defeating the   invading English at the Battle of Stirling 
Bridge, Wallace also pulled off an unlikely victory close to Aberdeen here, just a few 
miles down the coast at Dunnottar Castle. Perched on high rocky cliffs 
overlooking the North Sea,   the medieval Dunnottar Castle was renowned as 
almost unconquerable, yet in an offensive of 1297, William Wallace led a siege against 
the seemingly impregnable fortress,   which was being held by a force of as many 
as 4,000 English troops – and remarkably, his siege was a success, as his armies broke down 
the castle walls and overwhelmed the English. Today, Wallace’s statue in Aberdeen stands 
proudly at heart of the city, looking down over the Denburn Valley, inside which you’ll 
find one of the best open spaces in Aberdeen. Once known as the Denburn Gardens, 
these are now Union Terrace Gardens, and they provide eye-catching views of the 
city from down below, as some of the most   beautiful buildings from throughout Aberdeen’s 
history rise into the sky above on all sides. Now Union Terrace Gardens have changed their shape 
on numerous occasions through history – they began as landscaped Victorian-era gardens, complete 
with a bandstand, in 1879 – but most recently, the gardens were redeveloped in 2022, and now 
play host to one of Aberdeen’s most photogenic spots – the Aberdeen sign, which stands at 
the foot of the gardens’ main staircase, beneath the Wallace statue 
and His Majesty’s Theatre. Unveiled in 2023, these big letters 
originally stood at the Castlegate, with Union Street serving as a backdrop, but 
they were later moved here to Union Terrace Gardens, and they hope to serve as a symbol of 
Aberdeen’s appeal to tourists in the modern day. Indeed, millions of people from all around 
the world visit Scotland every year – but   many seek out the capital of Edinburgh, 
as well as the Highlands around Loch Ness, and the islands of the Inner 
Hebrides as their main destinations. Aberdeen, on the other side of the country, is a bit more underrated as a tourist 
destination, but as we’ve already seen   from just under half an hour of exploring 
the city – there’s plenty to see and do here. As we look up towards the buildings of Union 
Terrace, the street which gives these gardens   their current name, not only are the museums and 
major landmarks of Aberdeen that we’ve passed by all worth a visit – but the cobbled streets 
of Old Aberdeen, the centre of the university, is too – as is the beautiful countryside which 
surrounds the city, home to everything from the rugged Cairngorm mountains to an almost 
endless collection of historic castles, including Balmoral – for decades a favourite 
country retreat of the British royal family. All of those destinations and more are within 
easy reach of Aberdeen if you fancy a day trip while you’re here, but of course the city 
centre is full of treats too – and Union Terrace Gardens here is a great place 
to take a rest as you explore Aberdeen. And once you’ve explored the floor of 
the sunken gardens and snapped a photo   with the Aberdeen sign, take a walk back 
up to street level, and admire this view across the Den towards the houses and church 
spires of Belmont Street on the other side. As we discovered earlier, Belmont Street 
was originally laid out in the late 18th   century as the place for the homes of 
some of Aberdeen’s wealthiest citizens, but as the city continued to expand, 
in the following century a new street   on the opposite side of the valley 
was built, that being Union Terrace. Developed around the same time as Union 
Street, and named for the same reasons,   Union Terrace is one of Aberdeen’s 
most splendid streets, complete with yet more impressive statues, like this one 
of Scotland’s national poet, Robert Burns. Surprisingly, in his day Robert Burns 
wasn’t all too keen on the city of Aberdeen, he visited this place in 1787 and 
described it simply as ‘a lazy town’. But, that visit came just a couple 
of decades before almost all of the   buildings that we see around us now, 
as Aberdeen’s economy and industry began to boom like never before as the 
Industrial Revolution reached its peak. As we take in a beautiful view across the 
lush greenery of the Den from the vantage   point of Union Terrace, Aberdeen 
may have started out life as a pair of rival burghs on two separate 
rivers, but over the last 250 years, the city has firmly established itself as 
one of Scotland’s economic powerhouses. For centuries, Aberdeen was home 
to a modest manufacturing sphere,   the city best-known for 
textile and paper production, but as the 18th century rolled around, 
heavier industry began to take charge. The first step was the growth of Aberdeen’s 
granite industry – more than half of the   buildings in the city centre here are made 
from granite extracted in quarries on the outskirts of Aberdeen, but the stone was also 
exported far beyond the city’s boundaries. To this day, you’ll find Aberdonian granite 
all over the world – everywhere from the   pavements of London to skyscrapers in New 
York City – and most of it was extracted from just one quarry in the suburbs of Aberdeen. That would be the old Rubislaw Quarry, which 
opened all the way back in 1740 and remained in operation until 1971, during which time 
more than six million tonnes of granite were extracted from the earth, leaving behind one 
of the biggest man-made holes in all of Europe, still visible today in the West End of the city. But while this may be The Granite City, there was 
more than one string to Aberdeen’s industrial bow. Throughout the 19th century, the 
port here became an especially   crucial arm in the city’s economy, 
as Aberdeen became a major hub of shipbuilding – more than 3,000 ships 
were built here during the period. Simultaneously, fishing – though for centuries 
already a major industry – stepped up a gear as technology developed, allowing fishermen to 
venture deeper into the North Sea on modern   trawler vessels, and bring back huge quantities 
of fish – in fact by the late Victorian era, Aberdeen was Scotland’s leading white fish port. All of this industry brought great wealth to the 
city, allowing it to modernise and build grand new landmarks like the building we see just across 
the street here, Aberdeen’s famous Music Hall. It was originally built as the City Assembly 
Rooms back in 1820, but later developed as a major entertainment venue, hosting everything from 
rock concerts to opera and more, but the venue is probably best-known as the host of the traditional 
Freedom of the City ceremonies, a local ceremony which has a history dating back to the very 
beginnings of Aberdeen in the 12th century. Back then, the Freedom of the City came 
with it a right to trade in Aberdeen,   but today it’s purely honorific – having 
been awarded to a wide range of famous names, from local legends including Denis 
Law to Glasgow-born Sir Alex Ferguson, the manager who took Aberdeen football club to 
three league titles, four Scottish Cups and two European trophies in the early 1980s – including 
a famous extra-time victory over Real Madrid. Just across the road, meanwhile, we’re passing by   the old Caledonian Hotel – historically 
one of Aberdeen’s most luxurious hotels, which opened back in 1892, as the city’s 
industry was at the top of its game. But this economic prosperity didn’t come 
without its ups and downs – after all, we   know that the city was effectively bankrupted by 
the construction of Union Street here, and it’s at this point that we reach what was almost certainly 
one of the most expensive parts of the project. Designed to relieve the fast-growing city centre 
of the strain caused by its historically hilly and cramped streets and lanes, Union Street 
had to iron out all of the obstacles of Aberdeen’s geography if it was going to work – 
but that of course included the Denburn Valley. The solution was this, Union Bridge, which was 
built over the valley over the course of four years between 1801 and 1805 – finally linking 
the Castlegate with the west of Aberdeen. Having stood on the valley floor just a few 
minutes ago, we know how wide and deep the Den is, and so Union Bridge had to be a groundbreaking 
feat of engineering to get all the way across. Today complete with a delightful line 
of decorative cast iron leopards,   known locally as Kelly’s Cats – Union 
Bridge was built to stand 50 feet above the floor of the Den, and run for 130ft 
from one side of the valley to the other. That makes it – to this day – the largest 
single-span granite bridge in the world, crossing a valley that was technically 
difficult to bridge, and eye-wateringly   expensive too – costing the city £13,000, 
equivalent to £1.4 million in today’s money. Of course that, as we cross back 
onto the other side of the Den,   was just one part of the Union Street 
construction project – and so it’s no wonder that the city’s finances 
suffered so greatly as a result. But fortunately, the impact was fairly 
short-lived, as Aberdeen’s shipbuilding   and fishing industries continued to 
grow throughout the 19th century, recouping the losses of this mighty street, which 
in the end has proved essential in the growth of the city into its current shape – the largest 
urban area outside of Scotland’s Central Belt. And it’s a city which continues to grow even to 
this day, because while traditional industries have subsided, Aberdeen’s fortunes have 
continued to rise on the back of the oil industry – a vital part of the city today, 
which we’ll talk more about a little later on. For now, though it’s time to make our way 
off Union Street, and down into Aberdeen’s   historic Merchant Quarter, which we’ll find at the 
bottom of this huge staircase, Back Wynd Stairs. As we walk down, look to the left and note 
some old stonework – that was part of an old medieval house, known as Aedie’s House, 
which stood where these steps are today. It was demolished in 1922 to 
make way for Back Wynd Stairs,   in order to restore a direct link between 
the Mither Kirk up the hill, and an important area of Aberdeen known as The Green.

Immediately at the bottom of Back Wynd Stairs, there stands a pub known as The 
Old Kings Highway, an inn which   claims to be the oldest in all of Aberdeen, 
established nearly 300 years ago in 1741. It’s one of a number of pubs, bars and 
cafes that you’ll find in what’s now   known as Aberdeen’s Merchant Quarter, an area 
of the city focused around The Green just here. Now in all truth, this is much more 
granite than green today – but this   point in the city takes its name 
from a once grassy area that may have been the centre of Aberdeen 
long before the city was even born. The Aberdeen we know today may be around 900 years 
old, but people have lived here, at the mouth of the River Dee, for much longer – in fact The Green 
may have been the place where prehistoric peoples lived as many as 8,000 years ago, and crafted 
tools for hunting and fishing out of flint. Not much else is known about prehistoric 
Aberdeen, but by the Middle Ages the Green remained the central point of the settlement, 
thanks largely to its proximity to the river mouth and harbour – the lifeblood of 
Aberdeen for so much of its history. In the 13th century, monasteries 
were established around the Green,   and monks engaged with traders at the natural 
harbour on the River Dee, at the beginning of Aberdeen’s long road to becoming one of 
Scotland’s most active trading ports. As we mentioned at the beginning of our walk, the 
Castlegate grew to be the centre of Aberdeen’s markets, with local traders selling not just 
to fellow citizens, but also a steady flow of international merchants, who had come to Aberdeen 
from across the sea in continental Europe. Geographically isolated from the rest of Britain, 
Aberdeen’s most direct links with other markets were across the sea, and throughout the centuries, 
Aberdonians voyaged across to the Hanseatic ports of Hamburg, Bremen, Danzig and more on the North 
and Baltic Seas, bringing back with them not just a wide range of goods, but also new ideas that 
were out of reach for other parts of Britain. It’s for this reason that Aberdeen has long 
prided itself as a centre of cultural exchange   and innovation – through the centuries this 
city has pioneered everything from the world’s first full-body MRI scanner to Scotland’s 
very first all-seated football stadium, as well as one of Aberdeen’s most widespread 
claims to fame – self-sealing envelopes – the kind that you don’t have to lick to close 
– were invented here back in the 1890s. There’s plenty more to Aberdeen’s historic 
international links which make it a thoroughly   unique city, but of course as time 
went on, and technology developed, this city – once separated from the rest 
of Britain by mountains and sea – finally gained a stable link with its own 
country in the form of the railways. The railways first rolled into Aberdeen in 1850,   when a station was built close to the banks of 
the River Dee in the Ferryhill area of the city. But today, trains arrive and depart into 
Aberdeen’s huge central railway station, which we find just here – beside the 
recent Union Square development – an   excellent shopping centre nestled between the 
railway tracks and the city’s main harbour. The shops and restaurants of 
Union Square, opened in 2009,   are a great reason for people in surrounding 
towns to visit the big city of Aberdeen – but the railway station serves far more than 
just those in the nearby countryside. Trains depart throughout the day from here to 
Glasgow and Edinburgh – as well as a couple   which go all the way down to London – a seven and 
a half hour journey along the length of Britain. But if you think that’s a long train ride – it’s 
nothing compared to Aberdeen’s most famous railway service. At just after 8 o’clock in the morning, a 
train departs from Aberdeen station here, and sets out towards the town of Penzance, close to the 
tip of Cornwall in the very south-west of Britain. It’s an epic 13 and a half hour journey 
that covers more than 700 miles, and stops at 45 stations along the way. Unsurprisingly, it’s the longest scheduled 
train journey in the UK today – and an extremely scenic way to take in all the scenery 
that the country has to offer in just one day. If you’re coming the other way from Penzance, 
you might roll off the train and immediately   make for the Station Hotel here – which 
dates from 1890 – but fortunately, marathon train journeys aren’t the only way 
to reach Aberdeen if you’re coming from afar. Just to the northwest of the city 
is Aberdeen International Airport,   one of the country’s busiest airports. Like many others around Britain, Aberdeen’s 
airport serves to take passengers to a wide   array of overseas destinations, everywhere 
from the Mediterranean to the Norwegian coast, but it’s also the destination for 
many domestic flights – which are   a popular way to reach the city 
instead of the lengthy train ride. Flights to Aberdeen arrive and depart 
from major cities all over the UK,   including London, Manchester, 
Belfast, Birmingham and more. However, in recent decades, the airport has become 
busier not with planes, but helicopters, which are used to transport people from Aberdeen here to 
remote oil rigs in the middle of the North Sea. After all, Aberdeen is Britain’s 
oil capital, and because of this,   the airport here actually holds the 
title of the world’s busiest heliport, an indication of just how much the 
oil industry is booming in this city. Oil was discovered in the North 
Sea off Aberdeen in 1969 – and   since then it’s formed a core part of the city’s economy – replacing historic shipbuilding 
and fishing as a leading local industry. Helicopters may provide a quick link for 
a few people to reach remote offshore oil   rigs as far as 200 miles away, but the main 
connections are provided by ships – ships which typically depart the city from the 
modern harbour, which we find just here. Situated close to the mouth of the 
River Dee, where the port’s story began,   Aberdeen’s Harbour has been in 
operation for just under 900 years, since 1136 – which some say makes it the 
oldest operating business in Britain today. Of course, things look very different at the 
harbour today – as huge ships pack tightly   between the piers and quays built on reclaimed 
land, and while many are indeed closely associated with the city’s oil industry, you’ll also 
find a variety of huge freight vessels, and even passenger ferries – Aberdeen’s 
harbour serving as the main gateway for people travelling to the Orkney and Shetland 
Islands, the most northerly islands in Scotland. But, crowding around the vast modern 
harbour, are a small network of streets   which tell us of its past – and just 
here, we find the gorgeous Shiprow, one of the oldest streets in Aberdeen, 
dating all the way back to the year 1281. Decorated with some beautifully colourful 
umbrellas, Shiprow is now home to a couple   of pubs and bars, but once upon a time it was 
the main entrance to the burgh of New Aberdeen, linking the harbour with the 
markets up at the Castlegate. For that reason, local business owners packed 
tightly around the street’s path – hoping to deal with all of the merchants that 
came into the city from overseas. The buildings that we’re passing between 
now are a collection of granite warehouses and port buildings mostly of the 19th 
century, although among the stonework   of a number of addresses along this 
street – you may stumble across some much older remains of the city’s medieval 
warehouses, some as old as the 14th century. Just up here on the left, meanwhile, there 
stands the former Trinity Congregational Church, a late 19th-century church which now forms 
part of Aberdeen’s popular Maritime Museum, rightfully placed just a 
stone’s throw from the harbour. On that theme, in front of the church 
there also stands this sculpture of 2018, Aberdeen’s Fishing Industry Memorial, which 
serves to recognize the men and women who have worked in the city’s fishing industry through 
the centuries – often contending with harsh,   and at times life-threatening 
conditions while working out at sea. As we mentioned earlier, Aberdeen was Scotland’s 
leading white fish port towards the end of the Victorian era, but the industry had been 
present here for almost as long as Aberdeen   has existed – though for most of history, local 
fishing was focused mainly on river and salmon fishing, and it was only in the 19th century 
that deep-sea fishing, as well as whaling, became a major part of the city’s economy. That’s one of many stories told 
inside the city’s maritime museum, but just next door to it there 
stands another of Aberdeen’s   oldest buildings – Provost Ross’s House, 
which was built all the way back in 1593. Slightly smaller and younger 
than Provost Skene’s House,   which we saw earlier, this house was named 
after yet another Provost of Aberdeen, John Ross, who lived here in the 
early years of the 18th century. Today, it’s part of the Maritime Museum – 
but it serves as a vivid reminder of what   Shiprow looked like back in the period when 
it served as the main entrance to Aberdeen, for those climbing the hill from 
the harbour up to the Castlegate.
  And here, we can once again see the grand 
tower of Aberdeen Town House soaring above the buildings of the Castlegate, the place where 
we began our walk more than 45 minutes ago, and the place where we’ll reach its 
end in just a couple of minutes’ time. But of course, we now know just 
how this central part of modern   Aberdeen functioned back in the days 
when it was home to a bustling market, and even a great castle – closely linked with 
the harbour which stood just a few steps away. Over time, the centre of activity in Aberdeen 
has spread outwards as Union Street helped the city to expand beyond its historic geographic 
boundaries, and so we now have great city landmarks like the mighty Town House, complete 
with that distinctive, often sparkling silver granite look, standing as symbols of all that 
Aberdeen has been through in its history. Those ups and downs have forged a prosperous 
modern city filled with local pride, and it’s a pride that extends to every corner of 
Aberdeen, from its most recognizable landmarks, to some of the hidden gems that 
we’ve found on the city streets,   whether that be the frightening Russel 
Head, Kelly’s Cats on Union Bridge, or even a small old well just here 
in the heart of the Castlegate. This is known as the Mannie Well,   a historic piece of Aberdeen that was 
built more than 300 years ago in 1708. Topped by a much-loved local sculpture of 
the Mannie, uncharacteristically made of   lead rather than local granite, throughout 
history this well has been on just as much of a tour of Aberdeen as we have today, it’s 
stood at the other side of the Castlegate, on The Green, and here in 
the shadow of the Town House. At this point, the road is not known as Union 
Street, but rather Castle Street – an older thoroughfare that once provided a direct approach 
to the gates of the medieval Aberdeen Castle, and standing either side of it you’ll find famous 
local pubs, including Old Blackfriars just here. Another of the city’s oldest taverns,   Old Blackfriars takes its name from the 
fact that a monastery, known as Blackfriars, once stood roughly on the same spot – just 
beside the heart of the action in Aberdeen, where the castle overlooked the square 
where not just markets took place,   but also gruesome public executions for those 
who had been locked up inside the old Tolbooth. That’s one of countless more stories to 
be discovered on a visit to Aberdeen,   a city that we’ve barely just 
scratched the surface of, despite having walked its streets 
for nearly 50 minutes now. But sadly, having returned to the 
Castlegate – where we began our walk – it’s here that our tour 
of Aberdeen has reached its end. Thank you so much for watching this video, I 
really hope you enjoyed it – and I hope you’re   now looking forward to making your own trip to 
the great Granite City of Aberdeen sometime soon!

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25 Comments

  1. Good video.
    One thing you get (predictably) wrong however, is the origin of the city and the name Aberdeen.
    The original settlement was closest to the mouth of the Den Burn, beneath today's harbour, and the name means 'Confluence of the Den'.
    You correctly mention Old Aberdeen as originally seperate burgh, but this is neither the oldest nor the original source of 'Aberdeen', which is actually the confusingly-labelled 'New Aberdeen', evolving around the Den Burn, the Green and the Castlegate.
    Old Aberdeen, more accurately 'Aberdon', being around the mouth of the Don, and as a seperate burgh, only became part of the evolving City of Aberdeen about 1891.
    Hope this helps!

  2. 7:45 We always hear about 'The Scottish wars of Independence' – Please remember that Scotland was a State, a Nation, a country – BEFORE England even existed. The kindom of Scotland formed in AD 846, – England came in to being around AD 920.

  3. Absolutely love your channel The very best indeed!!!!!! Keep on all the good work forever!!!! Amazing narration & fab/relevant information throughout

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