Tuesday, 26 June 2007

Harry McGregor prints for sale


We have 12 limited edition Harry McGregor prints, showing the bandstand on Magdalen Green, for sale.

Unmounted prints (38cm wide x 28cm high) £10 each
Mounted prints (52cm wide by 42 cm high) £15 each

Email your order to friendsmagdalengreen@yahoo.co.uk

Monday, 25 June 2007

Iconic Bandstand


Many thanks to Donald Suttie (www.rockwellmedia.co.uk) for this lovely photo of the bandstand on a rare sunny day this summer!

Visitor to the Green


Local residents have been delighted to see this lovely young roe deer on the Green several times over the past few weeks.

(If you have a sharper picture of the deer that you'd like to see here please send it to the friendsmagdalengreen@yahoo.co.uk - many thanks)

Sunday, 24 June 2007

Successful Inaugural Meeting of Friends of Magdalen Green

Seventy five people attended the successful inaugural meeting of Friends of Magdalen Green (ably chaired by Councilor Fraser Macpherson) on 16 May 2007 in Dundee West Church. In addition to the formal part of the meeting there was opportunity to chat over tea and biscuits, to complete a short questionnaire about the Green and to view recent photos of activities on the Green. The meeting itself was in three parts, an introductory presentation, a lively discussion and the formal business - adoption of a constitution and election of office bearers. The following account is a summary of the minutes, which have been sent to all attendees.

Councillor Macpherson welcomed everyone and set the scene for the meeting with an account of some of the issues and concerns that had prompted the move to establish 'Friends of Magdalen Green', a group which would champion protection for and improvement of the Green. Liz Broumley, a local resident who has been involved in the steering group, gave an interesting, informative and humorous presentation, which covered a potted history of the Green, current concerns, positive attributes and possible future enhancements.

In the discussion which followed Councilor Macpherson informed the meeting that the Planning and Transportation Department intended to undertake consultation about options for improved residents' parking in areas adjacent to the City Centre in the coming months. This consultation will include the West End and therefore the Magdalen Green area. Parking issues were a key concern of the meeting and there is clearly need to seek imaginative solutions which will protect the Green and the trees on the northern edge from the effects of parking, while enabling residents to leave their cars within a reasonable distance of their homes. It was pointed out that the extension of the Roseangle car park into the children's play area has not benefited residents, and it was requested that the area should be reinstated as grass. There were differing views about a fence or other barrier on the northern edge of the green, some accepted that this might be a costly necessity whereas others argued for the open nature of the green. It was felt that parking might become a limiting factor to the numbers wanting to live in the West End, however it was pointed out that when 'No Parking' notices were erected the numbers of cars on the green reduced dramatically, suggesting that there is acceptable alternative parking within the vicinity of the Green.

In addition to parking a number of other issues were raised. There was discussion about the area that constitutes Magdalen Green. It was agreed that the children's play area to the east of Riverside Approach Road should be included, but not the reclaimed land to the south of the railway (although including that land would provide a car parking area and toilet facilities close to the railway foot bridge).

There were complaints about the amount of litter and the dumping of rubbish along the railway. Larger more functional litter bins are needed, along with more frequent litter collections.

It was felt that the southern edge of the Green would be improved with lighting, which could make the area safer and decrease vandalism. Solar lighting was suggested as a sustainable solution. (The possibility of developing this through a collaborative project with Dundee University and Dundee Sun City is being explored.)

There was consensus on the need to provide a formalised area for barbecues to stop the damage caused to the grass. (A request has already gone to Dundee City Council to provide BBQ stands) There was also agreement that toilet facilities would be useful.

There was discussion on how to involve young people and make them proud of the area, and to use the bandstand for a wider range of music. It was also suggested that the bandstand be flood-lit at night.

Many of the issues raised were reflected in the questionnaire returns, and together these views provide a basis for future action by 'Friends of Magdalen Green'.

The draft constitution was adopted subject to four amendments. In addition legal advice should be sought on member liability and OSCR (Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator) should be consulted about gaining charitable status.

The following office bearers were elected.

Chair person - Sheila Roy
Vice chair - Angela Mehlert
Secretary - Pat Orr
Treasurer - Liz Broumley

Below you can see a selection of photos voted by people at the meeting as the activities they most liked and least liked to see on the green.

Activities people like to see on Magdalen Green


Those of you who attended the inaugural meeting liked to see these activities on the Green

Saturday, 23 June 2007

... and things people don't like


These are the activities you least liked to see on the Green.

Tuesday, 24 April 2007

Our Magdalen Green ...

A group of local residents, supported by Dundee West End Community Council, local councillors and the City Council’s Leisure & Communities Department, are seeking to establish a Friends of Magdalen Green Association, with the aim of protecting and enhancing the facilities of Magdalen Green.

Following initial discussions,a public meeting will be held on Wednesday 16th May 2007 in Dundee West Church, Perth Road (opposite Duncan of Jordanstone) at 6.45pm.

If you care about the future of this popular public park come to the meeting, join the friends and help to shape the future of Magdalen Green.

Creating a formally recognised ‘Friends of Magdalen Green’ will enable us to apply for funding which is not available to the City Council.

Magdalen Yard / Magdalen Green - what’s in a name?

It is possible that there was a Magdalene convent in the area near the bottom of Step Row in medieval times. Yard could come from the Old English ‘geard’ meaning yard or garden, or from the Gaelic ‘garradh’ meaning grassy place.

An historic public arena

Magdalen Yard was originally part of the shoreline of the Tay estuary, and a common meeting ground and public resort from an early period. During the plague of 1585 the magistrates met there, as meeting in the open air was considered safer than being indoors. In 1679, at the beginning of the Covenanter Wars, all men between 16 and 60 capable of wielding a sword were summoned to meet on Magdalen Yard.

The area also saw meetings from Dundee’s more radical history. The 10th November 1819 saw a mass meeting "to consider the present STATE of the COUNTRY with a view to suggest the means most likely to lead to a REFORM of ABUSES and an alleviation of the distress with which the working classes in particular are nearly overwhelmed". Over 10,000 people are said to have attended this meeting, Dundee’s radical response to the Peterloo massacre in Manchester earlier that year. The 1880’s saw another mass demonstration, this time against the House of Lords' rejection of Gladstone’s bill to reform the voting system.

Between these two meetings Magdalen Green itself had changed. In the 1840’s it was developed into a more formal public park as a job creation scheme, initiated by Provost Alexander Lawson, to help alleviate severe unemployment, and also decrease the threat from the Chartist Movement. In 1847 the Green was cut off from the river, and the bathing area there, by the creation of the railway. Land was reclaimed from the Tay and the Green was no longer part of the foreshore.

By the 1870’s the Green had become a popular resort for west-enders, a place for cricket and other sports and a place to view "one of the most gigantic works of mankind" - the Tay Railway Bridge. Firework displays were held on the Green to celebrate both Queen Victoria’s visit to the city and the diamond Jubilee in 1897. In 1890 the iconic bandstand was built. During the 20th century the popularity of the Green has continued unabated, although how people used it varied over time. During the second world war it was a place where sheep could (safely?) graze.


The Green Now

Today the Green is still a magnet for locals, and activities on the Green continue to evolve. Sports like cricket and bowls have disappeared and now we are more likely to see football and ultimate. Picnics have given way to barbarcues, more trees and flowers have been planted and the Victorian bandstand renovated. It is still a place where local children play, where they learn to ride bikes and try out different sports. It is the home to a vast network of dogwalkers (see below) and for many of the students at the local universities relaxing on the Green is a part of student life, and provides fond memories when they leave Dundee.

However demands of modern life are threatening parts of the Green. Parking, by both residents and commuters, is damaging the trees on the north edge of the Green and, like other public spaces, it attracts vandalism, graffiti and litter. The fact that any sunny day, regardless of season, finds lots of people enjoying the Green means that it is worth protecting and enhancing - and all its' users can help to care for it.




Winter Wonderland


Summer at the Green


Relaxing on the Green


A more negative side ... HGV parking


Cherry Blossom


Autumn Cherry Trees


Dog Walkers of Magdalen Green

Poetic Tribute to local dogs!