The 9 Best Budget-friendly Things to do in Kirriemuir, Scotland

May 1, 2022 Jana Sager

Kirriemuir, sometimes called Kirrie, is a burgh in Angus, Scotland. Its history reaches back to earliest recorded times, when it seems to have been a major ecclesiastical centre. Later it was identified with witchcraft, and some older houses still feature a ‘witches stane’ to ward off evil. In the 19th century, it was an important centre of the jute trade. The playwright J.M. Barrie was born and buried here, and a statue of Peter Pan stands in the town square.
Restaurants in Kirriemuir

1. Angus Glens

Eastern Highlands Glen Clova, Kirriemuir Scotland +44 1575 550233 http://archive.angus.gov.uk/leisureaa/rangerservice/angusglens.htm
Excellent
88%
Good
10%
Satisfactory
1%
Poor
0%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

5.0 based on 108 reviews

Angus Glens

Reviewed By craigmZ6920JW - Perth, United Kingdom

Excellant walk to mayar and onto driesh with my wife and 2 kids 7 and 9, nice climb corrie fee and great veiws from the top. Car parking good and paths are good,

2. Gateway to the Glens Museum

The Town House 32 High Street 32 High Street, Kirriemuir DD8 4BB Scotland +44 1575 577140 [email protected] http://archive.angus.gov.uk/historyaa/museums/kirriemuir/default.htm
Excellent
79%
Good
19%
Satisfactory
2%
Poor
0%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

5.0 based on 52 reviews

Gateway to the Glens Museum

ANGUSalive’s Gateway to the Glens Museum is situated in Kirriemuir Town House, a building that has been at the heart of Kirriemuir since its construction in 1604. The Museum opened in 2001 after the building was carefully restored and conserved. Here at Kirriemuir Gateway to the Glens Museum, local people and visitors to the town can discover the unique atmosphere of historic Kirriemuir and the splendour of the Angus Glens. Stepping through the door, visitors experience a vivid introduction to the history, culture and natural environment of ‘Kirrie’ and the western Angus glens, with recordings of local people, computer interactives and permanent displays. Illustrated talks and children’s events complement and develop the variety of temporary displays that take place throughout the year.

3. Bon Scott Statue

Bellies Brae Car Park, Bellies Brae, Kirriemuir, Kirriemuir DD8 4EB Scotland http://www.bonfest.com
Excellent
84%
Good
11%
Satisfactory
5%
Poor
1%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

5.0 based on 168 reviews

Bon Scott Statue

Reviewed By 950anguse - Kirriemuir, United Kingdom

Even in the chilly damp cold of a Northeastern January morning in the Wee Red Town of Kirriemuir, the magnificent statue of Bon Scott in the Bellie's Brae Car Park still compels the great singer's admirers to congregate around it in well-behaved worship of their late rock-star hero. It's not an uncommon site here in our tight-knit community. In fact, I drove past a pretty pile of such people, chatting, admiring, taking and posing for photos, this very morning, and watched them awhile ... thought they might be probably Dutch. Anyway, the now well-established long-weekend annual bean-feast to the great Bon ... Kirriemuir's very own "The Bonfest" begins celebrating on May 3, 4 & 5. ... and the local caterers will be braced to provide all they require. Bon Scott is certainly an asset to the interesting little Scottish town of his birth.

4. Tayside Police Museum Kirriemuir

15 Reform Street, Kirriemuir DD8 4BS Scotland +44 7746 009985 [email protected] http://taysidepolicemuseum.org.uk
Excellent
97%
Good
3%
Satisfactory
0%
Poor
0%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

5.0 based on 39 reviews

Tayside Police Museum Kirriemuir

Giving the current circumstances, we have taken the decision to close Tayside Police Museum until further notice. We look forward to opening our doors once again later in the year. Everyone please stay safe, stay well, and look out for one another.

5. Peter Pan Park

Kirriemuir Hill, Kirriemuir Scotland
Excellent
63%
Good
28%
Satisfactory
3%
Poor
0%
Terrible
6%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 60 reviews

Peter Pan Park

Reviewed By 950anguse - Kirriemuir, United Kingdom

If you were present on The Great Hill of Kirriemuir this the second Monday in the month of October, like me, you would've been drinking in all the beautiful colours autumn brings for us on a warm sunshine day. I was out for a walk ... the area was busy with many walkers like myself, horse riders, dog owners, mums, grand-dads and kids ... and there were a lot of folk around the Camera Obscura Building. I took quite a few photos in the knowledge that such days, even in the year's penultimate season, are rare this far north. Even the Neverland Play-Park was being put to good use with lots of children enjoying this fabulous amenity. The longest and warmest summer since my childhood almost gone, autumn having its brief respite before winter gains the last laugh, the Peter Pan facility and its huge green and lush surroundings are still commanding the public attention they so richly deserve. Great free car park there, don't forget. And now for a reinvigorating walk around the place Winston Churchill, attending Sir J. M. Barrie's funeral in 1937 here, described as, "The Most Beautiful Cemetery in Great Britain." ... or, at least, so said my dad (a member of the Kirrie Scout Group) also invited.

6. Kirriemuir Camera Obscura

Barrie Pavilion, Kirrie Hill, Kirriemuir DD8 4PR Scotland +44 7825 408207 [email protected] http://www.kirriemuircameraobscura.com
Excellent
61%
Good
35%
Satisfactory
2%
Poor
0%
Terrible
2%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 62 reviews

Kirriemuir Camera Obscura

Due to the current situation, and our duty of care to our volunteer staff and the general public, the Camera and Cafe which were due to open on 21st March, will remain closed until further notice. The public toilets on Kirrie Hill will also remain closed as we cannot guarantee they are sufficiently sanitised. We apologise for any inconvenience but your safety is important to us. The situation will be monitored and we will update on any changes. Thank you for your forbearance

7. Reekie Linn

Glen Isla, Kirriemuir Scotland +44 7572 833339
Excellent
64%
Good
34%
Satisfactory
3%
Poor
0%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 74 reviews

Reekie Linn

Reviewed By silver1600

There are two trails to the falls. Like most people, we took the one that starts at the car park just to the north of the bridge of Craigisla on the B954. (The path on the south side of the river will have to wait till another day.) The walk is attractive, short, easy and straight-forward. By the time we started along the path we had passed 3 signs warning that the it was dangerous. I don't have a great head for heights, but I thought it was fine. However, it is true that there are places on the path where if you are only a step away from a fall, but if you watch your step, you'll be OK. We had my octogenarian parents with me, and while we played it safe and didn't take them all the way to the view of the falls, I'm sure there wouldn't have been a problem if we had. And yes, these falls are impressive.

8. Peter Pan Statue

Kirriemuir DD8 4EF Scotland
Excellent
48%
Good
39%
Satisfactory
13%
Poor
0%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 23 reviews

Peter Pan Statue

Reviewed By 950anguse - Kirriemuir, United Kingdom

Has any small hillside town a better centrepiece than The Little Red Town of Kirriemuir? The answer, of course, is a resounding.. "No". "Thrums", as Sir James Matthew Barrie termed this beautiful town, is certainly enhanced by the recent refurbishment of The Square at its centre but the magnificent statue of Peter Pan, the boy who never grew up, is a joy to behold. A dominating feature of the historic and charming town centre, the statue itself evokes many cherished memories, mainly those of happy childhoods, sunny days, adventurous times and families. It's a magnet for children and adults alike, alive and living in a bustling, but somehow still serene setting where people move around, eat, drink, relax, shop or just window shop, more often simply sit and soak in the absulute pleasure of the area. Kirriemarians are rightly proud of the legacy of J. M. Barrie and the ever-lasting appeal of his greatest creation as a Kirriemuir-born writer ... the world-famous, unique, Peter Pan.

9. JM Barrie's Birthplace

9 Brechin Road, Kirriemuir DD8 4BX Scotland +44 1575 572646 [email protected] http://www.nts.org.uk/Property/J-M-Barries-Birthplace/
Excellent
41%
Good
34%
Satisfactory
18%
Poor
6%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

4.0 based on 105 reviews

JM Barrie's Birthplace

J M Barrie, author, playwright and creator of the much loved character Peter Pan, was born in this house on 9 May 1860. It was here that he spent his early years, growing up immersed in the traditions of the small weaving community, and finding inspiration in everything around him. The house is now a museum dedicated to telling the story of J M Barrie. The exhibition rooms explore Barrie's life, the inspirations of his childhood and adult life, his route to success, literary and stage works, and his enduring connection with Kirriemuir. Furniture and personal items that belonged to Barrie help to tell the story. Elsewhere in the house two rooms have been recreated to appear as they would have done when Barrie was a boy. Along with the wash house, where Barrie rehearsed and performed his childhood plays, these rooms give visitors a sense of what life was like in the busy Barrie household. The house gives a remarkable insight into J M Barrie’s formative childhood years – in which the seeds of Peter Pan were sown. The tragic death of his older brother David in a skating accident left his mother inconsolable and Barrie has written of the times he sat on the cottage stairs and wept. He realised that even when he had grown into a man, his mother would always regard David as ‘the boy who wouldn’t grow up’. The house features furniture, fittings and day-to-day effects which would be familiar to Barrie and his family, as well as memorabilia associated with his later celebrity. Items include Barrie’s cradle; the silk christening robe used for Barrie and his nine siblings, which was also loaned out to other families in the parish; a copy of Barrie’s contract of payment promising the young Princess Margaret royalties of one penny per performance of his last play, The Boy David; the large oak settle from his Adelphi flat; and Barrie’s original desk from his London flat. The house also incorporates an exhibition room with a tableau of the young Barrie being told stories by his mother and examples of the original costumes worn at the first production of Peter Pan. The communal wash-house located outside the house was to play an important part in Barrie’s childhood. He performed his first play there (at the age of seven!) and, according to his dedication in Peter Pan, it was the inspiration behind the house that the Lost Boys built for Wendy in Never-Never Land.

Reviewed By Charlpie - York, United Kingdom

This is the actual house where began the rags to riches story of J.M.Barrie, whose Peter Pan books and plays were the Edwardian era’s equivalent of Harry Potter. The weaver’s cottage where Barrie grew up is tiny indeed - and he was squeezed in there with 8 other children. So it’s not a long visit – but an interesting, worthwhile one. On display are memorabilia of the complicated world of the complex man who generated the Peter Pan fantasy. There are illustrations which hint at the magical flavour of the play which so wowed Edwardian audiences. It made me curious as to what so thrilled so many people during Barrie’s lifetime. If you want to follow this up, the Barrie birthplace shop sells excellent books which tell the tale in depth. Next to the cottage is the Mother Of All Wendy Houses. It’s the little wash house where Barrie as a child staged his first plays and which then became the original for the Wendy House in the Peter Pan saga and goodness knows how many others since. To reach the Barrie birthplace cottage, you can walk through the little red stone lanes of the charming old world town of Kirriemuir, a place which Barrie loved, wrote about and kept in touch with all his life. Allow some time just to explore Kirriemuir. Besides various Peter Pan statues and a working Camera Obscura in a viewpoint park (given by Barrie), Kirriemuir is a lovely place in itself.

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