Latitude: 56.2238 / 56°13'25"N
Longitude: -2.7026 / 2°42'9"W
OS Eastings: 356530
OS Northings: 703688
OS Grid: NO565036
Mapcode National: GBR 2V.CYK8
Mapcode Global: WH7SM.GT8N
Plus Code: 9C8V67FW+GX
Entry Name: Former Waid Academy Annexe, Crail Road, Anstruther
Listing Name: Waid Academy Annexe (Former Anstruther Easter School), Crail Road, Anstruther (Excluding Extension To West)
Listing Date: 10 June 2015
Category: C
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 405104
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB52344
Building Class: Cultural
ID on this website: 200405104
Location: Anstruther Easter
County: Fife
Electoral Ward: East Neuk and Landward
Parish: Anstruther Easter
Traditional County: Fife
Tagged with: Architectural structure
Predominantly multi-pane glazing in timber sash and case frames. Cast iron rainwater goods. Grey slates. There is a sloping grassed bank to the front of the building with a stepped retaining wall with chamfered copes.
The design of the former Anstruther Easter School (now Waid Academy Annexe) blends restrained Art Nouveau influences in its shouldered, pointed-arch dormers and stylised thistle motifs with neo-Baroque elements including the key-stoned arch hoodmoulding and scrolled finial surmounting the central bay. The roof pitch is slightly swept near the eaves suggesting the bell-cast roof shape reminiscent of the Arts and Crafts style, and the survival of the distinctive timber ridge lantern is also uncommon in schools of the period. These styles were flourishing, particularly in Glasgow, around the turn of the 20th century, but were relatively uncommon for buildings in a rural burgh in Fife. The principal elevation largely retains its early 20th century form and building fabric and the building is a focal point in the town, on an elevated site at a junction near the centre of Anstruther.
The 1872 Education (Scotland) Act placed responsibility for education in the hands of locally elected school boards and elementary education was made compulsory for all children aged 5 to 13. The boards were also responsible for providing adequate school buildings and there was a surge in school building across Scotland after this date. Anstruther Easter School was built in 1901 and was designed by local architect, William Williamson. It is described in the 1901 September issue of 'The Builder' as 'a new school has been erected by the Anstruther School Board at the west end of Melville Terrace. The school was designed by Messrs Williamson and Inglis, architects, Kirkcaldy and Edinburgh and provides accommodation for 320 pupils. The classrooms are planned so that, by means of sliding screens, a large room is provided. The building has two entrances and a corridor 10 feet wide running from end to end. From it the five classrooms enter, three being used by senior pupils and two by infants'.
The Dictionary of Scottish Architects refers to William Williamson as 'one of the most accomplished Scottish architects of his generation' and notes the 'calm French-influenced neo-Baroque of his commercial buildings'. Williamson lived and practiced in Kirkcaldy for most of his life, designing a wide variety of buildings in the town. He formed a partnership with John Inglis in 1897 and the practice quickly made a name for themselves producing high quality Renaissance and Arts and Crafts work. Auchterderran School (1902) by Williamson adopts a similar style to Anstruther Easter on a slightly larger scale, and their other school buildings include Dysart Primary School (1914) in the 'Queen Anne' style (see separate listing).
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