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The Birnam House Hotel
The Birnam House Hotel

Birnam tends to be overshadowed by its larger neighbour, Dunkeld. The two face one another across the River Tay, Birnam on the south bank, Dunkeld on the north.

The Birnam Institute
The Birnam Institute
The New Extension
The New Extension
St Mary's Church, Birnam
St Mary's Church, Birnam

Birnam's major claim to fame came from the pen of Shakespeare. According to his telling of the story of Macbeth, it was through the realisation of the witches' prophecy about the movement of Birnam Wood that Macbeth came to his end.

Beatrix Potter Garden
Beatrix Potter Garden
Garden Residents
Garden Residents
Shopping in Birnam
Shopping in Birnam

Signs in Birnam point you to the Birnam Oak close to the River Tay and behind the Birnam House Hotel. This ancient tree, now supported on crutches, is said to be part of the wood from which Malcolm's soldiers cut branches to disguise their attack on Macbeth at Dunsinane Hill, 15 miles to the south east. If this seems odd, it is worth remembering that Shakespeare was a dramatist rather than a historian or a geographer.

It's a mistake to think of Birnam and Dunkeld as parts of the same settlement. The two are equally attractive, but wholly different in atmosphere and appearance. Today's Birnam is a village with a very Victorian feel. A collection of substantial grey stone buildings, it is easy to imagine much of Birnam being developed following the arrival of the railway at the station just to the south west in 1856.

Dunkeld and Birnam station now lies on the main line to Aviemore and Inverness. Between it and Birnam is the other main route north, the A9, which bypassed the village in the late 1970s. The result has been to leave Birnam occupying the space between the railway and road to the south west, and the River Tay to the north east.

A bridge across the Tay connecting Birnam and Dunkeld had been planned as far back as the 1500s, plans that were disrupted by the Reformation and the destruction of Dunkeld Cathedral in 1560. In the end, residents and travellers had to make do with ferries until 1809 when the seven arch bridge that still stands today was constructed by Thomas Telford.

At the heart of Birnam is the Birnam Institute. This has been run in an attractive Victorian building from the 1870s to provide a range of community facilities for the area. In 2001 work was completed on a £1.7m expansion, largely funded by lottery money. This produced an exciting new building in the village, providing a 230 seater theatre, workshop space, meeting and display areas, and library and IT facilities.

Over recent years the Institute has also developed displays highlighting the links with the author Beatrix Potter, who spent her childhood holidays here. This includes an attractive Beatrix Potter garden behind the institute and opposite the Birnam House Hotel. Peter Rabbit lives on in the garden, together with much else associated with the author.

Also in the centre of Birnam is St Mary's Church, complete with its clock tower. The church was built in 1858 and is set in its own well cared for churchyard. The clock tower was added in 1883. Windows in the church are by a number of different designers, including William Morris.

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