Page:The ecclesiastical architecture of Scotland ( Volume 3).djvu/320

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tower, the arches of which originally opened into the church being built up, was used as a stable, while the transept was turned into a potato or coal store and a huckster's shop. The fortunes of the structure were at the lowest ebb when, at the end of 1889, its renovation as a place of worship was undertaken by the Dean and Chapter of St. Mary's Cathedral, Edinburgh, under the direction of Mr. J. Kinross, architect.

Fig. 1217.—Carmelite Friars' Monastery. Interior of Choir.

The church stands at the west end of Queensferry, on the north side of the street, and the description of its situation in the oldest extant charter relating to it, which is of the year 1457, is quite intelligible at this time. James Dundas of Dundas grants "to God and the Virgine Mary, and brethren of the Order of the Virgine Mary of Mount Carmel,