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Memorial works

Following Albert’s premature death, Victoria commissioned the creation of photographs and decorative objects that memorialised her beloved husband

GEORGE WASHINGTON WILSON (1823-93)

Bridge of Dye, Banchory Ternan

1870

Albumen print | 8.6 x 5.8 cm (image) | RCIN 2620064

Photograph of a stone bridge with a single arch that spans the River Dee. Grassy banks lead down to the river in the left of the foreground. Banchory is a town in Aberdeenshire, Scotland and was often used as a place to stop off for Queen Victoria and her companions during her travels through Scotland.
  • Creator(s)

    George Washington Wilson (1823-93) (photographer)

  • 8.6 x 5.8 cm (image)

    17.5 x 13.2 cm (whole object)

  • Acquired by Queen Victoria

  • Subject(s)
    • Places
      • Europe
        • Great Britain
          • Scotland
            • Aberdeenshire [Scotland]
              • Banchory [Aberdeenshire]
                • Banchory Ternan [Kincardine]
                  • Bridge of Dye [Banchory Ternan]
      • Physiography
        • Rivers
          • Rivers of northern Europe
            • Rivers of Scotland
              • Dye, River [Kincardine and Deeside]
    • Arts, Recreation, Entertainment & Sport
      • Architecture
        • Secular architecture
          • Bridges