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Fisherrow railway station

1834 establishments in Scotland1961 disestablishments in ScotlandDisused railway stations in East LothianFormer North British Railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox station
Railway stations in Great Britain closed in 1847Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1834Scotland railway station stubsUse British English from September 2019

Fisherrow railway station served the harbour of Fisherrow, East Lothian, Scotland from 1831 to 1847 on the Edinburgh and Dalkeith Railway.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Fisherrow railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Fisherrow railway station
New Street,

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Wikipedia: Fisherrow railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 55.9449 ° E -3.0679 °
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Address

Harbour House

New Street 131
EH21 6DH , Fisherrow
Scotland, United Kingdom
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Website
moraruk.co

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Brunton Theatre
Brunton Theatre

The Brunton Theatre is a mid-scale performing arts venue in Musselburgh, East Lothian, Scotland. It is part of a wider complex, incorporating council offices, and called Brunton Memorial Hall. The building is textured concrete and glass, and was designed by William Kininmonth, with a gilded relief sculpture by Tom Whalen, a Scottish sculptor, on the facade (not to be confused with Tom Whalen the American writer and scholar). Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother opened it in 1971. The name derives from John D. Brunton, son of John Brunton, the founder of the Brunton Wireworks. He died in 1951 and left a bequest of £700,000 to the people of Musselburgh for the purpose of creating a community hall. The Town Council supplemented this and created a larger scheme which incorporated their offices.There are two performance spaces in the building: a 300 capacity theatre, with notably clear sightlines, and a main hall upstairs, which seats 500. The main hall (also known as "Venue 1") hosts classical music concerts, comedy and contemporary dance performances, as well as regular cinema screenings and live screenings from the National Theatre and Royal Opera House. The theatre underwent refurbishment in the late 1990s, while the entire building was refurbished in 2010-11 for £3.2 million. There is also a curved bar area, and artwork around the theatre complex by Glasgow-based glass artist Deborah Campbell. Venue hire is managed by East Lothian Council, while artistic programming is organised by the Brunton Theatre Trust, established in 1994.Children's theatre company, Catherine Wheels, are the resident company, and the theatre also acts as venue 191 at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.