Kirriemuir
Kirriemuir, in some cases called Kirrie, is a burgh in Angus, Scotland. Its background gets to back to earliest recorded times, when it is believed to have actually been a major ecclesiastical centre. Later on it was related to witchcraft, and some older residences still feature a "witches stane" to ward off bad. In the 19th century, it was an important centre of the jute trade. The dramatist J. M. Barrie was born as well as hidden here, and also a sculpture of Peter Pan stands in the community square. Though its significance as a market town has actually reduced, its former hemp manufacturing facilities (now manufacturing synthetics) resemble its significance in the 19th century as the centre of a home-based weaving sector. Historical functions near Kirriemuir include a sculpted Pictish stone known as the Eassie Stone, found in the bed of a shed near the village of Eassie. Kirriemuir claims the narrowest public path in Western Europe; Cat's Close, situated between Grant's Pend as well as Kirkwynd. It is a mere 40 centimetres (15.75 inches) broad. The family estate of Sir Hugh Munro, who produced Munro's Tables of Scottish mountains over 3,000 feet in elevation (which are now called "munros"), is also located near the community, as is Kinnordy House, the seat of the Lyells.