The Bruce Tavern on Broad Street, in a building that also housed the Stirling Banking Company, which failed in 1826.
The lower part of Spittal Street
The miners' rows in Plean, which were threatened to be condemned in 1893.
An aerial view of the Top of the Town in the mid 1950s
A more modern shot, this time of the Raploch in the 1980s.
Cowane's Hospital, erected as a place for a "decayed gild brethren".
A print of the original designs for Stirling High School by architects Hay of Liverpool.
A busy playground at the Craigs School at the beginning of the 20th century.
The North Church, which opened for worship in Murray Place in 1842. It later moved to Braehead in 1969
Barnton Street, with Viewfield Church in the background, in around 1880.
Bannockburn Cross, with one of the cobbled crossings across the dusty road (on the left).
A passenger terminal at Stirling Shore in the late 19th century.
In 1906, this accident at the Alloa railway bridge joined a long list of incidents on the Forth.
Some of the many buildings built in Bannockburn to house the local textile industry.
The Corn Exchange in the late 1800s. The event is the "feeing fair" where farm servants and farmers agreed employment terms.
A view of the Stirling Smith back in 1900. The picture was taken before the view of the museum and gallery was obscured by trees.