Tour Scotland travel video of an early Autumn road trip drive, with Scottish music, North on the A923 road from the centre of the city of Dundee in Tayside, on ancestry, history visit to the Town Hall in Coupar Angus in Perthshire. The Town Hall is perhaps the symbol of Coupar's nineteenth century civic pride. Built in 1887, at a cost of £4,000, it was erected to mark Queen Victoria's jubilee. The A923 road starts on the A991 ring road in the centre of Dundee, making its way out of town along Lochee Road and Coupar Angus Road before crossing the A90 Kingsway Junction. The road appears more rural immediately although we're passing between the Camperdown Country Park and Downfield golf course and we're still within Dundee. We cross the city limit to drive through Muirhead, where the B954 branches off towards Newtyle and Meigle. From here the road begins to rise up through the Sidlaw Hills before levelling out and becoming dead straight to reach Coupar Angus and the A94 Road. The A923 was built, or at least rebuilt by Major Caulfeild in the 1760s as part of the military road network. It was a southern extension of the route north from Blairgowrie to Fort George via Braemar and Blairgowrie.
The Scottish name Coupar is a habitational name thought to be taken on from the place name Cupar in Fife, which is probably of Pictish origin, with an unknown meaning. As an English name Coupar was occupational for a cooper, that is, a maker of barrels. Spelling variations of this family name include: Coupar, Cooper, Cowper, Couper, Copper and others.
Thomas Coupar settled in Virginia, America, in 1606; John Coupar arrived in America in 1793.
All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.
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