Formation | 21 June 1937 |
---|---|
Founder | Arthur Kinmond Bell |
Type | Charity |
Legal status | Registered Charity |
Purpose | To improve the quality of community life in Perth and Kinross, and for people across Scotland. [1] |
Headquarters | Pitcullen Crescent, Perth |
Location |
|
Chairman | David Gray |
Chief Executive | Joanna McCreadie |
Key people | Trustees |
Main organ | Board of Trustees |
Volunteers | 14 |
Website | www |
The Gannochy Trust was founded in 1937 by Scottish businessman and philanthropist Arthur Kinmond Bell, known as A. K. Bell. The Trust was formed to improve the quality of community life in Perth and Kinross, and for people across Scotland. [1]
The Gannochy Trust was founded in 1937, by the established whisky distiller and philanthropist A.K. Bell. [2] The founding aims of the Trust were to improve the quality of life for people living in Perth and Kinross, including maintaining the Gannochy Housing estate, providing grant funding for community based initiatives in the local area and investing in capital projects in Perth for the benefit of its citizens. [1] The Gannochy Housing estate was built by A. K, Bell between 1925 and 1931, [3] to a design by local architect Robert Matthew Mitchell. [4]
The Trust provides funding to improve the lives of people living in Perth and Kinross, as well projects across Scotland. The Trust funds in three year cycles, with the current Funding Strategy running between 2019 and 2022. The current Funding Strategy has three core funding objectives for Perth and Kinross: [5]
The Trust also provides funding for projects across the rest of Scotland. The funding objective for the rest of Scotland is to develop and inspire young people.
The Gannochy trust particularly provides many grants for the improvement of sports provision and participation. [6]
In line with the original Trust Deed, the Trust also manages and rents affordable property in the Gannochy area of Perth. This includes an estate of just under 300 rented homes including a mixture of general and pensioners houses and bungalows, [7] as well as two farms. [8] The Trust is currently building 48 new bungalows and houses on Gannochy Road, designed to improve health, accessibility and connectedness for tenants. [9] The Trust also manages the nearby Doo'cot Cricket Park, the Quarrymill Woodland Park, the Gannochy Community Hall, the Curly recreation ground and Gannochy Pond as places for the community to enjoy. [10]
The Trust has helped form a number of charitable partnerships, often in conjunction with Perth and Kinross Council, to help distribute funds to where they are needed the most. [11]
For example, the Bell's Sports Centre (Perth) Ltd was set up to manage the centre for the citizens of Perth, which was funded by the Trust. [12] [13] Now known as Live Active Leisure Ltd, this body has grown to include many recreational venues across the county. [14]
The Trust also has a close working partnership with the Perth and Kinross Countryside Trust, which helps maintain rural walkways and other local amenities, meeting the objectives of caring for the natural environment. [15]
The Trust also works closely with the Perth and Kinross Heritage Trust, which was set up to conserve the archaeological and architectural heritage of Perth. [16]
In line with A K Bell's vision to improve the lives of his local community, the Gannochy Trust has played a significant role in the development of modern-day Perth, and it has been noted that some of the city's most iconic landmarks are a result of support from the Trust. [17]
One of the Gannochy Trust's first major projects was the construction of the Bell's Sports Centre in Perth, completed in 1968. [18] The Trust provided £225,000 towards the cost of construction. They also provided funding for refurbishments and extensions in 1972 and 1982, with the newly extended centre being renamed the Gannochy Sports Complex, although Bell's Sports Centre is still the most commonly used name. [19]
The Trust also provided funding for the refurbishment of the Perth Theatre, which was completed in November 2017. [20]
In 1994 it was announced that Perth's new multi-million pound library would be named the A K Bell Library. This was both in recognition of the fact that the Gannochy Trust was a major contributor to this project, as well as the large role they, and their founder A K Bell, have made to the City since its foundation. [17] The library was formally opened in 1995. [18]
In 1967, as part of the construction of Stirling University, the Gannochy Trust provided up to £100,000 towards a sports pavilion on the campus. They have continued to support sport at the university, including funding sports bursaries in 1983, and contributing £500,000 to the Scottish National Tennis Centre in 1989. [21]
Between 2003 and 2010, The Gannochy Trust sponsored the Royal Society of Edinburgh's ‘Gannochy Trust Innovation Award.’ This highly prestigious award was presented to under 45 year olds based in Scotland whose outstanding achievements led to major economic or social benefits to Scotland, or the wider world. [22] This award consisted of a gold medal and £50,000 to develop the idea, and it is believed the £600,000 awarded has created £4 million of additional value to the Scottish economy. [23]
Perth is a centrally located Scottish city, on the banks of the River Tay. It is the administrative centre of Perth and Kinross council area and is the historic county town of Perthshire. It had a population of about 47,430 in 2018.
Dunning is a small village in Perth and Kinross in Scotland with a population of about 1,000. The village centres around the 12th–13th century former parish church of St. Serf, where the Dupplin Cross is displayed. It is in Strathearn, north of the Ochil Hills. It is just south of the A9, between Auchterarder and Perth.
Alyth is a town in Perth and Kinross, Scotland, five miles northeast of Blairgowrie and about 17 miles northwest of Dundee. In 2016 the town had an estimated population of 2,400.
Bankfoot is a village in Perth and Kinross, Scotland, approximately 8 miles (13 km) north of Perth and 7 miles (11 km) south of Dunkeld. Bankfoot had a population of 1,136 in 2001. In the 2011 Census the population of Bankfoot was 1,110 people with there being a slightly higher number of male residents (51.4%) than female residents (48.6%). It was found that 33% of Bankfoot residents were aged 60 or older.
Perth Grammar School is a secondary school in Perth, Scotland. It is located in the Muirton district of Perth at the junction of Bute Drive and Gowans Terrace. The catchment serves the area to the north of Perth between Murthly and Methven while a part of its catchment is urban, serving Tulloch, Muirton and North Muirton.
Kinnoull is a parish in Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland, approximately half a mile northeast of Perth city centre. Beginning at the level of the River Tay, which separates the parish from Perth, Kinnoull's terrain continues to rise as it continues southeast, culminating in Kinnoull Hill, the summit of which is at 728 feet (222 m).
Perth Academy is a state comprehensive secondary school in Perth, Scotland. It was founded in 1696. The institution is a non-denominational one. The school occupies ground on the side of a hill in the Viewlands area of Perth, and is within the Perth and Kinross Council area.
Arthur Kinmond Bell, also known as AK Bell, was a Scottish distiller, working as a partner of Arthur Bell & Sons Ltd, and as a philanthropist, founding the Gannochy Trust to help support the people of his home city of Perth.
Perth City Hall is a civic building in King Edward Street, Perth, Scotland. Built in 1914, it is a Category B listed building.
Lower City Mills is part of a cluster of former watermill buildings, collectively known as City Mills, in Perth, Scotland. It was given Category A listed status in 1965 by Scotland's Ancient Monument Division. Milling has taken place at the location since the 14th century.
Bertha Park High School is a non-denominational state comprehensive secondary school in Perth, Scotland.
Perth bus station is located on Leonard Street in Perth, Scotland. It is owned by Perth and Kinross Council and is situated approximately 800 metres from the city centre, and 100 metres from Perth railway station. The station is mostly used for out-of-town routes, while routes in and around Perth originate and terminate on Mill Street.
St John's Kirk is a church in the Scottish city of Perth, Perth and Kinross. Of Church of Scotland denomination, it is located in St John's Place, just southeast of the city centre. It stands on the former site of a church dating to 1126. Today's structure, built around 1448, is a Category A listed building. The church is most noted for being the site of John Knox's 1559 sermon against idolatry, which began the Scottish Reformation.
The vennels of Perth are a collection of small medieval streets in the city of Perth, Scotland. Similar to York's Snickelways, vennels are a public right-of-way passageway between the gables of buildings which can, in effect, be a minor street. In Scotland, the term originated in royal burghs created in the twelfth century, the word deriving from the Old French word venelle meaning "alley" or "lane". Unlike a tenement entry to private property, known as a "close", a vennel was a public way leading from a typical high street to the open ground beyond the burgage plots. The Latin form is venella, related to the English word "funnel".
The A. K. Bell Library is an historic building on York Place in Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland. The building was originally a hospital before becoming a municipal building and later a library. The central section of the building is Category A listed. The lodge to the estate, now removed from its original location, is Category B listed.
Bell's Sports Centre, formerly known as the Gannochy Trust Sports Complex, is located in Perth, Scotland. Built in 1968, it stands at the western edge of the city's North Inch park, adjacent to Balhousie Castle.
Milnathort Town Hall is a municipal building in New Road, Milnathort, Perth and Kinross, Scotland. The structure, which is currently used as community events venue, is a Category B listed building.
Joan Knight, OBE, was a British stage manager and director. She worked at the Royal Court Theatre and the Palace Theatre, Watford. She ran the Ludlow Theatre festival for three years. She was artistic director of Perth Theatre, Scotland, from 1968 until her retirement in 1993. During this time, she also served briefly as director of productions of Pitlochry Festival Theatre. She was offered a National Theatre directorship by Laurence Olivier, which she declined. She was a governor of Queen Margaret University College and a board member of Perth College. Known locally as Perth's "Queen of Theatre", she was presented with the DK Thomson Award in 1982 for her outstanding contribution to drama, and the Perth Partnership Rosebowl in 1993. She received an OBE for services to theatre in 1985. She was a council member of the Scottish Arts Council from 1980 to 1986.
Public transport in Perth and Kinross is available for two main modes of transport—bus and rail—assisting residents of and visitors to the Perth and Kinross council area, without their own vehicle, to travel around much of its 2,041 square miles (5,290 km2).
Camilla Bell was a Scottish philanthropist. She was married to distiller and noted philanthropist AK Bell, and was a trustee of the Gannochy Trust which he set up to improve the lives of citizens of Perth. She continued to contribute to local and community causes after his death, often preferring to remain anonymous. She bequeathed her home and the bulk of her estate to the Gannochy Trust in her will. Camilla Bell Park and Camilla Bell Crescent in Perth are named after her.