The
Orkney Library and Archive is in Kirkwall. Kirkwall also has the most northerly of the world's
Carnegie libraries, which was opened by
Andrew Carnegie and his wife in 1909. The building survives, although the library has since moved to a larger building on Junction Road which opened in August 2003. The town has two museums, the larger being
The Orkney Museum in Tankerness House, which contains items of local historical interest within one of Scotland's best-preserved 16th-century
town-houses. It is a Category A listed building
Scotland. The
prehistoric,
Pictish and
Viking collections are of international importance. The other museum is the
Orkney Wireless Museum, dealing with the history of radio and recorded sound. It is located in a Category C listed building, possibly the former
harbour master's office, on Junction Road. Orkney Tourist Board is located in an 18th-century Category B listed building on Broad Street. There is a
Royal National Lifeboat Institution lifeboat station. One of the major annual events in the town is the
Ba Game, held each
Christmas Day and
New Year's Day between the Uppies and the Doonies, each team representing one half of the town.
Media and the arts The composer
Peter Maxwell Davies was among a group which founded the annual
St Magnus International Festival which is centred on Kirkwall each midsummer. Notable music acts such as
the Wrigley Sisters and Bryttania formed in Kirkwall. Orkney Theatre, a 384-seat venue, was opened in 2014 next to Kirkwall Grammar School in The Meadows. It has an orchestra pit which can be made available for use by removing two rows of seats. Kirkwall Harbour can be seen in
The Highlands and Islands – A Royal Tour, a 1973 documentary about
Prince Charles' visit to the Highlands and Islands, directed by
Oscar Marzaroli. Scottish film-maker
Margaret Tait was born in Kirkwall, and many of her films (in particular the
Aspects of Kirkwall series) are set there. Long-running
The Simpsons character
Groundskeeper Willie was born in Kirkwall. ==Landmarks==