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Dumfries and Galloway

Towns & Villages

Dumfries and Galloway

TOWNS & VILLAGES

  Annan
  Creetown
  Castle Douglas
 

Dalbeattie

  Dumfries
  Ecclefechan
  Gatehouse of Fleet
  Gretna
  Hightae
 

Kirkcudbright

  Langholm
  Lochmaben
Lockerbie
  Moffat
  Moniaive
 

New Galloway

  Newton Stewart
  Portpatrick
  Sanquhar
  Southerness
  Stranraer
  Thornhill
  Whithorn
  Wigtown

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Towns & Villages

Town and Villages in Dumfries and Galloway

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ANNAN

Bridge over the River Annan - Photo © Colin Smith
Bridge over the River Annan - Photo: Colin Smith CCL

Sorry, no information currently available.


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CASTLE DOUGLAS

King Street, Castle Douglas - Photo: Great Scot
King Street, Castle Douglas -
Photo: Great Scot

7 Stanes Cycling Project - Photo: Forest Enterprise
7 Stanes Cycling Project -
Photo: Forest Enterprise


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DALBEATTIE

Dalbeattie was founded in 1780 on the Water of Urr. Largely built of granite, it was an important port in the 19th century, its main purpose being to export the rock mined from quarries on Craignar Hill. These would form the basis for the Thames Embankment and Liverpool Docks. The 12th century Motte of Urr is said to be the largest and possibly the best-preserved Norman motte and bailey earthworks in Britain. The town itself is surrounded by rolling countryside and offers the visitor many fine walks.


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DUMFRIES


New Abbey Road, Dumfries - Photo: Visit Scotland

It was here in 1306, among the local sandstone buildings, that Robert the Bruce sparked the Scottish wars of independence by slaying the Red Comyn, his rival for leadership of the Scots, before seeking out an army to fight the forces of the Crown. The poet Robbie Burns, who latterly worked as an excise man, searching the coves for smugglers, and lived here in what is now Burns Street. The house and his farm are still here, as is the mausoleum in which he was buried in St Michael’s churchyard. It was also here that JM Barrie was inspired to write Peter Pan.

Once a significant port, Dumfries is dominated by a tower and a midsteeple and has many attractive features. Among them is the Devorgilla Bridge, the oldest surviving multiple-arched bridge in Scotland; and Scotland’s oldest working theatre. Here, too, you will find the largest diameter stone circle on the mainland of Scotland, The Twelve Apostles.


Tower of Midsteeple, Dumfries - Photo: Visit Scotland>
 


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ECCLEFECHAN

The main street of the now quiet village of Ecclefechan was once a busy thoroughfare. For over 250 years the main road from London to Glasgow passed through here and brought with it considerable traffic. The re-routing of the A74 and its later upgrading to the M74 mean that this once bustling place is now a quiet backwater, with motorists rushing north from Carlisle catching but a fleeting glimpse as they flash by.

In the days of stage-coach travel, the Glasgow to London coach on its six-day journey would pause at a coaching inn, now the Ecclefechan Hotel, boosting the local economy and increasing the village's importance.

As the road signs proclaim, Ecclefechan was the birthplace of Thomas Carlyle, famous philosopher and historian. He was born in 1795. At the age of 11 months, in response to the tears of another child, it is claimed that he said his first words: "What ails we Jock?". The cottage where he lived as a child is now run as a museum by the National Trust for Scotland and houses a recreation of an 1800s cottage.


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GATEHOUSE OF FLEET

Gatehouse of Fleet - Photo © Toby Speight
Gatehouse of Fleet - Photo: Toby Speight CCL

This is where Scotland’s Bard, Robbie Burns, is said to have composed ‘Scots Wha Ha’e’’. He was inspired to write it while out walking but only committed the famous words to paper when he reached the Murray Arms Hotel. The Murrays were an important local family and established a number of cotton mills along the riverbank. What started out as a tiny hamlet with just one building – the eponymous gatehouse – has now grown into a small, pleasant holiday centre. Visitors will find the full story at the Mill on the Fleet Museum.


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GRETNA

The most southerly point of Scotland, Gretna is a comparatively ordinary town with an extraordinary reputation. Until 1856 English couples could legally marry here without a licence, banns – or even a priest. All that was needed was a marriage declaration in front of witnesses. Such declarations were usually made to the local blacksmith or pub landlord. The town’s smithy is preserved as a museum and couples still visit Gretna to exchange vows for purely sentimental reasons. Close to Gretna, at the head of the Solway Firth, stands the Neolithic Lochmaben Stone, believed to date from 3,000 BC.


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HIGHTAE

Sorry no information currently available


 


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KIRKCUDBRIGHT

Pronounced ‘Kir-coo-bree’ (the Church of St Cuthbert), this fascinating port on the River Dee is dominated by a church spire, a castle and the Gothic tower of a 15th century tollbooth which was used to humiliate criminals by exposing them to the townsfolk. One of those inmates was John Paul Jones, the great naval hero of the American Revolution. The cottage where he lived can be found at Arbigland Gardens. The town has always attracted artists and has numerous galleries as well as the Stewartry Museum.

Kirkcudbright - Photo: Allan Devlin
Kirkcudbright - Photo: Allan Devlin
 

Kirkcudbright’s churchyard contains a monument to Billy Marshal, the self-styled ‘king of the Galloway tinkers’ who died in 1790 at the age of 120 (or so it is said) having had seven wives.

It was in the Cistercian Dundrennan Abbey where Mary Queen Of Scots spent her last night on Scottish soil. The abbey was founded by David l and stands in a small, secluded valley.


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LANGHOLM

View Of Langhholm - Photo: Great Scot
View Of Langhholm - Photo: Great Scot

The River Esk, Wauchope Water and Ewes Water come together at this spot and are spanned by a series of bridges, one of which was worked on by a young apprentice who turned out to be the great bridge-builder Thomas Telford. He was born nearby. The town is an important textile centre with a number of thriving mills and is not only the birthplace of the poet Hugh MacDiarmid but also the home of the Armstrong family whose famous relation, Neil, became the first man on the moon. Nearby Eskdalemuir is home to Britain’s only Buddhist temple. Each summer Langholm hosts a festival designed to assert the right of locals to cut peat and bracken.


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LOCHMABEN

Lochmaben guards the route from England into Annandale and has always held a strategic position. Robert the Bruce may have been born and spent his childhood at Lochmaben Castle (contrarily, it may also have been at Turnberry Castle) on the south shore of Castle Loch. Although the castle is now just a magnificent ruin, it has a powerful, sentimental atmosphere. The area itself is a paradise for walkers. In the town are statues of both Bruce and William Paterson, founder in 1694 of the Bank of England.

Castle Loch at Lochmaben - Photo © Lynne Kirton
Castle Loch at Lochmaben - Photo: Lynne Kirton CCL


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LOCKERBIE

Bankshill, Near Lockerbie - Photo: David Morrison
Bankshill, Near Lockerbie - Photo: David Morrison

This market town grew up around the Johnstone Tower, once the local jail. It is famous for sheep sales and a lamb fair held since 1680. More recently, on 21 December 1988, it was the scene of a horrific plane crash when a Boeing bound for New York was blown up by a terrorist bomb. All 259 passengers were killed together with 11 local people.


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MOFFATT

Of great strategic importance, Moffat lies at the crossroads of key routes to the awesome Devil’s Beeftub and on to Edinburgh, or through the steep-sided Moffat Water towards the Yarrow Valley. In the 19th century it became a famous spa town, attracting aristocrats such as the Empress Eugenie of France. It was also an important wool centre, which is why the life-like statue of ram stands in its main street. This pretty town also boasts the shortest street in Scotland (Chapel Street) and the narrowest (Syme Street), not forgetting the narrowest hotel!

The man who invented tarmac, John McAdam, is buried here while Lord Dowding, head of Fighter Command in World War II, was born here.

Moffat - Photo: Visit Scotland
Moffat - Photo: Visit Scotland


Grey Mares Tail Waterfall - Photo: Visit Scotland

A short drive from Moffat is the magnificent Grey Mare’s Tail Nature Reserve, full of slopes and corries, which has an awe-inspiring waterfall at its centre and the White Coombe mountain as its highest point (821m).


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MONIAIVE

Moniaive sits at the confluence of three rivers, which together form Cairn Water. Nearby is Maxwelton House, the fortified home of the Earls of Glencairn and the birthplace of Annie Laurie. She died here in 1764 and is buried in Glencairn churchyard. The town is also the birthplace of James Renwick, the last prominent covenanter to be martyred.


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NEW GALLOWAY

It was Charles l who put this market town on the map by making it Scotland’s smallest ‘royal’ burgh. To the southwest is Cairn Edward Forest, which was named in tribute to Robert the Bruce’s brother Edward. He held the fort here while the great warrior Bruce went off in search of support for his fight for Scottish independence.


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NEWTON STEWART and CREETOWN

A pretty market town, Newton Stewart has a fine bridge over the River Cree and was founded in the 17th century by William Stewart, third son of the Earl of Galloway. Twelve miles east is ‘Bruce’s Stone’, not to mention some beautiful views beside Loch Trool. It was from Newton Stewart that Robert the Bruce launched his attempt to rid Scotland of English rule, ambushing an English army before fleeing into the hills. Bruce’s Stone was unveiled in 1929 on the 600th anniversary of his death and today marks the start and finish of many walks in the Galloway Forest Park, among them a rather serious climb to the top of Merrick, the highest summit in Scotland’s south west. Nearby is the Galloway House historic gardens which were created in the 1740s by Lord Garlies, elder son of the 65th Earl of Galloway.

Loch Trool - Photo: Visit Scotland
Loch Trool - Photo: Visit Scotland

 

View of Merrick - Photo: Allan Devlin
View of Merrick - Photo: Allan Devlin

Like many other towns in southwest Scotland, Creetown’s prosperity in the 19th century came from the exporting of granite. Today it has a museum dedicated to gems and minerals. Close by is Carsluith Castle, the well-preserved ruin of a four-storey tower house, and the 15th century Cardoness Castle.


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PORTPATRICK

Portpatrick Harbour - Photo: Allan Devlin
Portpatrick Harbour - Photo: Allan Devlin

 

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SANQUHAR

Once famous for its knitting industry, Sanquhar has the oldest post office in Britain (dating from 1763) and a 1735 tollbooth inside which is a museum. It also boasts a granite monument to remind visitors of two controversial declarations made by the Covenanters in the late 17th century renouncing their loyalty to both Charles II and James VII of Scotland. The famous Admiral Crichton was born in a tower house two miles from Sanquhar. Something of a genius, his name was used by James Barrie in his famous play.

Ruins of Sanquhar Castle - Photo © Paul Ashwin
Ruins of Sanquhar Castle - Photo: Paul Ashwin CCL


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SOUTHERNESS

View towards the Lighthouse at Southerness across the Golf Course - Photo © Richard Webb
View towards the Lighthouse at Southerness across the Golf Course - Photo: Richard Webb CCL

Sorry, no information currently available


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STRANRAER

Sheltered by the Rhinns of Galloway, a promontory lying to its west, Stranraer sits at the head of beautiful Loch Ryan and is a busy ferry port linking Scotland with Northern Ireland. Archaeologists believe it may also have been a naval base in Roman times. Close to the town centre is the 16th century Castle of St John, once the local jail for Covenanters, while the a local – built to look like a ship - was the one-time residence of Sir John Ross, the Victorian explorer who established the true position of the Magnetic North Pole.

On the outskirts of the town is Port Logan Fish Pond, a 200-year-old pool created by a blow hole in the Ice Age which is used to store live sea fish.

The grand Castle Kennedy Gardens was the creation of the Earl of Stair in the 18th century. It has ruins, lakes and woodland walks and is a near-neighbour of the remarkable Logan Botanic Garden.


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THORNHILL

Knowing the local terrain it may come as no surprise to learn that this is where the bicycle was invented by blacksmith Kirkpatrick MacMillan in 1839. No doubt he wanted a machine that would save his energy as he traversed the nearby hills.

The town itself has two picturesque boulevards lined with old lime trees and a column bearing the winged horse emblem of the Queensferry family. Erected in 1714 it was restored in 1955 following a severe storm.

 Drumlanrig Castle, Gardens and Country Park is the home of the Duke of Buccleuth and Queensberry. Built between 1679 and 1691, it is one of Scotland’s most important pieces of architecture. Made out of pink sandstone it has a renowned art collection.

 

Drumlanrig Castle - Photo: Andrew Shennan
Drumlanrig Castle - Photo: Andrew Shennan


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WHITHORN

Isle of Whithorn - Photo: Allan Devlin
Isle of Whithorn - Photo: Allan Devlin

This is one of the oldest Christian centres in Britain - it was here in 397AD that St Ninian built Scotland’s first Christian church, the white-plastered Candida Casa. It became the destination for tens of thousands of pilgrims, including Robert the Bruce and Mary Queen Of Scots. While a local museum has exhibits related to the saint, the present ruin dates from the 13th century.

The oldest Christian monument, the latinus stone, can also be found at Whithorn. Nearby is the picturesque Isle of Whithorn, which has its own harbour and a 12th century chapel dedicated to St Ninian.


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WIGTOWN

Lying to the west of Wigtown Bay, this distinctive town – divided by a garden and a bowling green – has become famous for its myriad bookshops. Ironically, it was a book that led to a different kind of notoriety in the 19th century. Two local women had refused to accept an English-style church and prayer book. Their punishment was to be tied to stakes in the River Bladnoch and left to drown as the tide came in.

Drummers at the Wigtown Brook Fair - Photo © Roger W Haworth
Drummers at the Wigtown Brook Fair - Photo: Roger W Haworth CCL


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