DOWNFIELD GOLF CLUB Competition Result Senior Mens Open 2021 (03/06/2021)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

DOWNFIELD GOLF CLUB Competition Result Senior Mens Open 2021 (03/06/2021) DOWNFIELD GOLF CLUB Competition Result Senior Mens Open 2021 (03/06/2021) Score Type: Stableford Course/Tee: Downfield GC (Yellow) Division 1 Pos Name Home Club Hcp Points Comments 1 Harry Keith 20 42 Best Nett score - £180 2 Jim Miller Bathgate Golf Club 18 40 2nd Nett Score - £160 3 Colin Miller Westerwood Golf 17 38 3rd Nett Score - Club £140 4 Don Stark 12 37 4th Nett Score - £120 5 Stewart Clark Hirsel Golf Club 11 37 5th Nett Score - £100 6 John Shields 19 36 6th Nett Score - £80 7 Stewart Gray 15 36 7th Nett Score - £60 8 Gary Brady 18 36 8th Nett Score - £40 9 Graeme Squire 17 36 9th Nett Score - £20 10 David Halkerston New Golf Club St 10 36 Andrews 11 James Duncan Ladybank Golf Club 2 36 Best Scratch - £180 12 Dave McKay Dullatur Golf Club 21 36 13 Steve Herron Scotscraig Golf 12 36 Club 14 Andy Patrick 14 36 15 Jeremy Murphy Craigmillar Park 17 36 Golf Club 16 GORDON BLACK Bishopbriggs Golf 11 35 Club 17 Robert Patrick Glenbervie Golf 12 35 Club 18 David DOIG Swanston Golf Club 10 35 Ltd 19 Fraser Stewart Deeside Golf Club 14 35 20 Ed White Leven Golfing 6 35 Society 21 Ian Cunningham 18 35 22 Paul Johnson Dunfermline Golf 21 35 Club 23 Graeme Brown Scotscraig Golf 16 35 Club 24 Eric Richardson Alva Golf Club 7 35 Register with HowDidiDo.com to view all your golfing statistics and competition results. It's FREE and over 500,000 golfers like you have done so already! 1 ClubV1 - Printed on 03/06/2021 Score Type: Stableford Course/Tee: Downfield GC (Yellow) Division 1 Pos Name Home Club Hcp Points Comments 25 William Barclay 4 34 26 Ramsay Howarth Dumbarton Golf 21 34 Club 27 James Murray Cowdenbeath Golf 10 34 Club 28 David Eardley Broomieknowe Golf 10 34 Club 29 George McNairney Falkirk Tryst Golf 5 34 Club 30 Ian J. Birnie Deeside Golf Club 10 34 31 Mark Walker 3 33 32 Allister Thompson Irvine Golf Club 12 33 33 Tom Anderson Bathgate Golf Club 14 33 34 John Peebles Piperdam Osprey 16 33 Golf Club 35 Alan Gall Haggs Castle Golf 6 33 Club 36 Kenneth Mathieson Kintore Golf Club 15 33 37 Stuart McIntosh 5 33 38 Ian T Calder Easter Moffat Golf 15 32 Club 39 Paddy McGlone 12 32 40 John Hunter Tulliallan Golf Club 16 32 41 Graeme J Ure Aboyne Golf Club 14 32 42 Colin W. Kennedy Deeside Golf Club 18 32 43 Ian Smith Newmachar Golf 5 32 Club 44 Bobby Brown Westerwood Golf 21 32 Club 45 Campbell McLean Thornton Golf Club 20 32 46 B Wilson Scotscraig Golf 5 32 Club 47 Mick Hall 15 32 48 David Leitch Dukes, St Andrews 7 32 49 Alan Rodgers Dunnikier Park Golf 7 32 Club 50 Ray Moles Murcar Links Golf 7 32 Club 51 Robert Dickson Portlethen Golf Club 15 32 Register with HowDidiDo.com to view all your golfing statistics and competition results. It's FREE and over 500,000 golfers like you have done so already! 2 ClubV1 - Printed on 03/06/2021 Score Type: Stableford Course/Tee: Downfield GC (Yellow) Division 1 Pos Name Home Club Hcp Points Comments 52 PETER MILNE Nigg Bay Golf Club 5 31 53 Robert P Watson Dunblane New Golf 16 31 Club 54 Ian Kerr New Golf Club St 6 31 Andrews 55 Andrew Stark Glenbervie Golf 11 31 Club 56 Alan Taylor Haggs Castle Golf 18 31 Club 57 John G Hope Campsie Golf Club 10 31 58 David Russell Harburn Golf Club 9 31 59 Jim Brown Grangemouth Golf 10 31 Club 60 Douglas Cameron Deeside Golf Club 11 31 61 Graham Box Stirling Golf Club 15 31 62 Steven Fenton Carnoustie Golf 10 31 Club 63 John Rooney Bishopbriggs Golf 5 31 Club 64 Raymond Barr 21 31 65 Brian Dick Alyth Golf Club 5 31 66 Manjit Singh Banchory Golf Club 12 30 67 Alan Stewart Leven Golfing 21 30 Society 68 NEIL McDONALD Scotscraig Golf 16 30 Club 69 Robert Campbell Grangemouth Golf 10 30 Club 70 Tim Leddy 10 30 71 Brian McCrae Canmore Golf Club 11 30 72 john lord Deeside Golf Club 16 30 73 Richard Nicoll Scotscraig Golf 11 30 Club 74 Graeme Finnan 15 30 75 COLIN HACROW Largs Golf Club 3 30 76 Brian Warren Banchory Golf Club 11 30 77 Hugh Murdoch Portlethen Golf Club 5 30 78 Josef Kucharski Bonnybridge Golf 15 30 Club Register with HowDidiDo.com to view all your golfing statistics and competition results. It's FREE and over 500,000 golfers like you have done so already! 3 ClubV1 - Printed on 03/06/2021 Score Type: Stableford Course/Tee: Downfield GC (Yellow) Division 1 Pos Name Home Club Hcp Points Comments 79 Brian Duncan Peterculter Golf 15 29 Club 80 Keith Shepherd Dunfermline Golf 18 29 Club 81 Jimmy White Leven Golfing 0 29 Society 82 Paul Mason 12 29 83 Jim Glasspool Kirkintilloch Golf 18 29 Club 84 Alfie CARTHEW Grangemouth Golf 19 29 Club 85 Stewart Stevenson Kemnay Golf Club 21 29 86 Alisdair Harrison Banchory Golf Club 15 29 87 Gordon Mathieson Newmachar Golf 21 29 Club 88 Alastair travers Irvine Ravenspark 9 29 Golf Club 89 Mark Jones Berwick upon 7 29 Tweed 90 Sam Goldie Stirling Golf Club 8 29 91 chris hutton Glenearn Golf Club 8 29 92 Derek Townsley Peterculter Golf 13 29 Club 93 David Moncur Grange & Broughty 9 28 Golf Club 94 Walter Gregg Kilmarnock 10 28 (Barassie) Golf Club 95 David Henderson Kilmarnock 8 28 (Barassie) Golf Club 96 Stephen Parkinson 16 28 97 Gordon Stevens Edzell Golf Club 6 28 98 Stephen Bruce Blairgowrie Golf 11 28 Club 99 Duncan McKinlay Berwick upon 10 28 Tweed 100 Mike Hodder Murcar Links Golf 7 28 Club 101 William Hughes Kilsyth Lennox Golf 19 28 Club 102 Douglas Millar Bathgate Golf Club 13 28 103 Alex McCrae Peterculter Golf 8 27 Club 104 Rab Denholm Duddingston Golf 5 27 Club 105 Vijay Taheem 8 27 Register with HowDidiDo.com to view all your golfing statistics and competition results. It's FREE and over 500,000 golfers like you have done so already! 4 ClubV1 - Printed on 03/06/2021 Score Type: Stableford Course/Tee: Downfield GC (Yellow) Division 1 Pos Name Home Club Hcp Points Comments 106 Kenneth O'Neil Kilmarnock 18 27 (Barassie) Golf Club 107 Mark Grubb Craigmillar Park 14 27 Golf Club 108 Alistair Warren Oldmeldrum Golf 10 27 Club 109 Peter Allum Murcar Links Golf 14 27 Club 110 Andrew Hudson Stirling Golf Club 15 27 111 Gordon Gibson Kemnay Golf Club 8 27 112 Ian Stilson West Kilbride Golf 8 27 Club 113 Michael Herbertson Newmachar Golf 8 27 Club 114 Graham Haworth 21 27 115 W. T Reid Drumpellier Golf 19 27 Club 116 Graham Leslie Dundas Parks Golf 7 27 Club 117 Derek McFarlane Kingennie Golf Club 14 26 118 Peter Blance Craigielaw Golf 13 26 Club 119 Lindsay Taylor Kirriemuir Golf Club 5 26 120 James Howieson Dunblane New Golf 12 26 Club 121 Charles Cassie Nigg Bay Golf Club 11 26 122 Thomas Reilly 11 26 123 Keith Anderson Dullatur Golf Club 20 26 124 Timothy LEWIS Monifieth Golf Club 8 26 125 Graham Birnie Ladybank Golf Club 3 26 126 George Watt Alva Golf Club 17 26 127 David Cuthbert Kirkintilloch Golf 7 26 Club 128 Jim Motherwell Crieff Golf Club 17 26 129 Graham Sinclair Linlithgow Golf Club 13 25 130 Callum Munro Westhill Golf Club 15 25 131 Jim Murison Kemnay Golf Club 19 25 132 David Anderson Craigmillar Park 12 25 Golf Club Register with HowDidiDo.com to view all your golfing statistics and competition results. It's FREE and over 500,000 golfers like you have done so already! 5 ClubV1 - Printed on 03/06/2021 Score Type: Stableford Course/Tee: Downfield GC (Yellow) Division 1 Pos Name Home Club Hcp Points Comments 133 Colin Fentiman Pitreavie 17 25 (Dunfermline) Golf Club 134 Stuart Cumming Portlethen Golf Club 18 25 135 Allan Jones Carnoustie Golf 7 25 Club 136 Mark Smith Dunnikier Park Golf 7 25 Club 137 Allan J McDonald Dumbarton Golf 15 25 Club 138 David Lamont Kirriemuir Golf Club 10 24 139 Bill Aitken Kirkcaldy Golf Club 15 24 140 Stewart McAra Kirkintilloch Golf 21 23 Club 141 J Neely Sandyhills Golf Club 17 23 142 Scott hayes Balbirnie Park Golf 13 23 Club 143 Richard McKay Murcar Links Golf 10 23 Club 144 Duncan Sloan Western Gailes Golf 5 23 Club 145 Robert Brown Kingsknowe Golf 12 23 Club 146 Findlay Brown Kirkintilloch Golf 16 22 Club 147 Iain Alasdair Watt Kilspindie Golf Club 21 22 148 Ian Murray Auchterderran Golf 10 22 Club 149 Gordon Adams Prestwick St 7 20 Nicholas Golf Club 150 Mike Langstaff Kirkcaldy Golf Club 21 19 151 Norman Garden Banchory Golf Club 21 19 152 Matthew Mitchell Banchory Golf Club 14 19 153 J David Mathieson Newmachar Golf 8 17 Club 154 Athole Grant Scotscraig Golf 6 DQ No score Club returned 155 Dougie Gorman Windyhill Golf Club 6 DQ No scores returned Register with HowDidiDo.com to view all your golfing statistics and competition results. It's FREE and over 500,000 golfers like you have done so already! 6 ClubV1 - Printed on 03/06/2021 Score Type: Stableford Course/Tee: Downfield GC (Yellow) Division 1 Pos Name Home Club Hcp Points Comments Register with HowDidiDo.com to view all your golfing statistics and competition results.
Recommended publications
  • The Antonine Wall, the Roman Frontier in Scotland, Was the Most and Northerly Frontier of the Roman Empire for a Generation from AD 142
    Breeze The Antonine Wall, the Roman frontier in Scotland, was the most and northerly frontier of the Roman Empire for a generation from AD 142. Hanson It is a World Heritage Site and Scotland’s largest ancient monument. The Antonine Wall Today, it cuts across the densely populated central belt between Forth (eds) and Clyde. In The Antonine Wall: Papers in Honour of Professor Lawrence Keppie, Papers in honour of nearly 40 archaeologists, historians and heritage managers present their researches on the Antonine Wall in recognition of the work Professor Lawrence Keppie of Lawrence Keppie, formerly Professor of Roman History and Wall Antonine The Archaeology at the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow University, who spent edited by much of his academic career recording and studying the Wall. The 32 papers cover a wide variety of aspects, embracing the environmental and prehistoric background to the Wall, its structure, planning and David J. Breeze and William S. Hanson construction, military deployment on its line, associated artefacts and inscriptions, the logistics of its supply, as well as new insights into the study of its history. Due attention is paid to the people of the Wall, not just the ofcers and soldiers, but their womenfolk and children. Important aspects of the book are new developments in the recording, interpretation and presentation of the Antonine Wall to today’s visitors. Considerable use is also made of modern scientifc techniques, from pollen, soil and spectrographic analysis to geophysical survey and airborne laser scanning. In short, the papers embody present- day cutting edge research on, and summarise the most up-to-date understanding of, Rome’s shortest-lived frontier.
    [Show full text]
  • Antonine Wall - Castlecary Fort
    Property in Care (PIC) ID: PIC170 Designations: Scheduled Monument (SM90009) Taken into State care: 1961 (Guardianship) Last reviewed: 2005 HISTORIC ENVIRONMENT SCOTLAND STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE ANTONINE WALL - CASTLECARY FORT We continually revise our Statements of Significance, so they may vary in length, format and level of detail. While every effort is made to keep them up to date, they should not be considered a definitive or final assessment of our properties. Historic Environment Scotland – Scottish Charity No. SC045925 Principal Office: Longmore House, Salisbury Place, Edinburgh EH9 1SH ANTONINE WALL – CASTLECARY FORT BRIEF DESCRIPTION The property is part of the Antonine Wall and contains the remains of a Roman fort and annexe with a stretch of Antonine Wall to the north-east of the fort. The Edinburgh-Glasgow railway cuts across the south section of the fort while modern buildings disturb the north-east corner of the fort and ditch. The Antonine Wall is a linear Roman frontier system of wall and ditch accompanied at stages by forts and fortlets, linked by a road system, stretching for 60km from Bo’ness on the Forth to Old Kilpatrick on the Clyde. It is one of only three linear barriers along the 2000km European frontier of the Roman Empire. These systems are unique to Britain and Germany. CHARACTER OF THE MONUMENT Historical Overview Archaeological finds indicate the site was used during the Flavian period (AD 79- 87/88). Antonine Wall construction initiated by Emperor Antoninus Pius (AD 138-161) after a successful campaign in AD 139/142 by the Governor of Britain, Lollius Urbicus.
    [Show full text]
  • Roman Inscriptions from Scotland: Some Additions and Corrections to RIB I L J F Keppie*
    Proc Antigc So Scot, (1983)3 11 , 391-404 Roman inscriptions from Scotland: some additions and corrections to RIB I L J F Keppie* Nearl year0 y2 s have elapsed sinc completioe th e WrighP R firse f wory th o tn tb n ko volum Romane Th f eo Inscriptions f Britain,o which provide detaileda d descriptio drawd nan - more in f eacth go f eho than 2000 inscribed stones foun Britai n di 195o t p 4nu (Collingwoo d & Wright 1965). Of these about 125 derived from Scotland. Since then a further 19 stones (some complete, others fragmentary) have come to light within Scotland's modern political boundaries. Most have already received definitiv t leasa r eto preliminary publicatio varieta n i y of journals, but it may be of use, since the appearance of supplements to RIB remains a distant prospect havo t , e these collecte singla n i d e place additionn I . numbea , f improveo r d read- ings to published inscriptions have followed upon the cleaning of stones in the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland, Edinburgh (hereafter NMAS), and the Hunterian Museum, Universit f Glasgoyo w (hereafter HM) preparation i , re-displayr nfo mord an , e recently during preparatory work for the Scottish Fascicule of the Corpus of Roman Sculpture (Keppie & Arnold 1984). The following report is divided into three sections: I, improvements to the readings of inscriptions already publishe RIB;description da i , II stonef no s lont g helbu , NMAy db HM r So only recently perceive inscribede b o dt ; III resumdiscoveriea ,w ne f eo s made since 1954.
    [Show full text]
  • Antonine Wall Rough Castle Statement of Significance
    Property in Care (PIC) ID: PIC175 Designations: Scheduled Monument (SM90013) Taken into State care: 1953 (Guardianship) Last Reviewed: 2019 STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE ANTONINE WALL – ROUGH CASTLE We continually revise our Statements of Significance, so they may vary in length, format and level of detail. While every effort is made to keep them up to date, they should not be considered a definitive or final assessment of our properties. Historic Environment Scotland – Scottish Charity No. SC045925 Principal Office: Longmore House, Salisbury Place, Edinburgh EH9 1SH © Historic Environment Scotland 2019 You may re-use this information (excluding logos and images) free of charge in any format or medium, under the terms of the Open Government Licence v3.0 except where otherwise stated. To view this licence, visit http://nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open- government-licence/version/3 or write to the Information Policy Team, The National Archives, Kew, London TW9 4DU, or email: [email protected] Where we have identified any third party copyright information you will need to obtain permission from the copyright holders concerned. Any enquiries regarding this document should be sent to us at: Historic Environment Scotland Longmore House Salisbury Place Edinburgh EH9 1SH +44 (0) 131 668 8600 www.historicenvironment.scot Historic Environment Scotland – Scottish Charity No. SC045925 Principal Office: Longmore House, Salisbury Place, Edinburgh EH9 1SH HISTORIC ENVIRONMENT SCOTLAND STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE ANTONINE WALL – ROUGH CASTLE CONTENTS
    [Show full text]
  • The Antonine Wall in the Context of Spatial Analysis
    STUDIA HERCYNIA XX/2, 40–66 To See and to be Seen – the Antonine Wall in the Context of Spatial Analysis Michal Dyčka ABSTRACT How did frontiers actually work? This essential question has been discussed over the last centuries through and through and the presented paper tries to offer a new perspective – this time by means of a landscape study and gaining an understanding of the positioning of individual forts on one of the short­‑lived Roman frontiers, the Antonine Wall. In the spotlight of this study is the spatial positioning of individual forts and fortlets on the above­‑mentioned frontier in terms of what could have been seen from them (visibility to the landscape and intervisibility with other Roman military installations) and how unique their locations were in terms of general accessibility (could they serve as natural blocking points?). A new approach is presented by using the Viewshed and Cost path analyses of the digital elevation model of the broader area around the Antonine Wall. KEYWORDS Antonine Wall; Viewshed analysis; Cost path analysis. INTRODUCTION Whenever we study the theme of Roman frontiers, we should always try to answer the fun- damental question: how did Roman frontiers actually work? This paper offers some new ideas about this subject, primarily on the basis of evidence collected by the use of the spatial analyses performed in the programs ArcGIS 10.3 and QGIS 1.8.0 Lisboa of one particular part of the Roman frontier system, the Antonine Wall. Two major issues are discussed in this paper: the visibility and intervisibility on the limes and questions concerning the accessibility of individual sites on the Antonine Wall.
    [Show full text]
  • The Provision of Fort-Annexes on the Antonine Wall Geoff B Bailey*
    Proc SocAntiq Scot, 124 (1994), 299-314 The provision of fort-annexes on the Antonine Wall Geoff B Bailey* ABSTRACT This paper suggests that temporary bathhouses were provided Antoninethe in Wall forts until such time as a planned Vallum could be completed behind the Wall. The protracted construction period caused many theseof bathhouses modifiedbe to provideto utilitiesthe required during this prolonged interval. The Wall had been built to Bearsden before the concept of a Vallum was abandoned and consequently annexes were attached to each fort. At this stage it was then possible to demolish the internal bathhouses and to build larger bathing complexes in these enclosures. INTRODUCTION This papeattempn a s i r provido t explanatioea severaf no l perplexing phenomena connected with Antonine th e Wall: Antonine Wall fort extremele sar y unusua westere th n li n Empir possessinn ei g internal bathhouses (Johnson 1983, 194); they have annexes rather than a Vallum like that of Hadrian's Wall (Salway 1965, 158); most of them apparently had their defences 'slighted' c AD 155 (Steer 1964); and they have different ways of attaching the annexes according to their location along the Wall (Breeze 1984, 61). THE BUILDING SEQUENCE ON THE WALL Antonine forte th f Th o s e Wall vary considerabl individuan ow s it sizeacn d yi s elan h ha interna l layout. Yet, ther significana s i e t degre f consistenco e y in their planning, enoug indicato ht a e unified scheme. Of the 16 known forts all appear to face north with the exception of Cadder (which faces east owing to the local topography) and the two terminal forts which both face away from the Wall.
    [Show full text]
  • The Antonine Wall in the Context of Spatial Analysis
    STUDIA HERCYNIA XX/2, 40–66 To See and to be Seen – the Antonine Wall in the Context of Spatial Analysis Michal Dyčka ABSTRACT How did frontiers actually work? This essential question has been discussed over the last centuries through and through and the presented paper tries to offer a new perspective – this time by means of a landscape study and gaining an understanding of the positioning of individual forts on one of the short­‑lived Roman frontiers, the Antonine Wall. In the spotlight of this study is the spatial positioning of individual forts and fortlets on the above­‑mentioned frontier in terms of what could have been seen from them (visibility to the landscape and intervisibility with other Roman military installations) and how unique their locations were in terms of general accessibility (could they serve as natural blocking points?). A new approach is presented by using the Viewshed and Cost path analyses of the digital elevation model of the broader area around the Antonine Wall. KEYWORDS Antonine Wall; Viewshed analysis; Cost path analysis. INTRODUCTION Whenever we study the theme of Roman frontiers, we should always try to answer the fun- damental question: how did Roman frontiers actually work? This paper offers some new ideas about this subject, primarily on the basis of evidence collected by the use of the spatial analyses performed in the programs ArcGIS 10.3 and QGIS 1.8.0 Lisboa of one particular part of the Roman frontier system, the Antonine Wall. Two major issues are discussed in this paper: the visibility and intervisibility on the limes and questions concerning the accessibility of individual sites on the Antonine Wall.
    [Show full text]
  • The Antonine Wall, the Roman Frontier in Scotland, Was the Most and Northerly Frontier of the Roman Empire for a Generation from AD 142
    Breeze The Antonine Wall, the Roman frontier in Scotland, was the most and northerly frontier of the Roman Empire for a generation from AD 142. Hanson It is a World Heritage Site and Scotland’s largest ancient monument. The Antonine Wall Today, it cuts across the densely populated central belt between Forth (eds) and Clyde. In The Antonine Wall: Papers in Honour of Professor Lawrence Keppie, Papers in honour of nearly 40 archaeologists, historians and heritage managers present their researches on the Antonine Wall in recognition of the work Professor Lawrence Keppie of Lawrence Keppie, formerly Professor of Roman History and Wall Antonine The Archaeology at the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow University, who spent edited by much of his academic career recording and studying the Wall. The 32 papers cover a wide variety of aspects, embracing the environmental and prehistoric background to the Wall, its structure, planning and David J. Breeze and William S. Hanson construction, military deployment on its line, associated artefacts and inscriptions, the logistics of its supply, as well as new insights into the study of its history. Due attention is paid to the people of the Wall, not just the ofcers and soldiers, but their womenfolk and children. Important aspects of the book are new developments in the recording, interpretation and presentation of the Antonine Wall to today’s visitors. Considerable use is also made of modern scientifc techniques, from pollen, soil and spectrographic analysis to geophysical survey and airborne laser scanning. In short, the papers embody present- day cutting edge research on, and summarise the most up-to-date understanding of, Rome’s shortest-lived frontier.
    [Show full text]
  • Antonine Wall – Castlecary Fort
    Property in Care (PIC) ID: PIC170 Designations: Scheduled Monument (SM90009) Taken into State care: 1961 (Guardianship) Last Reviewed: 2020 STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE ANTONINE WALL – CASTLECARY FORT We continually revise our Statements of Significance, so they may vary in length, format and level of detail. While every effort is made to keep them up to date, they should not be considered a definitive or final assessment of our properties. Historic Environment Scotland – Scottish Charity No. SC045925 Principal Office: Longmore House, Salisbury Place, Edinburgh EH9 1SH © Historic Environment Scotland 2020 You may re-use this information (excluding logos and images) free of charge in any format or medium, under the terms of the Open Government Licence v3.0 except where otherwise stated. To view this licence, visit http://nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open- government-licence/version/3 or write to the Information Policy Team, The National Archives, Kew, London TW9 4DU, or email: [email protected] Where we have identified any third party copyright information you will need to obtain permission from the copyright holders concerned. Any enquiries regarding this document should be sent to us at: Historic Environment Scotland Longmore House Salisbury Place Edinburgh EH9 1SH +44 (0) 131 668 8600 www.historicenvironment.scot You can download this publication from our website at www.historicenvironment.scot Historic Environment Scotland – Scottish Charity No. SC045925 Principal Office: Longmore House, Salisbury Place, Edinburgh EH9 1SH HISTORIC
    [Show full text]
  • Carrickstone CARRICKSTONE, CUMBERNAULD, G68 OHN
    Cumbernauld Retail Park Broadwood Stadium M80 Craigmarloch Tesco St Andrews & Cumbernauld Primary School Dullatur Golf Course Dullatur Village CARRICKSTONE CARRICKSTONE, CUMBERNAULD, G68 OHN DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITY - 0.54 acres (0.22 hectares) SUITABLE FOR A VARIETY OF USES, SUBJECT TO PLANNING Carrickstone Cumbernauld, G68 OHN 2 vp THE Opportunity AMENDMENTS • Prime neighbourhood convenience opportunity (subject to planning). • Highly prominent site located on major arterial route Location The site is located at Carrickstone in Cumbernauld. Cumbernauld is one of the largest towns within the local authority of North Lanarkshire and is one of Scotland’s six ‘New Towns’ created in 1956. Cumbernauld is well situated for commuters lying Issue Date Detail approximately 15 miles north west of Glasgow City Centre, approximately 16 miles south of Stirling and approximately 40 miles west of Edinburgh City Centre. The site is in the Carrickstone area of the town on the north side of the M80 motorway. It’s a predominantly residential area having been built out over the last 20 years. The development site within which the subjects Hamilton Business Park are located is the last site to be developed within this Caird Street Hamilton ML3 0QA area having previously been held as a potential site for Telephone 01698 477440 economic development. The houses within the locale Fax 01698 477441 are generally private for sale with some social housing www.bellway.co.uk on the opposite side of Eastfield Road. Project There is no convenience / neighbourhood provision vp vp Eastfield Road within 500 meters of the site. The closest retail vp Carrickstone destination is the Craigmarloch Tesco Superstore vp which is approximately 1.5 miles (2.4 km) from the site.
    [Show full text]
  • A Walk Along the Antonine Wall in 1825: the Travel Journal of the Rev John Skinner
    Proc Soc Antiq Scot, 133 (2003), 205–244 A walk along the Antonine Wall in 1825: the travel journal of the Rev John Skinner Lawrence Keppie* ABSTRACT In 1825 the Rev John Skinner, an Anglican clergyman from Camerton in Somerset, walked the length of the Antonine Wall from east to west, as part of an extensive Scottish tour. He recorded his observations at length in a journal and prepared daily a series of pencil sketches which constitute an invaluable record of the monument at a fixed date. His sketches include sculptures and inscriptions subsequently lost, and a few sites otherwise unrecorded. He also visited the Hunterian Museum in Glasgow in order to view its collection of Roman stones. INTRODUCTION After his return to Camerton, the journals were transcribed by his brother, in a neat hand Over a five-day period in September 1825 the that can be easily read today (in contrast to Rev John Skinner of Camerton in Somerset, Skinner’s own handwriting which can be near Bath, traversed the Antonine Wall on ffi foot from east to west, as part of an extensive di cult to decipher). Sometimes the seeming ‘northern tour’ which took him as far north as peculiarities of punctuation result from clauses Inverness. Skinner had travelled from the being associated with the wrong sentence, south-west of England with his son Owen, perhaps by his brother when the journals were whom he left in Edinburgh owing to illness. transcribed. His brother mistranscribed indi- On completing his Highland peregrination, he vidual words, especially proper names, or left was reunited with his son, now restored to gaps where the handwriting had defeated him.
    [Show full text]
  • Excavations at the Roman Civil Settlement at Inveresk, 1976-77 141
    Proc Antiqc So Scot, (1988)8 11 , 139-176, fich A4-2: 1 e 6 :D Excavation Romae th t a sn civil settlement a t Inveresk, 1976-77 Gordon D Thomas* with contribution BarnetsonD P n Li y sb , Catherine Brooks, Brenda Dickinson, Chris Going, George Haggarty, Katherine Hartley, A J Hayes, Audrey Henshall, N McQ Holmes, Anne K Howard, Vivien Swan and Roberta S Tomber SUMMARY Excavations outside the Roman fort at Inveresk revealed an extensive and well-established civilian settlement extending along the ridge to the east of the fort and beneath the present village. Four main phases of activity were identified, the middle two (phase 2 and phases 3/4) corresponding to the periodsAntoninetwo the of occupation Scotland.of earlierAn phase activityof (phasewas 1) represented characteristica by V-profiled ditch whichfor directno dating evidence existed whichbut may indicate the presence of a pre-settlement Roman enclosure in the vicinity. A buried turf-line directly overlying the phase 1 deposits suggested a period of abandonment over part of the site at least. The foundation trenches of a timber building surrounding a stone-built furnace and a second timber structure, which had been burnt to the ground, comprised the structural elements of phase 2. The subsequent phase of activity, phase 3/4, saw the rebuilding of the site on a much grander scale with massive timbered buildings and one stone building, all set in a regular grid separated by cobbled lanes roads.and Post-Roman deposits were confined lateto medieval modernand activity wereand characterized by stretchespits,few a of stone walling generaland disturbance over northernthe part site.
    [Show full text]