08 November 2019 DUMFRIES
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Dumfries & Galloway
Survey Report Dumfries & Galloway 2013 Revised Native Woodland Survey of Scotland Introduction Native woodlands are a vital part of Scotland’s natural and cultural heritage, providing us with a wide range of social, environmental and economic benefits. What is left today is only a small proportion of the native woodland that once covered much of Scotland, though much has been done since the 1980s to protect and restore the areas that remain. The Scottish Forestry Strategy (2006) promotes continuing action to expand our native woods, to improve their condition and to restore native woodland habitats on ancient woodland sites. To support this work Forestry Commission Scotland (FCS) has developed the Native Woodland Survey of Scotland (NWSS), which is the most extensive habitat survey of its kind ever undertaken in Scotland. The survey will provide a nationwide map and a comprehensive picture of our native woodland resource for the first time. Results will be reported separately for each local authority area and in a national summary. This report presents summary information from the Native Woodland Survey of Scotland for the Dumfries and Galloway authority area. Survey Aims The Native Woodland Survey of Scotland will create a woodland map linked to a spatial dataset which describes the type, extent, composition and condition of all native woods in Scotland over 0.5ha in area. Planted woods on ancient woodland sites (PAWS) will also be surveyed, even where they are not mainly native in species composition, in order to provide information to help maintain or restore their remaining biodiversity value. Method The fieldwork for Dumfries and Galloway was carried out between January 2008 and June 2012. -
EXCAVATIONS at the ROMAN FORT of CRAWFORD, LANARKSHIRE | 149 Extra-Mural Class in Archaeology at Edinburgh University
Excavation Romae th t sa n for Crawfordf o t , Lanarkshire by Gordon Maxwell INTRODUCTION The existence of a Roman fort in the neighbourhood of Crawford, although suspected by General Roy,i was not proved until 1938 when excavation carried out by Dr J K St Joseph2 on a site lying about 400 yds N of the village on the right bank of the Clyde put the matter beyon doubtl d al for e tTh . (NG 954214S RN ) occupie smoderatela y strong positio narroa n no w plateau of hard glacial gravel protected on the south by the Clyde, and on the E and W by the Camps Wate Berried an r s Burn respectively; site acces th ewoul N froo t se mth d have been impeded in Roman times by marshy ground (fig 1). Strategically, however, it was of great importance. At this point the Roman roads from Annandale and Nithsdale met, the latter probably crossing the Clyde to the SW of the site; the route then left the valley of the Clyde, avoidin e gorge-likgth e defile between Crawfor Abingtond dan climbed an , d northward over Raggengile th l Pas rejoio st f Coldchapel Clydo e nth S e e for th e jussitin e th o t t t f Th .musg o t also have been influence presencmuce s da th areconsiderable a y hf b th a o en i e native populationJ e nee th observo dt y b s a e regular intervals betwee e garrisonnth s guardin e Romagth n road notee networkb y d thama importance t I th .t stils site elth wa recognisef o e medievan di l times when Crawford Castle, originally a seat of the Lindsays, but later ceded to the Douglas family, Romae th f o nS site.e th 4wao t Doubtles s builyd 0 5 t s from this time onwar usefors e dth dwa t quarrconstructioa e s th a r yfo associates castlrepair e it n o th d f ean o r d buildings evidence .Th e for prehistoric use of the site is discussed below (pp 187—8). -
Kirkconnel &Kelloholm
KIRKCONNEL &KELLOHOLM COMMUNITY ACTION PLAN 2014 - 2019 CONTENTS 2 INTRODUCTION 3 OUR COMMUNITY NOW 5 LIKES 6 DISLIKES 7 OUR VISION FOR THE FUTURE 8 MAIN STRATEGIES AND PRIORITIES 10 ACTION 14 MAKING IT HAPPEN 2 INTRODUCTION UPS, L GRO OCA D H L NE IT . R W ONS U LD TI ET E ISA R H AN E RE G ER E OR W W T S S R RM W O . FO IE PP NT EY V U E 20 RV ER S V 8 COM WS SU NT D E MUNITY VIE D I N S AN , A RE 20 ST INGS ES U AKEHOLDER MEET ESS UT The plan will SIN F BU ITY UN be our guide for OMM 200 HE C what we PEOPLE ATTENDED T - as a community - try to make happen KIRKCONNEL & KELLOHOLM COMMUNITY ACTION PLAN over the next 5 years. This Community Action Plan summarises community views about: • Kirkconnel & Kelloholm now • the vision for the future of Kirkconnel & Kelloholm • the issues that matter most to the community • our priorities for projects and action. STEERING GROUP – WORKING TOGETHER The preparation of the Action Plan has been guided by a local steering group which brought together representatives from a wide range of local community and voluntary groups including Village Pride, Kirkconnel & THANKS Kelloholm Community Council, Kirkconnel Parish Heritage Society, Dumfries TO EVERYONE and Galloway Community Learning & Development Service (Nithsdale), Building Healthy Communities, Gala Week Committee, Action for Children WHO TOOK Family Project, Village Pride Furniture Project, Dumfries and Galloway Hard PART! of Hearing Group (Kirkconnel). -
Place-Names in and Around the Fleet Valley ==== D ==== Daffin Daffin Is a Farm at the Head of the Cleugh of Doon Above Carsluith
Place-names in and around the Fleet Valley ==== D ==== Daffin Daffin is a farm at the head of the Cleugh of Doon above Carsluith. There is a Daffin Tree marked on the 1st edition OS map at Killochy in Balmaclellan parish, and Daffin Hill in this location on current OS maps, across the Dee from Kenmure Castle; Castle Daffin is a hill in Parton parish and a house by Auchencairn. This is likely to be Gaelic *Dà pheiginn ‘two pennylands’. Peighinn is ‘a penny’, but in place-names it refers to a unit of land, based on yield rather than area. It probably originated in the Gaelic-Norse context of Argyll and the southern Hebrides, and was introduced into the south-west by the Gall- Ghàidheil (see Ardwell above). It occurs in place-names in Galloway and, especially, Carrick as ‘Pin- ‘ as first element, ‘-fin’ with ‘softened ‘ph’ after a numeral or other pre-positioned adjective. Originally a pennyland was a relatively small division of a davoch (dabhach, see Cullendoch above), but in the south-west places whose names contain this element appear in mediaeval records as holdings of relatively substantial landowners, comprising good extents of pasture, meadow and woodland as well as the arable core, and yielding much higher taxes than the pennylands further north. Indeed, peighinn may have come to be used more generally in the region for a fairly substantial estate without implying a specific valuation. *Dà pheiginn ‘two pennylands’ would, then, have been a large and productive landholding. However, a Scots origin is also possible, or if the origin was Gaelic, reinterpretation by Scots speakers is possible: daffin or daffen is a Scots word for ‘daffodil’, but as a verb, daffin(g) is ‘playing daft, larking about’. -
List of the Old Parish Registers of Scotland 758-811
List of the Old Parish Registers Dumfries OPR DUMFRIES 812. ANNAN 812/1 B 1703-1819 M 1764-1819 D - 812/2 B 1820-54 M - D - 812/3 B - M 1820-54 D - RNE 813A. APPLEGARTH AND SIBBALDBIE A 813 /1 B 1749-1819 M 1749-1824 D 1749-1820 A 813 /2 B 1820-54 M 1820-54 D 1820-54 See library reference MT 220.014 for deaths and burial index, 1749- 1854 813B. BRYDEKIRK B 813 /1 1836-54 M 1836-54 D - 814. CANONBIE 814/1 B 1693-1768 M - D - 814/2 B 1768-1820 M 1768-1820 D 1783-1805 814/3 B 1820-54 M 1820-43 D - RNE See library reference MT 220.006 for index to deaths and burials1786- 1805 815. CAERLAVEROCK 815/1 B 1749-1819 M 1753-1819 D 1753-75 815/2 B 1820-54 M 1826-39 D 1826-54 816. CLOSEBURN 816/1 B 1765-1819 M 1766-1817 D 1765-1815 816/2 B 1819-54 M 1823-48 D 1820-47 RNE 817. CUMMERTREES 817/1 B 1749-1846 M 1786-1854 D 1733-83 817/2 B 1820-54 M 1848-54 D 1831-38 818. DALTON 818/1 B 1723-1819 M 1766-1824 D 1766-1817 818/2 B - M 1769-1804 D 1779-1804 818/3 B 1820-54 M 1820-54 D - List of the Old Parish Registers Dumfries OPR 819. DORNOCK 819/1 B 1773-1819 M 1774-1818 D 1774-83 819/2 B 1820-54 M 1828-54 D - Contains index to B 1845-54 820. -
1. Introduction and Pipeline Legislation
1. INTRODUCTION AND PIPELINE LEGISLATION Introduction 1.1. Bord Gáis Eireann propose to construct a new pipeline between Beattock, Scotland and Gormanston, Ireland. The project is called ‘Scotland to Ireland – The Second Gas Interconnector.’ The pipeline will provide additional capacity to supply Ireland with natural gas from the North Sea and other international gas reserves via the existing Transco pipeline network. 1.2. The main elements of the project include an extension to Beattock Compressor Station, a new pipeline between Beattock and Brighouse, an extension to Brighouse Compressor Station and a new sub-sea pipeline between Brighouse and Gormanston. 1.3. This Environmental Statement examines the potential interaction between the Scottish Land Pipeline and the environment. The Scottish Land Pipeline will be constructed between Beattock and Brighouse. The land pipeline system will comprise a 36 inch (914mm) diameter pipeline approximately 50miles in length, and four Block Valve Stations (BV’s). The proposed pipeline route is shown in Figure 1.2. Background 1.4. Bord Gáis Eireann and the Irish Department of Public Enterprise initiated a project called Gas 2025 in November 1997, to plan the possible need for further transmission pipelines to meet forecast growth in demand to the year 2025. 1.5. In Ireland, gas is sourced from the Kinsale Head Gas Field off the south east coast, and the existing Interconnector pipeline. The Kinsale Head Gas Field is now in final depletion, placing increasing importance on the Interconnector pipeline. This first Interconnector pipeline was constructed in 1993 and runs from Beattock in Dumfries and Galloway, through to Loughshinny in Ireland. -
Volume 78 Cover
Transactions of the Dumfriesshire and Galloway Natural History and Antiquarian Society LXXVIII 2004 Transactions of the Dumfriesshire and Galloway Natural History and Antiquarian Society FOUNDED 20th NOVEMBER, 1862 THIRD SERIES VOLUME LXXVIII Editors: JAMES WILLIAMS, F.S.A.Scot., R. McEWEN ISSN 0141-1292 2004 DUMFRIES Published by the Council of the Society Office-Bearers 2003-2004 and Fellows of the Society President Mrs E Toolis Vice Presidents Mrs J Brann, Mr J Neilson, Miss M Stewart and Mrs M Williams Fellows of the Society Dr J Harper, MBE; Mr J Banks, BSc; Mr A E Truckell, MBE, MA, FMA; Mr A Anderson, BSc; Mr D Adamson, MA; Mr J Chinnock; Mr J H D Gair, MA, JP; Dr J B Wilson, MD and Mr K H Dobie – as Past Presidents. Mr J Williams and Mr L J Masters, MA – appointed under Rule 10. Hon. Secretary Mr R McEwen, 5 Arthur’s Place, Lockerbie DG11 2EB Tel. (01576) 202101 Hon. Membership Secretary Miss H Barrington, 30A Noblehill Avenue, Dumfries DG1 3HR Hon. Treasurer Mr L Murray, 24 Corberry Park, Dumfries DG2 7NG Hon. Librarian Mr R Coleman, 2 Loreburn Park, Dumfries DG1 1LS Tel. (01387) 247297 Assisted by Mr J Williams, 43 New Abbey Road, Dumfries DG2 7LZ Joint Hon. Editors Mr J Williams and Mr R McEwen Hon. Curators Mrs E Kennedy and Ms S Ratchford, both Dumfries Museum Ordinary Members Mrs A Clark, Mr I Cochrane-Dyet, Dr D Devereux, Dr S Graham, Dr B Irving, Mr J McKinnell, Mr I McClumpha, Mr M Taylor, Dr A Terry and Mr M White, Mr J L Williams. -
Report on the Current Position of Poverty and Deprivation in Dumfries and Galloway 2020
Dumfries and Galloway Council Report on the current position of Poverty and Deprivation in Dumfries and Galloway 2020 3 December 2020 1 Contents 1. Introduction 1 2. National Context 2 3. Analysis by the Geographies 5 3.1 Dumfries and Galloway – Geography and Population 5 3.2 Geographies Used for Analysis of Poverty and Deprivation Data 6 4. Overview of Poverty in Dumfries and Galloway 10 4.1 Comparisons with the Crichton Institute Report and Trends over Time 13 5. Poverty at the Local Level 16 5.1 Digital Connectivity 17 5.2 Education and Skills 23 5.3 Employment 29 5.4 Fuel Poverty 44 5.5 Food Poverty 50 5.6 Health and Wellbeing 54 5.7 Housing 57 5.8 Income 67 5.9 Travel and Access to Services 75 5.10 Financial Inclusion 82 5.11 Child Poverty 85 6. Poverty and Protected Characteristics 88 6.1 Age 88 6.2 Disability 91 6.3 Gender Reassignment 93 6.4 Marriage and Civil Partnership 93 6.5 Pregnancy and Maternity 93 6.6 Race 93 6.7 Religion or Belief 101 6.8 Sex 101 6.9 Sexual Orientation 104 6.10 Veterans 105 7. Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Poverty in Scotland 107 8. Summary and Conclusions 110 8.1 Overview of Poverty in Dumfries and Galloway 110 8.2 Digital Connectivity 110 8.3 Education and Skills 111 8.4 Employment 111 8.5 Fuel Poverty 112 8.6 Food Poverty 112 8.7 Health and Wellbeing 113 8.8 Housing 113 8.9 Income 113 8.10 Travel and Access to Services 114 8.11 Financial Inclusion 114 8.12 Child Poverty 114 8.13 Change Since 2016 115 8.14 Poverty and Protected Characteristics 116 Appendix 1 – Datazones 117 2 1. -
3 Burnbank Stranraer DG9 8PS
3 Burnbank Stranraer DG9 8PS www.gapinthemarket.com Living Room 3 Burnbank, Stranraer 3 Burnbank is a charming mid terrace house ideally situated for easy access to Galloway Community Hospital and Waverly Medical Centre. Ryan Leisure Centre and local shops are also close by. The house was built circa 1900’s and extends to 1½ storeys. The accommodation comprises: Entrance Vestibule with double glazed uPVC front door and timber/glass door to hall. The Hall provides access to living room, dining kitchen and stairs to upper floor. The Living Room has window to front and is a bright comfortable room. The Dining Kitchen has window to rear and has an open fireplace. A door leads through to Utility Room which is useful space with door to rear courtyard. On the upper floor are 2 bedrooms and bathroom. Both bedrooms have windows to the front. Bedroom 1 is good size double and Bedroom 2 a single. The bathroom has window to rear and comprises bath with electric shower over, wash hand basin and wc. The house is double glazed in uPVC casements. Heating is by way of new and very efficient electric storage Living Room heaters installed 2017. The property is accessed by pedestrian access from Dalrymple Street. There is a garden to the front of the property which has been landscaped for ease of upkeep with well planted herbaceous borders. There is a small yard to the rear of the property. Stranraer provides secondary and primary schooling, a general hospital, a variety of independent and multiple retailers, leisure centre with swimming pool, small marina, curling rink and a number of hotels and restaurants. -
2 Linns View, Harelaw Canonbie, Dumfries & Galloway
2 LINNS VIEW, HARELAW CANONBIE, DUMFRIES & GALLOWAY A three bedroom mid terraced house in an attractive rural area with gardens and views over the Liddel valley. The accommodation has PVC double glazed windows and doors but is in need of further modernisation work and will create a pleasant family house comprising an entrance hall, living room and kitchen on the ground floor and 3 bedrooms and a bathroom on the first floor. Harelaw is accessible to local shops and amenities in Langholm, Longtown, Gretna or Newcastleton with most required facilities available in the City of Carlisle to include the M6 motorway and mainline trains. EPC = E. GUIDE PRICE: £68,000 Langholm 7 miles, Carlisle City Centre 17 miles, Longtown 9 miles, M6/A74M/Gretna 12 miles, Newcastleton 7.5 miles (all distances approximate) SITUATION Harelaw is situated in the Liddel Valley in Dumfriesshire, a short distance from the England/Scotland border with much attractive countryside and rivers to explore and large tracks of open access forestry available for riding, cycling and walking. Harelaw is a small village but readily accessible to local facilities in Newcastleton, Canonbie, Langholm and Longtown with most required facilities available in the nearby City of Carlisle or at Gretna to include access to the M6 and the A74M. Nearby Canonbie has a village hall and field, doctor’s surgery, shop/post office and pub. For directions to the property from the village of Canonbie, which lies just off of the A7 north of Junction 44 of the M6 at Carlisle and the market town of Longtown, take the B6357 signposted to Rowanburn and Newcastleton. -
History of the Lands and Their Owners in Galloway
H.E NTIL , 4 Pfiffifinfi:-fit,mnuuugm‘é’r§ms, ».IVI\ ‘!{5_&mM;PAmnsox, _ V‘ V itbmnvncn. if,‘4ff V, f fixmmum ‘xnmonasfimwini cAa'1'm-no17t§1[.As'. xmgompnxenm. ,7’°':",*"-‘V"'{";‘.' ‘9“"3iLfA31Dan1r,_§v , qyuwgm." “,‘,« . ERRATA. Page 1, seventeenth line. For “jzim—g1'é.r,”read "j2'1r11—gr:ir." 16. Skaar, “had sasiik of the lands of Barskeoch, Skar,” has been twice erroneously printed. 19. Clouden, etc., page 4. For “ land of,” read “lands of.” 24. ,, For “ Lochenket," read “ Lochenkit.” 29.,9 For “ bo,” read “ b6." 48, seventh line. For “fill gici de gord1‘u1,”read“fill Riei de gordfin.” ,, nineteenth line. For “ Sr,” read “ Sr." 51 I ) 9 5’ For “fosse,” read “ fossé.” 63, sixteenth line. For “ your Lords,” read “ your Lord’s.” 143, first line. For “ godly,” etc., read “ Godly,” etc. 147, third line. For “ George Granville, Leveson Gower," read without the comma.after Granville. 150, ninth line. For “ Manor,” read “ Mona.” 155,fourth line at foot. For “ John Crak,” read “John Crai ." 157, twenty—seventhline. For “Ar-byll,” read “ Ar by1led.” 164, first line. For “ Galloway,” read “ Galtway.” ,, second line. For “ Galtway," read “ Galloway." 165, tenth line. For “ King Alpine," read “ King Alpin." ,, seventeenth line. For “ fosse,” read “ fossé.” 178, eleventh line. For “ Berwick,” read “ Berwickshire.” 200, tenth line. For “ Murmor,” read “ murinor.” 222, fifth line from foot. For “Alfred-Peter,” etc., read “Alfred Peter." 223 .Ba.rclosh Tower. The engraver has introduced two figures Of his own imagination, and not in our sketch. 230, fifth line from foot. For “ his douchter, four,” read “ his douchter four.” 248, tenth line. -
Dumfriesshire
Dumfriesshire Rare Plant Register 2020 Christopher Miles An account of the known distribution of the rare or scarce native plants in Dumfriesshire up to the end of 2019 Rare Plant Register Dumfriesshire 2020 Holy Grass, Hierochloe odorata Black Esk July 2019 2 Rare Plant Register Dumfriesshire 2020 Acknowledgements My thanks go to all those who have contributed plant records in Dumfriesshire over the years. Many people have between them provided hundreds or thousands of records and this publication would not have been possible without them. More particularly, before my recording from 1996 onwards, plant records have been collected and collated in three distinct periods since the nineteenth century by previous botanists working in Dumfriesshire. The first of these was George F. Scott- Elliot. He was an eminent explorer and botanist who edited the first and only Flora so far published for Dumfriesshire in 1896. His work was greatly aided by other contributing botanists probably most notably Mr J.T. Johnstone and Mr W. Stevens. The second was Humphrey Milne-Redhead who was a GP in Mainsriddle in Kircudbrightshire from 1947. He was both the vice county recorder for Bryophytes and for Higher Plants for all three Dumfries and Galloway vice counties! During his time the first systematic recording was stimulated by work for the first Atlas of the British Flora (1962). He published a checklist in 1971/72. The third period of recording was between 1975 and 1993 led by Stuart Martin and particularly Mary Martin after Stuart’s death. Mary in particular continued systematic recording and recorded for the monitoring scheme in 1987/88.