Barrhill, South Ayrshire

Barrhill (Scots: Baurhill)[1] is a village in South Ayrshire, Scotland with a population of approximately 400 in 2001.[2]

Barrhill
  • Scottish Gaelic: Am Barr
  • Scots: Baurhill
Barrhill
Location within South Ayrshire
Population400 
OS grid referenceNX2382
Council area
Lieutenancy area
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townGirvan
Postcode districtKA26
Dialling code01465
PoliceScotland
FireScottish
AmbulanceScottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament

While the surrounding area is predominantly agricultural land, the main local employer is Barr Construction Ltd. Local amenities include a village store and a Public House, "The Trout Inn",[3] formerly known as "The Commercial Hotel". On Main Street, in the centre of the village is Barrhill Bowling Club, affectionately known to locals as "The BBC".

The Cross Water (a tributary of the River Stinchar - not to be confused with the Cross Water of Luce) flows through the village.

Barrhill Primary School serves the local population, providing education for 5-11 year olds. In the 2006/7 academic year it had a roll of 34 pupils.[4]

Black Clauchrie House is a manor house and former hunting lodge, located just outside Barrhill. The house's architecture and decoration are a notable example of the Edwardian Arts and Crafts Movement.

Kildonan House is an impressive early 20th century mansion and former convent school, located slightly north of Barrhill. Originally constructed as the home of David Wallace, MP.[5]

Transport

Barrhill lies on the A714 road between Girvan and Newton Stewart. In addition, Barrhill railway station, on the Glasgow South Western Line is approximately 12 mile (1 km) south-west of the village. This station featured in The Five Red Herrings, a 1931 Lord Peter Wimsey detective novel by Dorothy L Sayers.

Local history

In 1665, by the side of Cross Water in Barrhill, John Murchie and Daniel Mieklewrick were found by soldiers to be in possession of Bibles and assumed to be Covenanters and shot to death. They were buried on the spot, and a memorial was built, known as "The Martyrs' Tomb".[6]

"The Martyrs' Tomb Walk" is now a popular scenic walk which follows the banks of Cross Water for 600 metres from the bridge in the village centre to the tomb itself.

gollark: Okay, v1.1 is out, with support for live as an alias for evil.
gollark: I could probably add that to the category system, so you might define your system as, for example, insecure against <0.8-level annoying evil but entirely secure against stuff which deletes files, etc.
gollark: Ah, good idea.
gollark: I'll look into it for v2.
gollark: What sort of evilness criteria should the next version use? I'd quite like receivers to be able to filter by type of evilness.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.