Drylaw
Drylaw is an area in the north west of Edinburgh, the capital of Scotland, located between Blackhall and Granton. It forms the community of Drylaw–Telford.[1] Formerly the estate of Drylaw House, built in 1718, the home of the Loch family,[2] the area became the site of a major housing scheme in the 1950s designed to rehouse the occupants of Leith. It is on the A902 road. Its name comes from the Scots language and means "hill without a spring".
Buildings
see[3]
- Old Drylaw House, now ruinous, a small mansion dating from the early 17th century
- Drylaw House, a classical mansion dating from 1718 with alterations of 1786
- Drylaw Parish Church, by Sir William Kininmonth 1956
Notable Residents
- Baron Loch of Drylaw
- Admiral Francis Erskine Loch (1788-1868) born and raised in Drylaw House
- Graham Hastings of the band Young Fathers was raised in Drylaw.
gollark: Maybe you could say that about political ideologies too. Hmm. They're generally less reason-based, inasmuch as you can't really measure "opinion goodness" objectively.
gollark: The flat earth model is self-reinforcing if you buy into some flat-earthy stuff already, and it is somewhat hard to get out of such traps.
gollark: You could just not act on it.
gollark: If I say "Gibson, [MINORITY] bad, be violent toward them", it's your problem if you do stuff based on that.
gollark: You can choose whether to act on it.
References
- "Drylaw–Telford Community Council". Neighbourhood Partnerships. Edinburgh City Council. Retrieved 18 January 2014.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 26 October 2016. Retrieved 6 July 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- Buildings of Scotland: Edinburgh by Gifford McWilliam and Walker
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