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Drymen (/ ˈ d r ɪ m ɪ n /; from Scottish Gaelic: Druiminn [ˈt̪ɾɯmɪɲ]) is a village in the Stirling district of central Scotland. Once a popular stopping place for cattle drovers , it is now favored by visiting tourists given its location near Loch Lomond . [ 2 ]
Upload another image See more images Drymen, 27 Main Street 56°03′46″N 4°27′08″W / 56.06268°N 4.452084°W / 56.06268; -4.452084 (Drymen, 27 Main Street) Category C(S) 48980 Upload Photo Corrie Aqueduct Bridge (Former Glasgow Corporation Water Works) 56°07′48″N 4°26′19″W / 56.129994°N 4.438634°W / 56.129994; -4.438634 (Corrie Aqueduct ...
List of listed buildings in Bridge Of Allan, Stirling; List of listed buildings in Buchanan, Stirling; List of listed buildings in Callander, Stirling; List of listed buildings in Comrie, Stirling; List of listed buildings in Doune, Stirling; List of listed buildings in Drymen, Stirling; List of listed buildings in Dunblane And Lecropt, Stirling
Buchanan Castle is a ruined castle in Stirlingshire, Scotland, located 1 mile (1.6 km) west of the village of Drymen.The house was commissioned by the 4th Duke of Montrose and built in 1852–1858 as a home for the Montrose family, serving as such until 1925.
This article is a list of towns, village, hamlet and settlements in the Stirling council area of Scotland. Aberfoyle, Main Street Bannockburn Ben Ledi from Kilmahog Callander Doune Castle Dunblane Cathedral Lochearnhead Loch Lubnaig Wallace Monument Ochil Hills
On 5 October 1959 the sections between Gartness Junction and Buchlyvie Junction, Jamestown and Drymen, and from Port of Menteith to Stirling closed. On 1 September 1964 the short section from Croftengea Siding to Jamestown closed, and finally the Croftengea Siding stub closed on 9 April 1965.
The Rob Roy Way is a Scottish long distance footpath that runs from Drymen in Stirling to Pitlochry in Perth and Kinross. The path was created in 2002, [2] and takes its name from Rob Roy MacGregor, a Scottish folk hero and outlaw of the early 18th century. It traverses countryside that he knew and travelled frequently. [3]
West of Stirling is the parish of Drymen and its name appears to have been derived from the Scottish Gaelic, dromainn which means a ridge or high ground. [4] There is a traditional legend that states that the first nobleman to settle in Drymen was a Hungarian prince called George who accompanied Edgar Ætheling, an Anglo-Saxon prince, on his escape from William the Conqueror and the Norman ...