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38, 40, 42 And 44 Academy Street Category C(S) 35126: Upload Photo: 28-34 (Even Nos Only) Academy Street ... Balnain House, Huntly Street Category A 35276: 15 Island ...
Sheep in Balnain in 1989. The annual Snowman Car Rally has passed through the town since 1998. [39] Recreational areas and parks. Balnain-park is a play park. [40] Balnain bike park. The Forestry Commission closed the 2-year-old Bike-park and general access to cross-country cyclists in 2011, [41] [42] [43] but walkers can still enjoy the ...
Balvenie House 3 West Park Street 57°26′57″N 2°47′10″W / 57.449067°N 2.786085°W / 57.449067; -2.786085 ( Balvenie House 3 West Park Category B
[1] [2] It served as a Red Cross hospital during the First World War. [1] An isolation unit for treating people with tuberculosis was added in 1925 and a day case unit was added in 1938. [1] After tuberculosis had been largely eradicated, the isolation unit was converted into a maternity unit in 1944. [1] A health centre was added in 1965. [1]
Drumnadrochit (/ d r ʌ m n ə ˈ d r ɒ x ɪ t /; Scottish Gaelic: Druim na Drochaid) is a village in the Highland local government council area of Scotland, lying near the west shore of Loch Ness at the foot of Glen Urquhart. [2] The village is close to several neighbouring settlements: the villages of Milton to the west, Kilmore to the east ...
The hospital was founded in 1874 by Lennox Browne, Llewellyn Thomas, Alfred Hutton, George Wallis and Ernest Turner. [2] [3] The hospital initially opened in Manchester Street (now Argyle Street), but demand for its services was such that new premises were acquired on Gray's Inn Road: the foundation stone was laid by Adelina Patti, a leading singer, in 1875. [2]
Stewart's Hall, formerly Huntly Town Hall, [1] is a municipal structure in Gordon Street, Huntly, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. The structure, which is used as a community events venue, is a Category C listed building .
Glass is a parish about 8 miles west of Huntly, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. [1] It is now wholly located in Aberdeenshire but before the reorganisation of Scottish county boundaries in 1891 [2] it was partly in Banffshire. [3] [1] The name Glass may have come from the Gaelic word for "grey," [3] "meadow" or "stream." [4]