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The first known settlement on the site of what is now Kirkintilloch was a Roman fort established in what is now the Peel Park area of the town. Dating from the mid-2nd century, the Antonine Wall, one of the northernmost frontiers in Roman Britannia was routed through Kirkintilloch; its course continues through the centre of the town to this day, although little trace can now be seen above ...
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In former times, Waterside was characterised by its neat and tidy weavers' cottages on the north bank of the Luggie river, and its picturesque mills on the south bank.
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Upload another image Westermains Farm, 72-80 West High Street 55°56′27″N 4°09′44″W / 55.940898°N 4.162183°W / 55.940898; -4.162183 (Westermains Farm, 72-80 West High Street) Category B 36658 Upload Photo Lenzie, Woodilee Hospital Main Block With Towers 55°55′39″N 4°08′00″W / 55.927473°N 4.133246°W / 55.927473; -4.133246 (Lenzie, Woodilee ...
Map of Auchinloch, published in 1923. Auchinloch (Scottish Gaelic: Achadh an Locha) is a village in Scotland, situated within the North Lanarkshire local authority area but very close to the boundary with East Dunbartonshire and sharing the G66 postcode of the town of Kirkintilloch and the adjoining village of Lenzie, located a short distance to the north. [2]
Looking North from Wilderness Brae to entrance to Village near old curling pond Pebbled Monster. Today, Cumbernauld Village is quite characteristically different from most of the rest of the town, as it contains a high number of local amenities, and its structure of having pavements beside the roads in the Village is quite unlike the rest of the planned new town, with the possible exception of ...
The site of the fort is north of Kirkintilloch's northern border. [5] It can be seen as a mound mid-way between the Forth and Clyde Canal and the road. [6] Sir George Macdonald wrote about the excavation of the site. [7] He says, "Auchendavy is distinguished for the large number of antiquities found in and about it."