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Dalry (from Scottish Gaelic: Dail Ruighe, 'the haugh at the slope' [2]) is a small settlement on the Rye Burn. [3] Its history has signs of early inhabitants in the area; the remains of an ancient fort, made of three concentric round walls, can be found on the summit of Carwinning Hill to the North of Dalry, west of the B784 to Largs.
Upload another image Baidland Manor 55°42′56″N 4°45′29″W / 55.715419°N 4.75807°W / 55.715419; -4.75807 (Baidland Manor) Category C(S) 1195 Upload Photo Brownhill House 55°43′37″N 4°41′15″W / 55.726908°N 4.687476°W / 55.726908; -4.687476 (Brownhill House) Category B 1204 Upload Photo 9 Aitken Street, Chapelhill, Dalry 55°42′24″N 4°43 ...
A view from the old millponds site of Pitcon Woods and Dalry. The tomb of Thomas and Janet Craufurd at Kilbirnie. Daniel Crawfurd adopted the name and arms of Ker of Kersland [14] and married first Annabella Campbell, daughter of Sir Matthew Campbell of Loudoun, Sheriff of Ayr, and second Isobel Drummond, in about 1578 at Loudoun, Ayrshire ...
Swindridgemuir House and estate were composed of the 'Lands of Swindridgemuir' and the dwelling house about two miles north-east of Dalry in the old Barony of Kersland, [1] about a mile and a half north of the Blair Estate, North Ayrshire, Scotland. The spelling on the family memorials at Ayr Auld Kirk is 'Swindrigemuir'.
Ayrshire and Arran, The Buildings of Scotland. New Haven : Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-14170-2. Dalry Local History Group (1985). Dalry Remembered. ISBN 0-9510674-0-0. Dobie, James D. (ed Dobie, J.S.) (1876). Cunninghame, Topographized by Timothy Pont 1604–1608, with continuations and illustrative notices. Glasgow: John Tweed.
The Lands of Pitcon, previously Potconnel [1] now form a small estate of around 100 acres in the Parish of Dalry, North Ayrshire in the old Barony of Dalry. The present category B listed [ 2 ] Georgian mansion house (OS NS 229879, 650628) dating from 1787, replaces an older castellated dwelling.
Meikle Auchengree is 500 metres (2 + 1 ⁄ 2 furlongs) east of Glengarnock in Dalry parish. The hamlet is situated at the north end of the Auchengree Road which runs between the B777 and the A737 roads. The settlement is today a mixture of farms, small-holdings and residential properties.
Monkcastle and Northern Ayrshire. The canal to Glasgow is shown, but this section was never built. A blank armorial panel above the entrance. The ruins of Monkcastle are in woodland to the west of the A737 trunk road on the right bank of the River Garnock, 1 + 1 ⁄ 4 miles (2.0 km) south of Dalry and 2 + 1 ⁄ 2 miles (4.0 km) north of Kilwinning and represent a small, late 16th or early 17th ...