Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Perthshire Advertiser (originally the Perthshire Advertiser and Strathmore Journal) [3] is a tabloid newspaper, published by Reach plc, in Perth, Scotland. The PA , as it is commonly known, comes out twice a week, on Tuesday and Friday.
Media in Perth, Scotland. ... Perthshire Advertiser This page was last edited on 27 April 2020, at 11:23 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
Season Skip Third Second Lead Events 1982–83 Hazel McGregor: Jane Ramsey: Betty McGregor: Billie-May Muirhead: SWCC 1983 WWCC 1983 (6th) : 1985–86 Hazel McGregor
The name "Perth" derives from a Pictish word for "wood" or "copse", related to the Welsh "perth", meaning "hedge" or "thicket". [10] During much of the later medieval period, it was known colloquially by its Scots-speaking inhabitants as "St John's Toun" or "Saint Johnstoun" because the church at the centre of the parish was dedicated to St John the Baptist. [11]
Luncarty withdrew after three games of the 1898–99 season [4] and was replaced the following year by Bridge of Earn. Clubs from Perth were able to join from the 1901–1902 season, but the two Perth clubs which did join - Fair City Athletic and Perth West End - did not finish the season; both were expelled, the former for non-fulfilment of ...
Agnes Hay Somerville "Rhoda" Fothergill [1] (1929 – 19 June 2019) [1] [2] [3] was a Scottish historian, educator and archaeologist. She published several historical guides to Perth, Scotland. Her focus areas were Old Perth, the Greyfriars Burial Ground and people of 19th-century Perth. [4]
The A85 is a major road in Scotland. It runs east from Oban along the south bank of Loch Etive, through Lochawe and Tyndrum, Crianlarich, Lochearnhead, St Fillans and Crieff before passing through Perth, where it crosses the River Tay via Perth Bridge (West Bridge Street) to Bridgend. Its name between Crieff and Perth is the Crieff Road.
Dunning is a small village in Perth and Kinross in Scotland with a population of about 1,000. The village centres around the 12th–13th century former parish church of St. Serf, where the Dupplin Cross is displayed (Historic Scotland; open in summer without entrance charge).