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The Mull of Galloway (Scottish Gaelic: Maol nan Gall, pronounced [mɯːlˠ̪ nəŋ ˈkaulˠ̪]; grid reference) is the southernmost point of Scotland. It is situated in Wigtownshire, Dumfries and Galloway , at the end of the Rhins of Galloway peninsula.
Mull of Galloway Trail: 59: Mull of Galloway & Glenapp, Ballantrae: Links the Ayrshire Coastal Path to the Mull of Galloway. SGT North Highland Way: 241: Cape Wrath & Duncansby Head: Along the north coast of Scotland. [18] Virtual route Pennine Way: 429: Edale & Kirk Yetholm: The northernmost 10 km are in Scotland. National Trail (England and ...
Upload another image Low Currochtrie, Farmhouse 54°41′50″N 4°55′06″W / 54.697329°N 4.918212°W / 54.697329; -4.918212 (Low Currochtrie, Farmhouse) Category C(S) 13573 Upload Photo Mull Of Galloway Lighthouse, Lighthouse Keepers' Houses And Boundary Walls 54°38′06″N 4°51′26″W / 54.634944°N 4.857186°W / 54.634944; -4.857186 (Mull Of Galloway ...
Map of places in Dumfries and Galloway compiled from this list. This List of places in Dumfries and Galloway is a list of links for any town, village, hamlet, castle, golf course, historic house, hill fort, lighthouse, nature reserve, reservoir, river, loch, and other place of interest in the historic counties of Kirkcudbrightshire, Dumfriesshire and Wigtownshire within the Dumfries and ...
The Firth of Clyde merges with the channel, between the southern tip of the Kintyre peninsula and Corsewall Point on the Rhins of Galloway. [2] The channel begins north of the Isle of Man and is customarily considered part of the Irish Sea , the channel runs north-west into the Atlantic Ocean .
Mull of Galloway Lighthouse Dumfries and Galloway [100] 54°38′6″N 4°51′26″W [101] mainland: 1830: Robert Stevenson: Northern Lighthouse Board: 26 [102] 99 [4] 28 [4] Mull of Kintyre Lighthouse Argyll and Bute 55°18′38″N 5°48′12″W [103] mainland: 1788 [104] Thomas Smith: Northern Lighthouse Board: 12 [104] 91 [4] 24 [4] Neist ...
The Mull of Galloway Trail is a coastal long-distance path in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. The route, which is 59 km (37 mi) long, [ 1 ] runs along the coast from Glenapp near Ballantrae (where the trail links with the Ayrshire Coastal Path ) to the Mull of Galloway .
The term Dumfries and Galloway has been used since at least the 19th century – by 1911 the three counties had a united sheriffdom under that name. Dumfries and Galloway covers the majority of the western area of the Southern Uplands, [3] it also hosts Scotland's most Southerly point, at the Mull of Galloway [4] in the west of the region.