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Bar of the Sheep Heid Inn. In addition to the question of the conjectural date, the origin of the pub's name is also a matter of some debate. From the medieval period to early modern times, sheep were reared in Holyrood Park, a royal park beside Duddingston, and were slaughtered in Duddingston before being taken to the Fleshmarket in Edinburgh's Old Town.
The Old Ship Inn is a public house in Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland. While the current building is late Victorian , an Old Ship Inn has been on the site since at least 1665. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Although its address is given as High Street , its entrance on the medieval Skinnergate is more notable. [ 3 ]
Pages in category "Pubs in Scotland" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total. ... The Old Ship Inn; S. Shore Inn; T. Tied Pubs (Scotland) Act ...
The Jigger Inn is a pub which overlooks the 17th Road Hole on the Old Course in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland.Jigger Inn dates back to 1852 when it was the station master's lodge for the St Andrews Links railway station. [1]
The inn is sited towards the western end of the glen at grid reference, about 3 km (1.9 mi) southeast of the modern Glencoe village, on the old road just to the north of the A82 trunk road. It lies at the foot of Clachaig Gully, a precarious descent route to the west of the Aonach Eagach ridge, and faces across the glen to the starkly vertical ...
The Bein Inn (commonly known as the Famous Bein Inn) [1] is an historic building in Glenfarg, Perth and Kinross, Scotland.A "noted hostelry," according to the Gazetteer for Scotland, [2] it was originally built in the 19th century as a resting place for travellers moving between Edinburgh and the Highlands on the old Great North Road, the traditional route north, today's A912 road.
The Old Mill Inn is a public house and country inn in Pitlochry, Perth and Kinross, Scotland. A former gristmill dating to the 18th century, it won the Scottish Inn of the Year in 2016. [1] It has won several other awards. [2] The building still has a functioning water wheel. [2]
The Horse Shoe Bar (or Horseshoe Bar) is a public house on Drury Street, Glasgow, Scotland. A bar opened on the site as far back as 1846 when William Turnbull, a local spirits dealer moved in to the premises. [1] The licence changed several times in subsequent years before being taken over by John Scoullar in 1884. [2]