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linen thread, much used at the time for boot and shoe making, and for sailmaking; an offshoot of the much larger linen thread mills at
Kilbirnie. The largest of the mill buildings was a three-storeyed, flat-roofed mill, with a fireproof interior with brick arches on cast iron columns. In front is a section of a range of single-storeyed, north-lit sheds. In 1965 the buildings were being used as a fertiliser factory. The mill buildings have been demolished, but the offices still survive.
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762:. The railway is no longer used for transporting items to the depot, due to the delicate nature of modern complex armaments, the last trains running in 1996 although the trackwork remains intact within the depot (2014). Locals relate how the engine drivers used to park their train at the overbridge and walk up to the shop to get a drink and a snack. The line saw the occasional MOD passenger train when conferences or inspections were being held at the 'Admiralty'.
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railworkers and farm workers who lived in
Patrick Row which was located on Barkip Road near to what is now the main entrance to the depot. Bellcraigs House near Barmill Road was also demolished, the site being marked in 2011 by surviving flowering cherry trees. In 1942 something like 1,200 acres (500 hectares) were taken to establish the depot.
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Barrmillians were out in force and supporting attractions that included bouncy castles, Chinese Dragon dancers, book and postcard sales, the
Olympic Flame time capsule, a piper, an international food fair, Threepwood sweets, mini-Olympics, Play Ranger Walks, a labyrinth, sport tasters, health checks,
852:
The moss lies entirely within the DM Beith site and therefore access is restricted. Giffen
Colliery, bing and freight railway line were once located on the southern side of the moss as shown by the old OS maps of the area; a railway also cut across the northern edge of the moss, however the main part
729:
on the
Glasgow & South Western railway line to the old Glengarnock steelworks, owned by the Glengarnock Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. The works closed in 1921, however the waste bings remained for many years. The 'Beith Supplement and Advertiser' reported in 1912 that after a two-month-long strike at
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The news that the war in South Africa has at last been brought to an end by the surrender of the Boers was known in
Barrmill in June 1902 when the early papers arrived. At Barrmill the villagers gave full vent to their joy by knocking off at the breakfast hour and compelling the master at Greenhills
765:
There were five farms which were taken over by the
Ministry of Defence for them to establish the Royal Naval Armaments Depot. Boyd's of Drumbuie, Jacks o' the Ward; Crawfords o' the Scoup; Harpers o' the White Spot; and Blairs of the Bugstone, Boyd of the Bellcraig, Gillies of Gatend and a number of
356:
The limestone works was closed in 1972. The whinstone quarries of Messrs. King & Co. employed a considerable number of men in 1951, but even then the quarries were almost worked out. Giffen coal pit (No 1) lay close to
Bankhead Moss as shown on the 1897 OS map, closing not long afterwards as the
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and was feud out to various local millers and farmers in the 17th century. Close records that
Drumbuie Farm incorporates an early 18th-century two-storey house, originally thatched, which was built around 1736 for Hugh Patrick, this being stated on a plaque on the 1815 addition. Drumbuie Mill stood
654:
The burial site is located on the lands of South Barr Farm and was at one time fenced off and bordered by trees, kept in order thanks to the
Crawford Brothers of the old factory until they died. It has been neglected since then, however a stile and footbridge were built by the Barrmill Conservation
332:
General Roy's survey of 1747–1755 shows only the farm of High Barr. A village grew up here due to the employment provided by the several limestone quarries that were present at one time, the Dockra Ironstone pit that was located near the railway line down from Dockra quarry in 1912, and other local
980:
In 2010 a Barrmill Communities Projects Initiatives (BCPI) group was set up by the Community and District Association and the NAC Ranger Service to improve the appearance of the Barrmill, Greenhills, and Burnhouse villages. One achievement was the creation of the Veil Grove amenity within Barrmill
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Bellcraig House stood near the old entrance to Bogston House and was destroyed by quarrying for whinstone. In 1844 John Ritchie of Bellcraigs House died. Bellcraig and Crawford Terrace form a small hamlet close to Barrmill. The Braefoot Building stood on the other, north side of the road, owned by
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Apart from the Olympic Flame runners many other VIP's guests were present, such as the Provost and Deputy-Provost, the NAC Chief Executive, the NAC Citizen of the Year (Jean Gilbert), NAC councillors, pupils and staff from Glengarnock Primary School, and representatives of the Chinese, Sikh, and
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On 8 June 2012 the Olympic Flame visited Barrmill. Barrmill's Olympic Flame Committee provided hundreds of people, young and older, with a series of events to mark the day. The village was decorated with hanging baskets, banners, colourful flowerbeds, and everywhere had been swept, weeded and the
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In 1908 the local paper recorded that not even a fence surrounded the spot and a resident of Barrmill suggested that a suitable stone and a fence should be erected to mark the resting place of the unfortunate ancestors of Barrmill residents and also to recognise the sacredness of the burial site.
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The village that developed had a population of 300 in 1876 and 600 in 1951, when the threadmaking industry had just ceased, although the workers still lived in company houses and were transported daily to the threadmaking factory at Kilbirnie. This mill was founded in the mid-19th century to make
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The quoiting (pronounced 'kiting') green was located at the site of the present day playground. Many teams from elsewhere in Ayrshire came here to compete and the unofficial betting sometimes resulted in heated exchanges. Peter Wilson played for Celtic and Scotland in the 1920s and he was also a
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ground which was in what is now the park, close to the old railway embankment; a mission hall is also shown, located just the other side of the railway bridge over the Beith branchline. In 2006 a new housing estate was created on the site of the old Barrmill railway station and goods yard.
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Extensive limestone quarrying took place at Dockra with a mineral line running down to join with the Beith to Lugton line. Limekilns were located at the site, as were gunpowder magazines, a mine manager's house, a large bing, etc. The quarry is now flooded, but not infilled.
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In 2012 local resident Jean Gilbert was voted in as the North Ayrshire Citizen of the Year in recognition for all the work that Jean and her team have done to enhance the social life and surroundings of Burnhouse, Greenhills and Barrmill. In 2013 Jean was awarded an MBE.
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Matthew, known as the 'Policemen-Poet of Ayrshire', was posted to Barrmill for a number of years, leaving for Kilmarnock in June 1896. He wrote a number of poems about the district, such as 'Farewell to Barrmill', 'The Braes o'Barrmill', and 'Night at Barrmill.'
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The 'Dusk Rovers' were a local football team that played on a pitch located on a field near the old Giffen Viaduct and Dusk water; allowing the ploy of losing the ball into the Dusk Water or onto the nearby railway if the game was not going well.
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Birsieknowe was in the grounds of what is now DM Beith (2010) and the old coal pit here closed due to flooding beyond the capacity of the pumps in 1913; it had been active in the 1890s. A commemorative plaque was placed at the site.
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was the only intermediate station on the line from Lugton to Beith Town railway station and opened on 26 June 1873, and closed permanently to passengers on 5 November 1962. Freight services continued on the line until 1964.
923:, was the garden designer, working with the group to create a community resource to complement the existing Vale Grove site in Barrmill Park. Many other groups contributed to the work, such as Community Payback, Greenbelt,
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These houses, some of which housed quarry workers, lie close to a 20th-century limestone quarry nearby, now abandoned and filled with water. The area had many small limestone and ironstone quarries. Dockra and
931:, Youth Making Beith Better, Redburn Activity Agreement Group, the Outreach Group, the Barrmill and District Community Association, etc. Many local businesses donated items and materials for the project.
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plot at the base of Jameshill, lying to the south-west of Barrmill village. No record of the people buried here seems to exist and it is likely that they were buried without any religious observance.
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In 2013 a Bioblitz and Citizen Science event took place through which locals were trained in some basic identification skills and the whole district was subject to a thorough biological survey.
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massage, vintage cars, an art exhibition, the Village Shop, tea and cakes, etc. A 'Bothy Night' with live musical entertainment took place with profits going to the new Community Centre appeal.
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parish cemetery was impossible and impractical, given the number of deaths. As is usual for such sites a remote spot was selected, well away from water courses. No health risk remains today.
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Drumbuie House, built in 1702, is one of the oldest inhabited houses in the Beith area and has been the home of the Boyd family for at least three generations. Drumbuie was part of the
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In late 2010 the local 'Barrmill Village Shop' was restored to its previous appearance with the entrance moved back to the original position, etc. The shop has its own Facebook page.
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The work involved over a hundred people during the three days of filming and many more on the thirty or so workdays before the filming dates. Jeremy Needham, a lecturer at SAC
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Merry & Cunningham the ironmasters. The building was demolished in 1956 and the residents moved to new housing in Beith. The Mack family were onetime residents.
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Group in 2012 to allow easier access to the site which also has a Geocache. In 2014 the Barrmill Conservation Group built a new fence around the cholera pit site.
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1175:: details every public and private passenger station, halt, platform and stopping place, past and present, 1st Edition, Sparkford: Patrick Stephens Ltd.
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The Biggart Memorial Home for Cripple Children in Prestwick was built in 1905 as a memorial to Robert and Mary Biggart of Drumbuie by their children.
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nearby on the Dusk Water; however, no physical remains are now extant as it was largely destroyed by the construction of the railway, now closed.
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Dobie, James (1876). Pont's Cunninghame topographised 1604-1608 with continuations and illustrative notices (1876). Pub. John Tweed. P.125.
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A large Defence Munitions (DM) centre is located between Beith and Barrmill. The site was originally developed in 1943 as a conventional
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The time capsule was sealed in its cairn in August 2012 to be opened in 2036 by the oldest resident in the district at that time.
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In 2012 the Vale Grove and Barrmill Park appeared on the BBC's Beechgrove Garden programme, having created the Vale View Garden.
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Park. In 2011 the Save the Children Fund employed an Environmental Artist to create living willow shelters in Barrmill Park.
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Wilhelmina Boyd records that in the 1930s the local children regarded the site as 'sacred ground' and wouldn't walk on it.
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Troops were regularly placed at road junctions to prevent entry or exit during cholera outbreaks and normal burial in the
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House and the old Giffen Viaduct; it was once used for curling. The site was filled with earth and is now overgrown.
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Over a period of two months in 2012 the Barrmill Conservation Group created a new garden, the Vale View, as part of
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of the moss has been largely untouched by industry although it is grazed by farm animals. The site is monitored by
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An ironstone quarry was also located at the site and the ore, crushed on site, was taken down the 'bogey line' via
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Detail of the site of the old Cholera pit below South Barr farm in 2012, known locally as the 'Deid mans plantin'
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noted quoiting prodigy, defeating many top players to win a tournament held to raise funds for the Red Cross.
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The railway cutting beyond Barrmill station facing Beith, near the old Junction with the Dockra mineral line
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Barrmill from near the old mill offices. The wall to the left is the frontage of old mill workers' cottages.
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Strawhorn, John and Boyd, William (1951). The Third Statistical Account of Scotland. Ayrshire. Pub. P. 407.
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within a week of visiting a Gipsy encampment to have their fortunes told and were buried in a triangular
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The Giffen railway viaduct was demolished in the 1980s; locals knew it as the 'Navvies Brig'.
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were planted in the orchard area by the provost and deputy provost to commemorate the visit.
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programme. The Barrmill 'Best Kept Garden' competition formed part of the programme.
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The stile leading to the Dead Man's Planting with Barrmill conservation volunteers.
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The last stretch of the railway line before the depot from Drumbuie Bridge in 2008
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The line and an old signal looking towards the closed Giffen station and DM Beith
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The Vale Grove on day three of the filming of the Beechgrove Garden programme.
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quarries are quite nearby. Around 30 people were employed here in the 1930s.
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Glengarnock Steelworks the ironstone works at Dockra would be re-opening.
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Barrmill's mainstreet with the railway bridge, looking towards Greenhills
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The freight business of the G&SWR at the start of the 20th Century.
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This is a good example of a lowland raised bog or mire. Bankhead is a
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Approaching Barrmill from Lugton near the old Kilbirnie Junction
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Millbarr Grove on the site of the old station and goods yard
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YouTube video of the Dead Man's Planting and surroundings
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The site of Barrmill station from the old road overbridge
1084:
Discovering Matthew Anderson. Policeman-Poet of Ayrshire
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Barr Mill Linen Thread mill. Accessed : 2009-11-19
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Whisky barrels at the nearby Balgray Bond, Chivas Regal
1360:
Ayrshire and Arran: An Illustrated Architectural Guide
849:(SAC), making it significant in the European context.
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The old railway line running towards Lugton at Barmill
1524:
YouTube video of Barrmill Village industrial heritage
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A video of powder magazines at Dockra Quarry in 2015
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YouTube video of the Burns Mausoleum at Nettlehirst
1213:
The High Church. An Illustrated Guide. 1983, p. 48.
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The restored appearance of the village shop in 2011
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1466:Beith, Barrmill & Gateside. Precious memories
1445:Beith, Barrmill & Gateside. Precious memories
1418:Gilbert, Tom & Grace (2010). Windyhouse Farm.
1126:Reid, Donald L. & Monahan, Isobel F. (1999).
558:Barrmill's Giffen Mill and the old Miller's house
1499:Playing quoits in Barrmill and Lowland Scotland.
992:The Black Loch was a shallow loch situated near
510:A water feature in the Veil Grove, Barrmill Park
498:A Barrmill garden built using recycled materials
2056:Demolished buildings and structures in Scotland
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1240:
1585:
1494:A Guided Walk - The Vale Grove Garden in 2014
700:Details of the lock on the gunpowder magazine
592:The old flooded limestone quarry at Bellcraig
8:
1489:A Guided Walk - The Vale View Garden in 2014
629:In 1832 around forty local youths died from
1559:Alex Sanderson's recollections of Barrmill.
1194:Ayrshire & Renfrewshire's Lost Railways
1676:
1592:
1578:
1570:
712:Internal details of the gunpowder magazine
438:The old railway bridge over the mainstreet
23:
1314:Recollections of Robert Boyd of Drumbuie.
1285:. Beith : Duke of Edinburgh Award.
1167:
1165:
1151:. Beith : Duke of Edinburgh Award.
1130:. Beith : Duke of Edinburgh Award.
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462:Barrmill crossroads, with hotel and shop
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1381:Historic Prestwick and its surroundings
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950:Some of the members of the BCPI in 2010
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30:
2046:Archaeological sites in North Ayrshire
1544:Video with a SNAPS project aerial view
1431:. Greenhills Women's Institute. p. 27.
1032:Broadstone Castle and Barony, Ayrshire
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1437:
1362:. Pub. Royal Incorp Archit Scotland.
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7:
1128:Yesterday's Beith. A Pictorial Guide
357:following OS maps cease showing it.
38:Barrmill from the old railway bridge
878:Olympic Torch swapover at Barrmill.
843:Site of Special Scientific Interest
721:Ruins at the Dockra Ironstone works
401:Barrmill village and railway - 2007
16:Village in North Ayrshire, Scotland
1196:. Ochiltree: Stenlake Publishing.
796:The old Cotter's House at Drumbuie
676:The eye of a more recent lime kiln
14:
1226:. Ochiltree:Stenlake Publishing.
1173:The Directory of Railway Stations
2027:List of places in North Ayrshire
1529:Video of the Dead Man's Planting
1272:Sou' West Journal. No. 37. P. 6.
1250:Beith : Pilot Press. p. 35.
1086:. Beith : Cleland Crosbie.
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1549:YouTube video of Giffen Station
883:grass in the park freshly cut.
688:The back of a more recent kiln.
308:miles (2.5 kilometres) east of
1539:Video of the Vale Grove Garden
1283:The Story of Beith's Newspaper
1149:The Story of Beith's Newspaper
837:Crawford Brothers thread mills
584:Bellcraig and Crawford Terrace
1:
1534:Video of the Vale View Garden
1379:Allan, Shiela et al. (2003).
320:. Locally it is known as the
1554:YouTube video of Giffen Mill
1509:YouTube video of Nettlehirst
847:Special Area of Conservation
727:Brackenhills railway station
486:Barrmill's Millennium Garden
21:Human settlement in Scotland
1037:Barony and Castle of Giffen
925:The Conservation Volunteers
758:, munitions store, for the
756:Royal Naval Armaments Depot
450:The Station Inn in Barrmill
340:The old thread mill offices
2082:
2061:Villages in North Ayrshire
1566:Barrmill Community Website
1332:Recollections of Tom Boyd.
1319:February 18, 2012, at the
1057:Greenhills, North Ayrshire
988:The site of the Black Loch
970:to set the scholars free.
360:The 1912 OS map marks the
2051:History of North Ayrshire
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1427:Jamieson, Sheila (1997).
1268:Gibson, Fergus (2005-6).
855:Scottish Natural Heritage
474:Barrmill's Community Hall
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1998:North Ayrshire and Arran
1464:Reid, Donald L. (2010).
1443:Reid, Donald L. (2010).
1281:Reid, Donald L. (2000).
1246:Porterfield, S. (1925).
1147:Reid, Donald L. (2000).
1082:Reid, Donald L. (2009).
394:Barrmill railway station
373:Barrmill Railway station
214:Scottish Parliament
204:North Ayrshire and Arran
1192:Stansfield, G. (1999).
1406:July 20, 2011, at the
1358:Close, Robert (1992),
1337:July 15, 2009, at the
1047:Giffen railway station
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929:North Ayrshire Council
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808:Drumbuie Farm steading
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576:Bellcraig and Braefoot
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290:is a small village in
1564:Barrmillvillage.co.uk
1171:Butt, R.V.J. (1995).
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2004:Scottish Parliament
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887:Polish communities.
132:Sovereign state
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142:Dialling code
108:Ayrshire and Arran
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2013:Cunninghame South
2008:Cunninghame North
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1817:Meikle Auchengree
1787:Hessilhead hamlet
1474:978-0-9566343-1-3
1453:978-0-9566343-1-3
294:, Scotland about
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82:Council area
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861:Matthew Anderson
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18:
1950:Whiting Bay
1822:Portencross
1777:Glengarnock
1772:Girdle Toll
1692:Auchentiber
1673:and hamlets
1429:Our Village
994:Nettlehirst
635:Cholera pit
273: /
2040:Categories
1842:Torranyard
1837:Springside
1832:Skelmorlie
1782:Greenhills
1727:Castlepark
1717:Broomlands
1655:Stevenston
1640:Kilwinning
1234:. Page 43.
1068:References
760:Royal Navy
603:Broadstone
258:55°43′44″N
2025:See also
1915:Lochranza
1860:Birchburn
1807:Lylestone
1792:Highfield
1762:Fullarton
1752:Drybridge
1742:Drakemyre
1737:Dalgarven
1722:Burnhouse
1669:Villages,
1650:Saltcoats
1635:Kilbirnie
1615:Ardrossan
1224:Old Beith
1062:Burnhouse
314:Burnhouse
261:4°36′04″W
180:Ambulance
1970:Millport
1940:Sliddery
1935:Shiskine
1925:Pirnmill
1895:Kildonan
1797:Lawthorn
1767:Gateside
1747:Dreghorn
1702:Barrmill
1680:Mainland
1476:. p. 20.
1455:. p. 44.
1404:Archived
1391:. p. 22.
1370:. P. 97.
1335:Archived
1317:Archived
1303:DM Beith
1204:. P. 10.
1138:. P. 57.
1094:. P. 49.
1010:See also
783:Drumbuie
770:Drumbuie
734:DM Beith
362:quoiting
288:Barrmill
245:Scotland
185:Scottish
173:Scottish
161:Scotland
124:Scotland
63:Barrmill
27:Barrmill
1962:Cumbrae
1920:Machrie
1910:Lamlash
1900:Kilmory
1880:Cladach
1875:Catacol
1870:Brodick
1827:Seamill
1802:Longbar
1757:Fairlie
1707:Benslie
1671:suburbs
857:(SNH).
631:cholera
328:History
303:⁄
118:Country
1930:Sannox
1890:Dippen
1885:Corrie
1812:Meigle
1697:Barkip
1687:Ardeer
1630:Irvine
1472:
1451:
1387:
1366:
1293:p. 77.
1289:
1230:
1200:
1179:
1159:p. 54.
1155:
1134:
1090:
659:Dockra
318:Lugton
156:Police
1960:Great
1852:Arran
1645:Largs
1625:Dalry
1620:Beith
1608:Towns
642:Beith
310:Beith
146:01505
1905:Lagg
1470:ISBN
1449:ISBN
1385:ISBN
1364:ISBN
1287:ISBN
1228:ISBN
1198:ISBN
1177:ISBN
1153:ISBN
1132:ISBN
1088:ISBN
322:Barr
316:and
168:Fire
2042::
1468:.
1447:.
1436:^
1239:^
1164:^
1119:^
1075:^
927:,
324:.
240:UK
1593:e
1586:t
1579:v
1183:.
305:2
301:1
298:+
296:1
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