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Ballencrieff, East Lothian
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| country | Scotland |
| official_name | Ballencrieff |
| gaelic_name | Baile na Craoibhe |
| static_image_name | Ballencreiff - geograph.org.uk - 29430.jpg |
| static_image_caption | Houses adjacent to the B1377 at Ballencrieff |
| coordinates | |
| pushpin_map | Scotland East Lothian |
| os_grid_reference | NT483781 |
| unitary_scotland | East Lothian Council |
| lieutenancy_scotland | East Lothian |
| constituency_westminster | Lothian East |
| constituency_scottish_parliament | East Lothian |
| post_town | LONGNIDDRY |
| postcode_district | EH32 |
| postcode_area | EH |
| dial_code | 01875 |
Ballencrieff is a rural community in East Lothian, Scotland. It lies between the towns of Aberlady, Drem, Haddington and Longniddry and is approximately 20 miles north-east of Edinburgh.
The name comes from the Gaelic Baile na Craoibhe, meaning "stead of the tree". There is a prehistoric enclosure at Ballencrieff Mains which is a Scheduled Ancient Monument.
Ballencrief is just west of a roundabout where the A6137 road (Haddington to Aberlady) is crossed by the B1377 (Longniddry to Drem). The village comprises typical rural housing, and there was some industry in the past. Nearby Ballencrieff Castle was built in 1507; this was the seat of the Murray family, the Lords Elibank, and James Murray (governor of Quebec) was born here in 1721. There is a 16th-century granary near the castle.
There was a brickworks in Ballencrieff which was shown on a 1799 map, and in 1837 a George Reid was recorded as a brick and tile maker. In 1838 the Marquess of Tweeddale tested a tile making machine at this site. It was still recorded on a map in 1853, and in 1867 William Brodie was recorded as a brick and tile manufacturer. It was last recorded in 1915 when the Edinburgh Evening News reported that the farmer G. Sinclair, who had been farming the land, bought the site from Lord Elibank.
The North British Railway, opened in 1846, passes close to Ballencrieff, and there was a short-lived station here from June 1846 to November 1847. The line is still in use as part of the East Coast Main Line.
References
References
- Watson, William J.. (1926). "The History of the Celtic Place-Names of Scotland". William Blackwood and Sons.
- "Ballencrieff Mains,enclosure 300m south west of". AncientMonuments.uk.
- "Ballencrieff Rare Pedigree Pigs". Farming UK.
- "Ballencrieff Castle : Historic Aberlady Building".
- "Ballencrieff East Lothian". The Editors of The Gazetteer for Scotland.
- "Ballencrieff Granary". East Lothian Council.
- "Aberlady or Ballencrieff Brick Works, Aberlady, Haddingtonshire, East Lothian". Scotland's Brick Manufacturing Industry.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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