Dunure Explained

Static Image Name:File:Ayrshire Dunure Aerial.jpg
Static Image Caption:Aerial view of Dunure and nearby Fisherton
Static Image Width:280px
Country:Scotland
Type:Village
Official Name:Dunure
Scots Name:Dunure
Gaelic Name:Dùn Iùbhair
Population Ref:
Map Type:Scotland
Unitary Scotland:South Ayrshire
Lieutenancy Scotland:Ayrshire and Arran
Constituency Westminster:Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock
Constituency Scottish Parliament:Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley
Post Town:Ayr
Postcode District:KA7
Postcode Area:KA
Coordinates:55.4°N -4.75°W
Os Grid Reference:NS250158

Dunure (Scottish Gaelic: Dùn Iùbhair, meaning Yew Hill) is a small village in the South Ayrshire area of Scotland about 5miles from Ayr, Scotland. It is located on the coast of the Firth of Clyde, and is near to Maybole, south of Ayr.

The village is most notable for its ruined medieval castle in a clifftop setting, its small former fishing harbour nearby, and (on the opposite side of the castle from the harbour) a small plant maze known as the Dunure Labyrinth.

Village

The first buildings in the lower Dunure village were erected in the early nineteenth century, not long after improvements to the local harbour in 1811. Kennedy Hall dates from 1881 and Dunure House from around 1800. Limekilns are a common feature of small harbours and Dunure has a fine specimen at the village play park.[1]

Fisherton Church was erected in 1938 as a chapel of ease for Dunure and district. It was rebuilt and extended in 1912. Dunduff Castle stands above Fisherton; originally a 15th-century structure, it was altered and extended in the 1980s for use as a private house. The remains of a prehistoric earthwork, the Dane's Hill, are in a nearby field. The ruins of the pre-reformation Kirkbride church and cemetery are nearby, abandoned since the parish was combined with that of Maybole.[2]

Harbour

The harbour is a roughly square basin with a breakwater quay, topped off by a locally characteristic cylindrical stone harbour light. The Earl of Cassillis improved the harbour at a cost of £50,000 in 1811, making the location more attractive for fishing. The depth of the water in the harbour is 12abbr=offNaNabbr=off at ordinary spring tides, but could be artificially increased to almost 300NaN0.[3] William Aiton records in 1808 that the sole costs of the improvements to Dunure harbour were borne by Thomas Kennedy of Dunure Esq.[4]

Transport

There was previously a Dunure railway station in the village on the Maidens and Dunure Railway: the station closed in the 1930s.

Operated by Stagecoach West Scotland, the 361 bus service to Ayr & Straiton starts/terminates here.

Items of local interest

The substantial ruins of the infamous Dunure Castle are in the village. Dunduff Castle above Fisherton primary school has been rebuilt and is now a private home; the old parish cemetery and pre-reformation church ruins lie near Dunduff Farm.

John Keppie, a colleague of the renowned Glasgow artist, architect and type designer Charles Rennie Mackintosh, rented the house of Mainslea and a small cottage in its back garden opposite Dunure Castle for what was known as “The Roaring Camp”, a holiday home popular with young women friends of theirs from the Glasgow School of Art. It was from this base that Mackintosh set out on a sketching expedition to the abbey of Crossraguel, Baltersan and Maybole in 1895.[5]

The mounted skeleton of the famous Clydesdale horse 'Baron of Buchlyvie' is a popular attraction for the Kelvingrove Museum and Art Galleries in Glasgow. The Baron finished his days at Dunure Mains Farm and was originally buried there.[6]

A labyrinth has been constructed in a hollow on the headland overlooked by the castle in May 2008 led by local community councillor Andy Guthrie. It is looked after by volunteers from the village and pagan groups from around Scotland and is open all year.

The famous Electric Brae is located on the main road (where national speed limit of 60mph applies) near the village: its nickname comes from the optical illusion that it is going slightly uphill instead of down

External links

Notes and References

  1. Love, Dane (2003). Ayrshire : Discovering a County. Ayr : Fort Publishing. . p. 298.
  2. Love, Dane (2003). Ayrshire : Discovering a County. Ayr : Fort Publishing. . p. 297 - 298.
  3. Harvey, William. Picturesque Ayrshire. Dundee : Valentine and Sons. p. 30.
  4. Aiton, William (1811). General View of The Agriculture of the County of Ayr; observations on the means of its improvement; drawn up for the consideration of the Board of Agriculture, and Internal Improvements, with Beautiful Engravings. Glasgow. Page 55.
  5. Brown, James (2007). Cherchez l’’origine! How Ayrshire inspired Scotland’s greatest architect/designer and how Ayrshire can now benefit.
  6. Love, Dane (2003). Ayrshire : Discovering a County. Ayr : Fort Publishing. . pp. 299-300.