Maud, Aberdeenshire Explained

Official Name:Maud
Gaelic Name:Am Mòd
Country:Scotland
Population Ref:
Static Image Name:Village centre, Maud - geograph.org.uk - 833494.jpg
Static Image Caption:Maud village centre
Coordinates:57.5221°N -2.1269°W
Os Grid Reference:NJ925479
Unitary Scotland:Aberdeenshire
Lieutenancy Scotland:Aberdeenshire
Post Town:PETERHEAD
Postcode Area:AB
Postcode District:AB42
Constituency Westminster:Gordon and Buchan
Constituency Scottish Parliament:Aberdeenshire East

Maud (Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic: Am Mòd) is a village in the Buchan area of the Scottish county of Aberdeenshire, with a population of 780 (2006 estimate).[1] Located west of Peterhead on the South Ugie Water,[2] Maud rose to prosperity after 1863 as a railway junction of the Formartine and Buchan Railway that ran through Maud to Fraserburgh and Peterhead, but has always been the meeting place of six roads. It has had a variety of names:

The village

Maud features an old railway station,[3] which closed to passengers in 1965. When the railway was active, Maud was where the railway line from Aberdeen split before heading to Fraserburgh and Peterhead. Walks can be taken along the old railway lines which now form part of the Formartine and Buchan Way; the railway tracks were removed following the ending of freight trains in 1979. There was a mart or livestock market until recently, selling local livestock. There is also a hospital for the elderly, which was formerly a poorhouse that opened in 1866, designed by Alexander Ellis.

A modern complex in the centre of the village houses a café, community centre, gym and other facilities; the old town hall, a few minutes walk from the new complex, is also still in regular use by community groups. The village also has a small parade of shops.

The hamlet of Kirkhill Pendicle to the south of Maud has a weather station which features prominently in Met Office weather maps for Aberdeenshire.

Prehistory and archaeology

The local area to the immediate south is rich with prehistory and historical features. There are found a number of prehistoric monuments including Catto Long Barrow,[4] Silver Cairn and numerous tumuli.

In 2001, archaeological work being undertaken in advance of the development of a pipeline discovered an Early Bronze Age cremation cemetery. The cemetery contained 41 pits, of which 29 contained cremated human bone, though representing 42 individuals, as multiple individuals were interned in several pits. Of those 29 burial pits, 11 of them had Collared or Cordoned Urns. The human remains were of adults and children and ranged in age from a fetus to 45+ years old. The cremations were radiocarbon dated to between 2040 to 1500 BC. A diverse range of artefacts were recovered in the graves, including a pair of Golden Eagle talons and a flint foliate knife. A large Mesolithic pit was also found in the cemetery and was dated to 4510–3970 BC. Also, several other pits from the later Neolithic and Early Bronze age were also found.[5]

History

Catto Long Barrow is the point d'appui of a historic battle between invading Danes and the Picts.[6]

In the era of the railway, the New Maud junction station was situated 298feet above sea level, with the vicinity rail line being noted for several embankments and shallow rock cuts.[7]

Maud's Gothic church was constructed in 1889.

Notable people

Bibliography

. Charles McKean. Banff & Buchan . 1990 . . 978-1-85158-231-0.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.gro-scotland.gov.uk/statistics/publications-and-data/settlements-and-localities/mid-2006-population-estimates-for-settlements-in-scotland/list-of-tables.html General Register Office for Scotland, 2006 population estimate
  2. http://www.museumsgalleriesscotland.org.uk/museums/by_name/m/maud_railway_station_museum.asp Maud Railway Station Museum
  3. C. Michael Hogan (2008) Catto Long Barrow fieldnotes, The Modern Antiquarian
  4. Web site: Vol 53 (2012): An early Bronze Age unenclosed cremation cemetery and Mesolithic pit at Skilmafilly, near Maud, Aberdeenshire Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports. 2021-08-23. journals.socantscot.org.
  5. Web site: Catto Long Barrow.
  6. Alexander Smith (1875) A new history of Aberdeenshire
  7. https://www.birlinn.co.uk/Jack-Webster/ Jack Webster's author page at Birlinn
  8. Web site: Jack Webster obituary . Scotsman newspaper . 16 April 2020.