Whitehill Loch Explained

Whitehill Loch (NS 49240 33240), previously known as Hillhouse Loch was a freshwater loch in the East Ayrshire Council Area, now drained, near Galston, in the Parish of Riccarton, lying in a glacial Kettle Hole.

Whitehill Loch
Pushpin Map:Scotland East Ayrshire
Coords:55.5706°N -4.3879°W
Type:Freshwater loch
Inflow:Rainfall and runoff
Outflow:Lochhouse Burn
Location:East Ayrshire, Scotland
Basin Countries:Scotland
Cities:Galston

The loch

Whitehill Loch was one of several small lochs within the Parish of Galston, lying within a detached portion of the Parish of Riccarton, Ayrshire.

Cartographic evidence

Blaeu's Atlas of Scotland, 1654 shows a 'Hilhos Loch' lying between Hilhous (Hillhouse) and Whythil (Whitehill) in the baillary of Kyle, with a single outflow running into the Little Sorn Burn near Little Sorn. The estate policies of Cessnock and Carnell are shown to the west of the roughly circular loch.[1] In 1857 the dwelling at Lochhouse is shown with a major ditch running down from the site of the loch and the stump of the original outflow and confluence with the Little Sorn Burn.[2] The 1895 6" OS map shows a Lochhouse, abandoned by 1910 and now demolished, on the course of a major drain running down from the site of the loch down towards the Little Sorn Burn. A track ran up to Hillhouse Farm from the dwelling at Lochhouse.[3] The satellite image of ploughed fields shows anaerobic soil markings typical of loch beds, etc.

The loch shore formed part of the boundary of the Parish of Riccarton.[4] The 1971 OS map indicates the remnants of the loch as an enclosed marshy area, probably that retained for curling, drained through ditches leading down to the Little Sorn Burn.[5]

Uses

Curling is recorded on Whitehill Loch, namely Loudoun v Tarbolton, on 25 February 1830.[6] Craigmill Mill was located further down the Cessnock Water but does not appear to have been powered by the loch's waters.

Micro-history

The loch was drained for agriculture well before the nearby lochs of Bruntwood and Brown, last being recorded clearly circa 1654. The loch was drained through a culvert that was later converted to a pipe.

See also

References

Notes
Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://maps.nls.uk/atlas/blaeu/view/?id=85 Blaeu's Map
  2. http://maps.nls.uk/os/6inch/view/?sid=74425810 OS Map
  3. http://maps.nls.uk/os/6inch-2nd-and-later/view/?sid=75494537 OS Map
  4. http://maps.nls.uk/os/view/?sid=74400778 OS Parish Boundary map
  5. http://www.old-maps.co.uk/maps.html 1971 OS Map
  6. https://www.google.com/fusiontables/DataSource?snapid=80306 Scottish Curling Places