Kincardine O'Neil

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Kincardine O'Neil
Gaelic: Cinn Chàrdainn
Aberdeenshire
Old Toll house, Kincardine O'Neil.jpg
The Old Toll House at Kincardine O'Neil
Location
Grid reference: NO592997
Location: 57°5’13"N, 2°40’26"W
Data
Population: 500  (2004 est.)
Post town: Aboyne
Postcode: AB34
Dialling code: 013398
Local Government
Council: Aberdeenshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
W. Aberdeenshire & Kincardine

Kincardine O'Neil is one of the oldest villages in Deeside, in Aberdeenshire. It is to be found in the south of the county between Aboyne and Banchory (the latter in neighbouring Kincardineshire, a county named for a different Kincardine).

Kincardine O'Neil is known locally as 'Kinker', and was formerly known as Eaglais Iarach in Gaelic.

It was designated as a conservation area in 1978. It will be connected to the Deeside Way, once the route is completed.

Area history

Since ancient times there was a crossing of the Dee River at Kincardine O'Neil.[1] Locations of the Dee crossings along with alignment of ancient trackways formed a major impetus for location of early castles and settlements. In the vicinity of Kincardine O'Neil the Middle Ages trackways to the south had a particular influence on development in and around Kincardine O'Neil and Aboyne Castle.[2]

In the 19th century, the Deeside Railway bypassed the village, impeding the expansion of the settlement, unlike towns nearby. By 1895 the population of Kincardine O'Neil exceeded 200.[3] Most of the extant buildings were built in the 19th century.

In and about the village

The area is beautified by the River Dee. Standing in the village itself are a village store and an antiques shop. In early 2012 the Brewmeister Micro Brewery opened on the Kincardine estate.[4]

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Kincardine O'Neil)

References

  1. Kincardine O'Neil historical profile
  2. Hogan, 2007
  3. Mackintosh, 1895
  4. Brewmeister Micro Brewery
  • C Michael Hogan, Elsick Mounth, Megalithic Portal, ed A. Burnham [1]
  • John Mackintosh, History of the Valley of the Dee, from the Earliest Times to the Present Day, 1895, Taylor and Henderson, 240 pages
  • Kincardine O'Neil historical profile