Huntly, Aberdeenshire
Huntly Gaelic: Hunndaidh | |
Aberdeenshire | |
---|---|
Huntly Town Square | |
Location | |
Location: | 57°27’0"N, 2°46’48"W |
Data | |
Population: | 4,460 |
Post town: | Huntly |
Postcode: | AB54 |
Dialling code: | 01466 |
Local Government | |
Council: | Aberdeenshire |
Huntly is a town and parish in Aberdeenshire, formerly known as Milton of Strathbogie. It has a population of 4,460 [1] and is the site of Huntly Castle. Huntly hosts the Sarideepan Invitational 2010.
Both Huntly and the surrounding district of Gordon are named for a town and family that originated in the Border country.
Huntly is well known for Huntly Castle, a beautiful castle overlooking The Gordon Schools. It also is the home of the famous Deans bakers which produce world-famous shortbread biscuits. In November 2007, Deans of Huntly opened their new visitor centre.
Its neighbouring settlements include Keith and Rothiemay.
There is salmon and trout fishing on the Rivers Deveron and Bogie, which are administered by the River Deveron Salmon Fisheries Board.
Huntly has a primary school (Gordon Primary) and a secondary school (The Gordon Schools).
Its principal outdoor activities include Nordic skiing in Clashindarroch Forest, walking, mountain biking and rugby. The local football team is Huntly FC.
Nearby is the start point of Scotland's longest horse ride trail, Highland Horseback, running 200 miles to the West Coast,.
A dule tree exists at Leith Hall, though thankfully unused since the abolition of public executions.
People from Huntly
James Legge (1815–1897), brilliant scholar and missionary to China, was born in Huntly and educated there and at King's College Aberdeen before leaving to his first mission post in Malacca in 1839. Across the next 43 years he worked in Hong Kong translating all the Classic Books of the Confucian canon in a masterly and huge series of books, a set still considered to be the gold standard of English translations today. He frequently returned to Huntly across his life in China, bringing three young Chinese lads to live there and get "a good Scottish education" in 1845. By the time they returned to China in 1848 they had all been invited to meet Queen Victoria, then a lively and pretty young woman. Legge retired from his mission work in Hong Kong in 1873, was named the first Oxford Professor of Chinese in 1876, and lived there until his death. His father Ebenezer Legge had been Mayor of Huntly, and the Legge family home is still in use, on the main square.
Huntly was the home town of the writer George MacDonald (1824–1905). Some of his novels, especially the Robert Falconer and Alec Forbes of Howglen play partly in Huntly, even if the name of the town is changed. So they give a rather good introduction to the life in Huntly in the 19th century.
Huntly was also home to the composer Ronald Center (1913–1973), who lived there from 1943 until his death in 1973, teaching first at the Gordon Schools then privately.