Maybole

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Maybole
Ayrshire

St Cuthbert's collegiate church
Location
Grid reference: NS300100
Location: 55°21’18"N, 4°40’55"W
Data
Population: 4,552  (2001)
Postcode: KA19
Local Government
Council: South Ayrshire

Maybole is a town and burgh of barony in Ayrshire, 9 miles south of the county town, Ayr and 50 miles southwest of Glasgow by rail.

This is an ancient place, having received a charter from Donnchadh, Earl of Carrick in 1193. In 1516 it was made a burgh of regality, but for generations it remained under the subjection of the Kennedy family, afterwards Earls of Cassillis and (later) Marquesses of Ailsa, the most powerful family in Ayrshire. The current Marquess of Ailsa lives at Cassillis House, just outside Maybole. The ancestral seat of the Marquesses of Ailsa is Culzean Castle, now run by The National Trust for Scotland and located just a few miles from Maybole. In former times, Maybole was the capital of the Ayrshire division of Carrick, and for long its characteristic feature was the family mansions of the Barons of Carrick. Maybole Castle, a former seat of the Earls of Cassillis, still remains. The public buildings include the town-hall, the Ashgrove and the Lumsden fresh-air fortnightly homes, and the Maybole combination poorhouse.

The town is served by Maybole railway station. The leading manufactures are of boots and shoes and agricultural implements. Two miles to the south-west are the ruins of Crossraguel (from Crois Riaghail meaning 'Cross of St Regulus' ) Abbey, founded about 1240.

The head of the old Maybole Cross, Maybole Castle

Kirkoswald, where Robert Burns spent his seventeenth year, learning land-surveying, lies a little farther west. In the parish churchyard lie the real people who inspired two of Burn's fictitious characters Douglas Graham (Tam o' Shanter) and John Davidson (Souter Johnnie). Four miles to the west of Maybole on the coast is Culzean Castle, the chief seat of the marquess of Ailsa, dating from 1777; it stands on a basaltic cliff, beneath which are the Coves of Culzean, once the retreat of outlaws and a resort of the fairies. Farther south are the ruins of Turnberry Castle, where Robert the Bruce is said to have been born. A few miles to the north of Culzean are the ruins of Dunure Castle, an ancient stronghold of the Kennedys.

Margaret McMurray who died in 1760, was reputedly the last or one of the last native speakers of the Galloway dialect of Gaelic. She is recorded to have lived at Cultezron (not to be confused with nearby Culzean), a farm on the outskirts of Maybole.

St Cuthberts in 1789

Sport

  • Football: Maybole FC, who play at Ladywell Stadium.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Maybole)

References