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Rathen railway station

1865 establishments in Scotland1965 disestablishments in ScotlandAberdeenshire railway station stubsBeeching closures in ScotlandBuildings and structures in Buchan
Disused railway stations in AberdeenshireFormer Great North of Scotland Railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1965Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1865Use British English from October 2017
Disused railway geograph.org.uk 360768
Disused railway geograph.org.uk 360768

Rathen railway station was a railway station in Rathen, Aberdeenshire, on the defunct Formartine and Buchan Railway in northeast Scotland.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Rathen railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Rathen railway station
Formatine and Buchan Way,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Rathen railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 57.6517 ° E -1.9748 °
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Address

Formatine and Buchan Way

Formatine and Buchan Way
AB43 8RD
Scotland, United Kingdom
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Disused railway geograph.org.uk 360768
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Nearby Places

Inverallochy and Cairnbulg
Inverallochy and Cairnbulg

The villages of Inverallochy (Scottish Gaelic: Inbhir Aileachaidh) and Cairnbulg (from the Gaelic càrn builg meaning 'gap cairn') lie some 4 miles (6.4 km) east of Fraserburgh, in North East Scotland. It formerly consisted of the three fishing villages of Brandesburgh, Cairnbulg and Inverallochy, but the former village has since disappeared. Cairnbulg Castle, one of the nine castles of the Knuckle, originally dated to the 13th century and parts of the current construction are believed to date to an earlier period but whereas the land of Inverallochy was granted by Earl Alexander to Jordan Comyn in 1277, there is no indication that the now-ruined Inverallochy Castle was built at such an early date. Cairnbulg Castle was a stronghold of the Comyns, but was given by Robert the Bruce to the Earls of Ross in 1316 following the Harrying of Buchan, then passed to the Frasers from 1375 until 1666. The current construction is a late 19th-century re-build following a century of abandonment and dereliction. Well-established fishing communities were in place in the area by the early 16th century, but after an epidemic of cholera in the 1860s wiped out the "collections of huts next to which fishing boats were dragged out of reach of the tide", planned fishing settlements were recreated at Inverallochy and the twinned village Cairnbulg. As a result of this planning, within 20 years over 200 boats were based here, although in recent years this has dwindled to almost zero as larger, commercial operations became focused on the nearby ports of Fraserburgh and Peterhead. Cairnbulg railway station was opened on 1 July 1903. It was originally named Inverallochy, but was renamed on 1 September, two months after it opened. The station closed in 1965. Philorth Bridge Halt was located near the Water of Philorth at the entrance to Cairnbulg Castle. Owing to the close proximity of the villages to one another, the name Invercairn has in recent years become used on a local basis to represent both, such as in Invercairn Gala and Invercairn Utd FC.