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Lee Castle, South Lanarkshire

Castles in South LanarkshireCategory B listed buildings in South LanarkshireHouses completed in 1845Inventory of Gardens and Designed LandscapesJames Gillespie Graham buildings
JP Neale 1830 Lee Place
JP Neale 1830 Lee Place

Lee Castle, also known as The Lee, is a castellated mansion in Auchenglen, a branch of the Clyde Valley in South Lanarkshire, Scotland. It is located 1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi) south of Braidwood, and 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) north-west of Lanark. Lee was the seat of the Lockharts of Lee from its establishment in the 13th century until 1919, though the present house is the result of rebuilding in the 19th century. The house is protected as a category B listed building, and the grounds are included in the Inventory of Gardens and Designed Landscapes in Scotland, the national listing of significant gardens.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Lee Castle, South Lanarkshire (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Lee Castle, South Lanarkshire
A73,

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Wikipedia: Lee Castle, South LanarkshireContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 55.6984 ° E -3.8247 °
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Lee Castle

A73
ML11 9JA
Scotland, United Kingdom
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JP Neale 1830 Lee Place
JP Neale 1830 Lee Place
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A73 road
A73 road

The A73 is a former trunk route in Scotland, that connects the M74 at Abington, Jct. 13 to the M80 motorway at Cumbernauld. Running for approximately 37 miles (60 km), it passes through the towns of Lanark, Carluke, Newmains, Chapelhall and Airdrie. Formerly a main route connecting the north of Scotland to England it has less importance these days, and is now merely a local feeder to the two motorways with which it connects. The sections between Abington & Carluke and Cumbernauld & Newhouse were the first sections to be downgraded from a trunk route to a secondary route, following the construction of the shorter M73 further west, which connected the M74 at Jct. 4. This motorway removed the need for vehicles from the north to use the A73 to reach England. Following this downgrading, the remaining section of A73 between Carluke and Newhouse remained a trunk route for vehicles travelling between Glasgow and Peebles. For this reason, two new sections of dual carriageway were built between Bellside & Newmains and Bogside & Law, as well as a new bypass for the town centre of Carluke, where the trunk route continues as the A721. Eventually though, the M74 was completed and it became easier for vehicles travelling from Peebles to Glasgow, to use the A702 trunk route instead, which also joins the M74 at Abington. For this reason, the entire length of the A73 was downgraded to a secondary route, although it is still heavily trafficked, especially between Lanark and the M8 at Newhouse.