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Garve railway station

Former Highland Railway stationsHighland railway station stubsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain opened in 1870Railway stations in Highland (council area)
Railway stations served by ScotRailUse British English from January 2017
158701 158704 Garve
158701 158704 Garve

Garve railway station is a railway station on the Kyle of Lochalsh Line, serving the village of Garve in the north of Scotland. Garve is located at the eastern edge of Loch Garve, measured 11 miles 65 chains (19.0 km) from Dingwall, and is the first stop on the line before Lochluichart. ScotRail, who manage the station, operate all services.

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

Garve railway station
Station Road,

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Wikipedia: Garve railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 57.613 ° E -4.6883 °
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Address

Garve

Station Road
IV23 2QF
Scotland, United Kingdom
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linkWikiData (Q3260754)
linkOpenStreetMap (26485630)

158701 158704 Garve
158701 158704 Garve
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Nearby Places

Contin
Contin

Contin (Gaelic: Cunndainn) is a Ross-shire village, and a civil parish and community council area between Strathpeffer and Garve in the Highland council area of Scotland. The parish has a population of 675.The church in Contin is dedicated to St Maelrubha or Máel Ruba and is on Contin Island which lies in the Black Water (Conon) and is reached from the rest of the village by two bridges, one foot and the other road. The present building dates back to the 18th century but there has probably been a church on this site since the 7th or 8th century. According to a booklet "Parish of Contin 690 to 1990", based on research by Rev. A.C. Maclean FSA, JP Minister from 1906 to 1937, published by the Church of Contin "Between 1485 and 1487 the Macdonalds and some of their allies (about 1,000 men) meeting at Contin, at the appropriately named (Scottish Gaelic: Blar' na'n Ceann) or the field of heads on their way to a punitive raid against the Mackenzies of Kinellan, discovered the church was filled with the aged men, women and children trusting to its sanctuary. Alexander Macdonald ordered the door to be shut and the building to be surrounded so that none could escape. He gave orders to set the church on fire, and everyone within - several hundreds - were burnt to death. Vengeance from the Mackenzies and Macreas was swift. After the battle at Pairc, one or two hundred out of 1,800 to 2,000 Macdonalds and their followers, who had eventually gathered at Contin, were left to escape as they might."