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Millerhill Marshalling Yard

Railway depots in ScotlandUse British English from December 2016
Twin track rail entry to the Millerhill Marshalling Yard geograph.org.uk 1144186
Twin track rail entry to the Millerhill Marshalling Yard geograph.org.uk 1144186

Millerhill Marshalling Yard is a traction maintenance depot located in Millerhill, Scotland. The depot is situated on the Edinburgh and Hawick Railway and was near Millerhill station until it closed. The depot code is MH.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Millerhill Marshalling Yard (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Millerhill Marshalling Yard
Whitehill Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Millerhill Marshalling YardContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 55.9237 ° E -3.0829 °
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Address

Cairney

Whitehill Road
EH21 8RZ , Stoneybank
Scotland, United Kingdom
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Twin track rail entry to the Millerhill Marshalling Yard geograph.org.uk 1144186
Twin track rail entry to the Millerhill Marshalling Yard geograph.org.uk 1144186
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Nearby Places

Newcraighall

Newcraighall (Scots: Newcraighauch, Scottish Gaelic: Talla na Creige Nuadh) is a South-Eastern suburb of Edinburgh, Scotland. A former mining village, its prosperity was based on the Midlothian coalfields. The Newcraighall pit was known as 'Klondyke' and closed in the 1960s, work transferring to nearby Bilston Glen and in particular the last-to-close (1998) Monktonhall pit. The village had a church, a Co-op and a miners' club (demolished after a fire on 15 July 2009) and bowling green. Newcraighall now plays host to an out-of-town shopping complex, Fort Kinnaird, previously known as ‘’Edinburgh Fort (south of Newcraighall Road) and Kinnaird Park (north). Today, the retail park is still commonly referred to as "The Fort" by residents. Newcraighall railway station is on the newly reopened Borders Railway which runs from Edinburgh to Tweedbank and was formerly part of the Waverley Route to Carlisle its closure (Closed 5 January 1969) following the Beeching Report in 1963. Newcraighall was the setting for the film My Childhood by Bill Douglas. There is a plaque to Douglas in the village. The village also contained a bridge that features in a scene from the film, however it was demolished in 2015. The village also contains a sculpture by Jake Harvey which celebrates the mining tradition of the area. On Newcraighall Road is the Craigmillar Arts Centre, with a Woman of Achievement plaque for Helen Crummy, who lived in Newcraighall for many years.