place

Whithorn railway station

Disused railway stations in Dumfries and GallowayFormer Portpatrick and Wigtownshire Joint Railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1950Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1877
Scotland railway station stubsUse British English from March 2017Whithorn
Whithorn railway station (site), Dumfries & Galloway (geograph 6162903)
Whithorn railway station (site), Dumfries & Galloway (geograph 6162903)

Whithorn is the closed terminus of the Wigtownshire Railway branch, from Newton Stewart, of the Portpatrick and Wigtownshire Joint Railway. It served the town of Whithorn in Wigtownshire. The line was closed to passenger services in 1950, and to goods in 1964.

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

Whithorn railway station
Station Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Whithorn railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 54.7386 ° E -4.4156 °
placeShow on map

Address

Station Road

Station Road
DG8 8PG
Scotland, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Whithorn railway station (site), Dumfries & Galloway (geograph 6162903)
Whithorn railway station (site), Dumfries & Galloway (geograph 6162903)
Share experience

Nearby Places

Rispain Camp

Rispain Camp is the remains of a fortified farmstead 1 mile west of Whithorn, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. It is one of the major Iron Age archaeological sites in Scotland. The property is in the care of Historic Environment Scotland. Access is through a farm off the A746 South of Whithorn. The name Rispain may derive from a local equivalent of the Old Welsh word rhwospen meaning 'the chief of the cultivated country', a name certainly appropriate to as prestigious a farm as this. Today it consists of two broad earth banks separated by a ditch, originally almost six metres deep surrounding an enclosure of almost half a hectare. Its defences are so well preserved that until the mid-1970s archaeologists believed the site to be either a Roman fort or mediaeval farmstead. However excavations in the early 1980s provided evidence that it was inhabited between the 100 BC and 200 AD by local Celtic farmers. Radiocarbon dating has provided evidence that the site was definitely occupied around 60 BC.Excavation revealed traces of a timber gateway to the north east, which would probably have been connected to a timber stockade running along the top of the inner rampart. There was also evidence of large timber roundhouses inside the enclosure, one of which is thirteen and a half metres in diameter. In the ditch's south eastern corner excavation uncovered a square pit, possibly a cistern. Cattle, sheep and pigs were kept and hunting in the surrounding countryside provided venison. Barley and wheat may not just have been used as foodstuffs but also, in the case of barley, used in the brewing of alcohol.