Carnell originally belonged to the Wallace family, ancestors of the present owners, for whom the original 16th Century Towerhouse was built. It is the ideal venue for all types of private parties and conferences.
Omschrijving: Winterhard. Hoog : 1,5-2 m. in 10 jaar . Bloei : april / mei. 'Kilmarnock' heeft roodachtige takken en katjes met gele meeldraden . Treurvorm. Groeit langzaam, maar neemt in de hoogte nauwelijks toe. Ideaal voor kleine tuin. In de winter vormt de takkenkroon een opvallend element. ...
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
This 88 acre waterfront estate, dubbed "Southern Comfort", is located at 355 Ditchley Road in Kilmarnock, Virginia.
This 88 acre waterfront estate is located at 355 Ditchley Road in Kilmarnock, Virginia.
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
Kilmarnock is not just a summer home. It’s a home that’s been loved and lived in for decades through Himalayan summers, springs and winters a CAM practitioner & her family, descendants of the royal family of Kuthar
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
Galbraith - Ayr present this 5 bedroom detached house in High Williamshaw, Old Glasgow Road, Stewarton, Kilmarnock, East Ayrshire, KA3
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
Dean Castle takes its name from ‘The Dean’ or wooded valley – a common place name in Scotland. The original keep dates from around 1350 with the Palace being added around 110 years later. Built by the Boyd family, it has strong historical connections with many people and events in Scottish history – Robert the Bruce who gave the lands to the Boyds, James III whose sister married a Boyd, the Covenanters – some of whom were imprisoned there, Bonnie Prince Charlie – whose rebellion was joined by the 4th Earl of Kilmarnock and Robert Burns who was encouraged to publish his poems by the Earl of Glencairn who owned the castle at the time. (www.deancastle.com, 2008)
About Our Kilmarnock House Clearance Service Keke Waste Disposal are your local Kilmarnock house clearance specialists with over 20 years of expertise in clearing houses, homes, and clearances of properties and estates of all sizes. From full house clearances to the removal of single items, we offer you a fairly priced professional clearance service and
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
Weeping pussy willows can be very ornamental additions to your backyard. You can even grow them in a pot. Learn about potted weeping pussy willows here.
Old photograph of Caprington Castle near Kilmarnock, Ayrshire, Scotland. This Scottish castle was originally a Tower House in the early 15th Century built for Adam Cunningham. The present building was erected about 1820 by Sir William Cuninghame. The tower which forms the South West part of the building is said to be of 15th century date, with 17th, 18th and 19th century alterations. Caprington Castle remains the private residence of the Cunningham Family. All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission. View the most recent Tour Scotland photographs.
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OK, we got through reasons 1-3 to go to Irvington and Kilmarnock. the other day. (See the post here.) Just to recap, for the people in the back, all three reasons had to do with the Hope and Glory Inn. Now moving on...The rest of the reason all have to do with cool things to do and eat in Kilmarnock/ Irvington. BTW, I don't think I was very clear in the first post about the difference between Kilmarnock and Irvington. Just to be clear, they are both small towns on Virginia's Northern Neck. If you are coming from DC, and driving down Route 3, you get to Kilmarnock first. In Kilmarnock you take Route 200 south and then in about 5 minutes, you are in Irvington. So for this girl of the 'burbs, they are close enough together to count as one location, though they really are two separate cities. Irvington is the more upscale of the two. That's where the Hope and Glory Inn is located. Now back to our "regularly scheduled' vacation: REASONS TO GO TO KILMARNOCK VA 4. Windmill Point- This is the "beach" in town. But it is actually the Chesapeake Bay, not the ocean. You'd never know from the views: The hotels say that sections of the beach are "Private". The laws and the locals say the whole thing is public. I say "It is easier to get forgiveness, than permission," and went wherever I wanted. Amazingly, we had the whole beach all to ourselves. It was a fantastic place to watch the sunset. So we did just that. Enough said. 5. Thai Pot Restaurant Thai Pot is one of the most delicious Thai restaurants I have ever eaten at. Here is a Yelp! review if you don't believe me. It is located along Main Street in Kilmarnock. (36 N Main, to be exact). The owner is this cute, little, high energy Thai lady. She waits tables with the staff and walks the floor to make sure everyone is happy. We instantly became her favorite customers when she took our order and we said we wanted "medium heat." I guess the local palate prefers things a little less "colorful." I ordered the fried fish dish with tamarind sauce. I had to keep myself from licking the plate. I really did have to tell myself, "Self, you are in public. You cannot lick this plate just to make sure you ingest every last drop of this sauce." Fortunately for the other diners, I listened to myself this time. You really do want to eat there. It's beautifully decorated with original Thai art, like this golden finial in front of the kitchen. The kitchen is open to the dining room, so you can watch them make all your little goodies. I love that. 6. The Crown Donuts Truck We stumbled upon this one by accident. After a futile attempt to go shopping before the stores actually opened, we looked across the street and saw all these people lined up in front of a truck. Now I don't know about you, but if I'm on vacation and there is a line up to a brightly painted truck parked in a gas station, I'm going to go check it out. That's one of the delights of not having anything better to do. This particular truck was full of donuts. Well maybe not full of donuts, but they had this cool little machine that was cranking them out as fast as people could by them. So we bought some. A bucket full to be exact. For the kids....of course. 7. Christ Church This is a cool original brick Anglican church built in 1735. I am always amazed that anything can survive that long. Especially in Virginia's humidity and rain. Here is the website of the Christ Church Historical Society. They can tell you a lot more about it than I can, because the visitor center was closed when we got there. So we did what all intrepid travelers who have to leave so the babysitter doesn't abandon their kids. We parked in front and tried to peek in the windows. Sadly the windows were way too high. So we walked around the grounds and read the gravestones. There is a guy buried there that was a doctor in the Revolutionary War. And a few soldiers from the War of 1812. I don't know about you, but there is always this sense of "I wonder if all that really happened?" that gets shattered when you see something from that era that has made it across time until now. I never realized that I didn't "believe in" the War of 1812, until I saw the gravestones of people who had actually fought in it. Funny how things work. So while all of this "history really happened" stuff was super cool, I still really wanted to see the inside of that church. So I started looking for options. And then I found one. I did it. I totally looked through the keyhole, just to see what I could see. And my guy thought it was so funny, he took a picture to show the kids. I promise, I totally did not stage that photo. The best part was, I actually could see the inside of the church through the keyhole! And through the miracle of technology (and my guy's Blackberry camera,) so can you! Ahh the things a man will do for his woman's blog.... Everyone loves a nice pair of antique carved wood ten commandments, right? I suppose, someday I should go back and actually take the tour. If you all ever do, let me know what I missed, OK? 8. The Drive Along Route 3 I was so ready to be away from Northern Virginia and the DC Metro Area, that even the drive was total bliss. (Execpt for the two hours it took us to go 30 miles as we were leaving said metro area. Not so much bliss there. Thank goodness for the bumpin' mix CD my guy made for the trip!) You get to Tappahanak, which is a very cool name for a town, and then cross a bridge to the penisula that makes up the Northern Neck. The road that takes you all the way down to the tip is Route 3. It's a charming and calming drive. Little towns, no traffic, beaucolic farms everywhere. I kept wanting to stop and take pictures, but I only had one card with me and it could only hold 70 pics, so I held off. There were a million little places I wanted to stop and check out, but my guy was impatient to get to our destination after being stuck so long in traffic, so I just relaxed and enjoyed the view. It looks nothing like where I live, so it was perfect. Here is the coolest old broken down farmhouse. I made him stop on the way home to take pics. Totally worth stopping for, right? So I walked around the front to get in a little closer and quickly realized that I was not the first person to have this idea. So I didn't go any farther than the ominous "No Tresspassing" sign, but I couldn't resist taking this last shot. I plan on titling it "But Honey....Think of the Potential". So that's how I spent a very pleasant 29 hours. The only vacation I had this summer. And we made it back just before the babysitter had to abandon the children.
Helen Holland, 59, described years of 'sadistic' treatment at the Nazareth House home in Kilmarnock, Scotland
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
Old travel Blog photograph of shops, cars and houses on Kilmarnock Road in Giffnock located six miles from Paisley, Scotland. The first written mention of Giffnock came in 1530, when King James V presented Rockend, Ruken Mill and the surrounding lands to Hugh Montgomerie, 1st Earl of Eglinton. Montgomerie was created Earl of Eglinton between the 3 and 20 January 1506. He was one of those peers who after the Battle of Flodden on 9 September 1513, at which King James IV was slain, met at Perth, Perthshire, to arrange for the coronation of the infant prince, King James V, and was nominated one of the guardians of the prince. On 28 October 1515, he was made keeper of the isle of Little Cumbrae, for the preservation of the game, until the king came of age. On 2 February 1526 he was appointed justice general of the northern parts of Scotland. He was one of the lords who attended the council of the king at Stirling in June 1528, after the young king's escape from the Douglas Clan. In November of the same year, his house of Eglinton was burnt down by William Cunningham, 4th Earl of Glencairn, and the charters of his lands having been all destroyed, the king granted him a new charter dated 23 January 1528. Of interest to folks with ancestry, genealogy or Scottish Family Roots in Scotland who may wish to visit one day. All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission. View the most recent Tour Scotland photographs.
201 Chase St, Kilmarnock, VA 22482 $210,000 REALTOR COMMENTS In the heart of Kilmarnock, this Folk Victorian For Sale welcomes you with a front porch
Looking for self catering accommodation in Kilmarnock? Discover more details/information about Craufurdland Castle including facilities, what’s nearby & contact details today.
Galbraith - Ayr present this 5 bedroom detached house in High Williamshaw, Old Glasgow Road, Stewarton, Kilmarnock, East Ayrshire, KA3
Gracious tidewater living in the Northern Neck.