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Lang Syne Publishers
120 Carstairs St
Dalmarnock
Glasgow
Scotland

Ayrshire’s Brigadoon

Hugh Maxwell investigates the vanished village of Loudounkirk

It used to be one of the most picturesque scenes imaginable - down in a small, secluded hollow stood a row of thatched cottages against whose whitewashed walls fragrantly scented woodbine and roses spread with wondrous profusion; while, nearby, a sparkling burn disappeared under a rustic stone bridge before gurgling past the walls of an old kirkyard where the ruined chapel was surrounded by dark yew trees gently swaying in the warm, sweetly scented, summer breeze.

This was the delightful village of Loudounkirk, hidden in a sheltered corner of the Irvine Valley near Galston. The tiny hamlet riginally took its name from the nearby church that dates back to 1451 when Lady Alicia Campbell, the tenant of the local castle, granted the land to the monks of Kilwinning Abbey in memory of her late husband Sir John.

Loudounkirk became an idyllic spot with less than a hundred residents, most of them estate workers and their families living in a row of thatched cottages and paying an annual feu duty of three shillings and fourpence - plus two fat hens.

The men were employed as gardeners, foresters, gamekeepers, stable hands and farm labourers in the extensive grounds of Loudoun Castle while the women worked as maids and servants.

One visitor to the village in 1894 was so enamoured that he wrote, “The birds which sing so sweetly here just about sunset had now
sought their nests and nothing but the murmur of the brook that babbles past the walls of the graveyard or a slight stirring of the
branches of the trees by the evening breeze disturbed the solemn quiet. As we approached the ivy-mantled tower of the auld kirk, no moping owl startled us with its eerie screech, although a bat - or, as the children call it, a battie bird - went whisking by. It is indeed a lovely spot, retired from the hum and bustle of the town,inspiring one with a feeling of peace and seclusion.

Beneath the rugged elms and the shade of the yew trees, as well as the ash and the weeping willow, the green turf is lying, while beautiful roses fill the summer air with their fragrance.”

The condition of the cottages in many of these small villages was dependent not only upon the pride of the tenants who lived there
but also on the financial status of the landlord.

In the early part of the 19th century, Lord Moira invested a huge amount of money on the Loudoun estate, including £100,000 on the castle itself. The latter now became one of the most attractive in the country and was proudly known as the Windsor of Scotland.

During this period, the row of cottages, with their thatched roofs and clay flagstoned floors,were well maintained by the estate; and the tenants and their families also transformed the gardens into rich, colourful havens of flowers and shrubs.


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