Volume contents
- 1 - St Andrews Lhanbryd , page 1 (start)
- 10 - St Andrews Lhanbryd , page 10
- 20 - St Andrews Lhanbryd , page 20
- 30 - St Andrews Lhanbryd , page 30
- 40 - St Andrews Lhanbryd , page 40
- 50 - St Andrews Lhanbryd , page 50
- 60 - St Andrews Lhanbryd , page 60
- 70 - St Andrews Lhanbryd , page 70
- 80 - St Andrews Lhanbryd , page 80
- 81 - St Andrews Lhanbryd , page 81 (end)
- 82 - St Andrews Lhanbryd , title page
- 83 - St Andrews Lhanbryd , index
- 85 - St Andrews Lhanbryd , loose notes appended
| List of names as written | Various modes of spelling | Authorities for spelling | Situation | Description remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RIVER LOSSIE | River Lossie River Lossie River Lossie River Lossie |
Mr Skinner, Town Clerk Mr Watson, Publisher Burgh Plan 1858 New Statistical Account |
007; 008 | The Lossie is the only Stream of any magnitude in the parish. It either skirts or winds through it a rather Sluggish course of about 5 miles part of which it forms the Western boundary of this parish and falls in to the Moray Firth at the Port of Lossiemouth |
| HIGHLAND RAILWAY | Highland Railway Highland Railway Highland Railway |
Company's Tickets etc etc Mr Skinner Town Clerk, Elgin Mr Watson, Publisher |
007; 008; 013 | The Inverness and Perth Junction Railway Company was incorporated in 1861, for promoting a line of Railway from Forres by way of Grantown to Perth. The works were completed and the line opened throughout in 1863. This company afterwards amalgamated with the Inverness and Aberdeen Junction; the Inverness and Nairn and the Ross-shire Companies under the designation of the Highland Railway Company, and the entire system (with the exception the Morayshire and Findhorn Lines) from Keith to Inverness and Bonar Bridge and from Forres to Perth, is now known as the Highland Railway. |
Continued entries/extra info
[page] 10
County of Elgin -- Parish of St Andrews Lhanbryd
Ordnance Survey - Moray county, OS Name Books - Moray county - Volume 21 - Parish of St Andrews Lhanbryd, OS1/12/21
This volume contains place name information from the parish of St Andrews Lhanbryd.
Ordnance Survey - Moray county
Ordnance Survey was established in the 18th century to create maps, surveys and associated records for the entirety of Great Britain. These records are arranged by county. This entry has been created to enable searching for Ordnance Survey records for the county of Moray, which is in the north east of Scotland. The boundaries of the county were altered by the Boundary Commissioners in 1891.