Volume contents
- 1 - Crawford etc , Page 1 (start)
- 20 - Crawford etc , Page 20
- 28A - Crawford etc , loose item
- 40 - Crawford etc , Page 40
- 60 - Crawford etc , Page 60
- 73A - Crawford etc , loose map
- 80 - Crawford etc , Page 80
- 100 - Crawford etc , Page 100
- 120 - Crawford etc , Page 120
- 140 - Crawford etc , Page 140
- 160 - Crawford etc , Page 160
- 180 - Crawford etc , Page 180
- 200 - Crawford etc , Page 200
- 220 - Crawford etc , Page 220
- 240 - Crawford etc , Page 240
- 260 - Crawford etc , Page 260
- 280 - Crawford etc , Page 280
- 300 - Crawford etc , Page 300
- 316 - Crawford etc , Page 316 (end)
- 317 - Crawford etc , Title Page
- 318 - Crawford etc , Index
Continued entries/extra info
Roman Road continued:-
On entering the upper ward, it descends the left bank of the Potrail, the Daer, and the Clyde, which however may be as a continuation of the same river, till it arrives at the village of Crawford, where a portion of it is well known as Watling Street. Here it crosses the river by the Castle ford, and joins the other branch mentioned above." ("On the ancient camps of the Upper Ward of Lanarkshire, by George Vere Irving Esqr. F.A.S. Reprinted from the journal of the Archaeological Association).
"From this passage, the road continued its course, in a northerly direction, past a Roman Fort in a remarkable pass, above the Kirk at Durisdeer; from this post, it pushed through the hills by the defile, called the Wall Path; and it went down the west side of Powtrail Water to its confluence with the Daer. The road now continued its course, along the west side of the Daer, till its influx into the Clyde; and equally proceeded along the west side of the Clyde, past Elvanfoot, and Crawford Village; and then crossed the Clyde to Crawford Castle, where it joined the Annandale branch". (Chalmer's Caledonia (Vol. 1, P. 137)).
"Advancing from Tibbers Castle by the road to Clydesdale, we reach the vestiges of a quadrangular Camp, situated in a mountain pass at the distance of a mile beyond the village of Durisdeer. THis has evidently been a post of the Romans, established to protect their western line of communication, which at this place enters what must anciently have been a very wild and rugged district. Its vestiges are by no means very distinct, but the general form of the work can be tolerably well distinguished. From Durisdeer, to the village of Crawford, in Lanarkshire, near to which two Vice united, no traces of any Roman entrenchments have been discovered. Roy expected to find the remains of a camp somewhere aboutthe ruins of Crawford Castle, but was disappointed. It is, however exceedingly probable that the Romans were possessed of a military post near to this junction of the two roads.The name of the rivulet, Camps Water, which here falls into the infant Clyde may perhaps be thought to favour this opinion." (Caledonia Romana P. 236).
Ordnance Survey - Lanark county, OS Name Books - Lanark county - Volume 18 - Parish of Crawford and Moffat, OS1/21/18
This volume contains information on place names found in the parish of Crawford and Moffat.
Ordnance Survey - Lanark 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 Lanark, which is in the west of Scotland. The boundaries of the county were altered by the Boundary Commissioners in 1891.