Online Encyclopedia

INNERLEITHEN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 577 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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INNERLEITHEN  , a

police burgh and
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health resort of
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Peebles-
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shire, Scotland, on Leithen
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Water, near its junction with the
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Tweed, m . S.E. of Peebles by the North
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British railway . Pop . (Igor) 2181 . In olden times it seems to have been known as Hornehuntersland, and to have been mentioned as early as 1159, when a son of Malcolm IV . (the Maiden) was drowned in 6
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pool of the Tweed, close to Leithenfoot . Its chief industry is the manufacture of tweeds and
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fine yarns, which, together with the fame of its medicinal springs, brought the burgh into prominence towards the end of the 18th century . The
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spa, alleged to be the St Ronan's well of Scott's novel of that name, has a
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pump-
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room,
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baths, &c . The saline waters are useful in minor cases of dyspepsia and liver complaints . The
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town is flanked on the W. by the hill fort of Caerlee (400 ft. long) and on the E. by that of the Pirn (350 ft. long) . Farther E., close to the
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village of Walkerburn, are Purvis Hill terraces, a remarkable series of earthen banks, from 5o ft. to more than 10o ft. wide, and with a length varying up to 900 ft., the origin and purpose of which are unknown . Traquair House, or Palace, on the right
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bank of the Tweed, is believed to be the
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oldest inhabited house in Scotland, the most ancient portion dating from the loth century, and including a remnant of the castle .

It was largely added to by

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Sir John Stewart, first
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earl of Traquair (d . 1659) and is a good example of the Scottish Baronial mansion with high-pitched roof and turreted angles . To the west of the house was the arbour which formed the "
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bush aboon Traquair " of the songs by Robert Crawford (d . 1733) and John Campbell Shairp, its site being indicated by a few birch trees . James Nicol (1769-1819), the poet. was minister of Traquair, and his son James Nicol (1810-1879), the geologist and professor of natural
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history in Aberdeen University, was born in the manse .

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GEORGE INNESS (1825-1894)

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