Cronberry is a small hamlet situated north-east of Cumnock and one mile north-east of Lugar, in East Ayrshire, Scotland.

The village of Cronberry

History

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The Lugar Lochs viewed from Cronberry.
Etymology
The meaning of Cronberry is suggested by Johnston[1] as being from the Gaelic cronag, a 'a fort' and the Old English byrig, a 'burgh' or 'fortified place'.

Cronberry has a Women's Rural Institute which meets in the old school.[2]

Diane and Holly Fallon were murdered at Cronberry in 2009 by a former soldier, Thomas Smith, who was sentenced to serve a minimum of 32 years behind bars.[3]

The mining village

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The village, in the Parish of Auchinleck, had a public school and in the 1880s a population of 799.[4][5]

Cronberry (or Kronberry) appears on maps as far back as 1654. Its actual age, however, is thought to be much older. It probably, though as yet unconfirmed,[6] existed as part of the fief of Auchinleck (various spelling) well before 1400. The more recent Cronberry was built in the 1860s by the Eglinton Iron Company. Cronberry had seven miner rows set in lines and not streets or squares, the back of one line facing the front of another.[7] One row had a store, managed as a co-op and as a branch of the Lugar store.[7] Later, the store was semi-detached with the school, which when replaced by a new school building in 1931, became the village hall.[7] Mortonmuir Park lay across the road from Store Row, famous for being the ground where Cronberry Eglinton football team played.[7]

In 1913 the population was approximately 600, and not a single washing-house existed for the whole population. Only the Store Row, No. 7, had a coal house and was built of stone, unlike the others that were built of bricks.[8] The pathways in front of the houses were at that time all unpaved, and the winter condition resembled a quagmire. The village had a gravitation water supply, and there were two wells in every row. Rows 4 - 6 had roofs of tarred felt, the so-called 'Tarry Rows' demolished in the 1920s.[8]

The village was owned by William Baird & Co.[9] The older miners' rows were demolished and the occupants rehoused in Lugar. Riverside Terrace houses were more modern, dating from the 1920s[8] and were converted to form private housing.[5]

Industrial sites

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The remains of Cronberry Moor colliery, comprising the remains of a bing, lie to the north-west of Cronberry village at NGR NS 6031 2281.[10] Mortonmuir Colliery was begun in 1948 and opened in 1950 as one of the National Coal Board's short term drift mines; it closed after only four years as much of the coal was found to have been extracted previously.[8] Locals have stated that no coal at all was found.[8]

An ironstone mine existed at Cronberry in the 1880s,[11] as did a claypit and tileworks.

Covenanting

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The Cameron Stone on nearby Airds Moss commemorates the Reverend Richard Cameron and eight other Covenanter soldiers killed in the Battle of Airds Moss against a troop of dragoons in July 1680.[12] The memorial lies near Muirkirk and was restored in 2005.[13] The village never had its own church.[12]

Archaeology

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Excavations at Cronberry have revealed a medieval turf building and a nearby turf enclosure of unknown date. The turf structure was sub-rectangular and contained a hearth surrounded by some paving with pottery dating to no later than the 16th century.

Micro-history

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Bill Shankly OBE once played at right half for the Cronberry Eglinton youth football club.

The Bellow Water runs past the settlement.[14]

Transport

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Cronberry lay on the old turnpike road from Muirkirk to Ayr. A typical Ayrshire Direction stone survives, having a pyramidal top, square on plan, but set as a diamond. These stones complemented the milestones, which on this road, acted both as distance and direction markers. The lettering and style of the milestones contrasts with the elegant and clear Direction stones.[15]

The nearby Cronberry railway station was originally part of the Glasgow, Paisley, Kilmarnock and Ayr Railway. The station opened on 9 August 1848, and closed on 10 September 1951.

See also

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References

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Notes
  1. ^ Johnston, Page 90
  2. ^ Scottish Women's Rural Institute. Accessed : 2010-04-08 Archived 2010-03-01 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Paisley Daily Express. Accessed : 2010-04-08
  4. ^ McMichael, Page 75
  5. ^ a b Love, Page 181
  6. ^ 1654 Blaeu Atlas of Scotland NLE
  7. ^ a b c d Hutton, Page 56
  8. ^ a b c d e Hutton, Page 57
  9. ^ Cumnock Living Memory Group. Accessed : 2010-04-08 Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ "Scotlands Places. Accessed : 2010-04-08". Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2010-04-08.
  11. ^ Gazetteer for Scotland. Accessed : 2010-04-08
  12. ^ a b Hutton, Page 60
  13. ^ Scran Site. Accessed : 2010-04-09
  14. ^ Geograph. Riverside Gardens Cronberry. Accessed : 2010-04-09
  15. ^ Scran Site. Accessed : 2010-04-09
Sources
  • Hutton, Guthrie (1996). Mining. Ayrshire's Lost Industry. Catrine : Stenlake Publishing. ISBN 1-872074-88-X.
  • Johnston, J. B. (1903). Place-names of Scotland. Edinburgh : David Douglas.
  • Love, Dane (2003). Ayrshire : Discovering a County. Ayr : Fort Publishing. ISBN 0-9544461-1-9.
  • McMichael, George (c. 1881 - 1890). Notes on the Way Through Ayrshire and the Land of Burn, Wallace, Henry the Minstrel, and Covenant Martyrs. Hugh Henry : Ayr.
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  Media related to Cronberry at Wikimedia Commons

55°28′N 4°13′W / 55.47°N 04.21°W / 55.47; -04.21