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Cramond Inn View from North
B 78562
Description Cramond Inn View from North
Date c. 1895 to 1900
Catalogue Number B 78562
Category Photographs and Off-line Digital Images
Copies SC 536676
Scope and Content Late 19th-century view of Cramond Glebe Road, Cramond, Edinburgh, from the north Cramond Glebe Road, a narrow walled lane built on the old glebe lands belonging to Cramond Church, is the main road leading to the village. It has a number of 18th-century houses as well as the village's only public house, the 17th-century Cramond Inn. This lane was the main access to the village from the south. The Cramond Inn (left), dating from 1670, had an extension built, and crowsteps added to its gables, c.1887. The long row of houses opposite were built for mill-workers in the 18th century. Cramond, four miles north-west of Edinburgh, was well placed for visitors. The main coaching route to Queensferry and the north ran close to the village, and crossed the River Almond at Old Cramond Bridge, a mile to the south. Source: RCAHMS contribution to SCRAN.
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Attribution: © RCAHMS
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