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County of Ayr
AyrshireTraditional.png
Geography
Area
- Total
Ranked 7th
2947
County town Ayr
Chapman code AYR

Ayrshire (Scots: Coontie o Ayrshire; Scottish Gaelic: Siorrachd Inbhir Àir, pronounced [ʃirˠəxk iɲiˈɾʲaːɾʲ]) is a registration county, and former administrative county in south-west Scotland, United Kingdom, located on the shores of the Firth of Clyde. Its principal towns include Ayr, Kilmarnock and Irvine. The town of Troon on the coast has hosted the British Open Golf Championship twice in the last seven years and eight times in total. Approximately 200,000 visitors came to Troon during the 2004 Open. It was the members of Prestwick Golf Club who first created the British Open Championship in 1860[1] with the club hosting the event twenty-four times up until 1925.

Ayrshire, under the name the County of Ayr, is a registration county. The electoral and valuation area named Ayrshire covers the three council areas of South Ayrshire, East Ayrshire and North Ayrshire, therefore including the Isle of Arran, Great Cumbrae and Little Cumbrae. The three islands were part of the County of Bute until 1975 and are not always included when the term Ayrshire is applied to the region. The same area is known as Ayrshire and Arran in other contexts.

Ayrshire is one of the most agriculturally fertile regions of Scotland. Potatoes are grown in fields near the coast, using seaweed-based fertiliser, and in addition the region produces pork products, other root vegetables, cattle (see below) and summer berries such as strawberries are grown abundantly.

Ayrshire shares with Dumfries and Galloway some wonderful rugged hill country known as the Galloway Hills. These hill lie to the west of the A713 (Ayr to Castle Douglas road) and they run south from the Loch Doon area almost to the Solway Firth. To the east of this route through the hills lie the Carsphairn and Scaur Hills which lie to the south east of Dalmellington and south of New Cumnock. Glen Afton runs deep into these hills.

The area used to be heavily industrialised, with steel making, coal mining and in Kilmarnock numerous examples of production-line manufacturing, most famously Johnnie Walker whisky. In more recent history, Digital Equipment had a large manufacturing plant near Ayr from about 1976 until the company was taken over by Compaq in 1998. Some supplier companies grew up to service this site and the more distant IBM plant at Greenock in Renfrewshire. Scotland's aviation industry has long been based in and around Prestwick and its international airport, and although aircraft manufacture ceased at the former British Aerospace plant in 1998, a significant number of aviation companies are still based on the Prestwick site. However, unemployment in the region (excluding the more rural South Ayrshire) remains high, above the national average.

The area became part of the kingdom of Scotland during the 11th century. In 1263, the Scots successfully drove off of the Norwegian leidang-army in a skirmish known as the Battle of Largs.

A notable historic building in Ayrshire is Turnberry Castle, which dates from the 13th century or earlier, and which may have been the birthplace of Robert the Bruce.

The historic shire or sheriffdom of Ayr was divided into three districts or bailieries which later made up the county of Ayrshire. The three districts were:

  • Carrick in the south. It was situated between the Doon and the wild district of Galloway in the adjoining Stewartries, an area that was little else than a vast tract of hills and mosses.[2]
  • Kyle in the centre, which included the royal burgh of Ayr, occupied the central district between the Irwine on the north, and the Doon on the south and south-west, an area that is partly mountainous. It was subdivided into "Kyle Stewart",[3] (sometimes called "Stewart Kyle"[2] or "Walter's Kyle"[4]) and "King's Kyle," the former embracing the country between the Irvine and the Ayr; and the latter, the triangular portion between the Ayr and the Doon, which is honoured as the birth-place and youthful home of Robert Burns.[2]
  • Cunninghame in the north which included the royal burgh of Irvine was that part of the county which lay north of the Irvine water, and was in an area that is generally level and fertile.[2]

The Local Government (Scotland) Act 1889 established a uniform system of county councils in Scotland and realigned the boundaries of many of Scotland’s counties.

Glasgow Prestwick International Airport, serving Glasgow, is located in Ayrshire. It has a niche in rock history as the only place in Britain visited by Elvis Presley, on his way home from Army service in Germany in 1960.

History[]

File:M77-Ayrshire.jpg

"Welcome to Ayrshire" sign on M77 southbound

MapOfAyrshire

Administrative subdivisions covering Ayrshire

Ayr county council was created in 1890, under the Local Government (Scotland) Act 1889. In 1930 the Local Government (Scotland) Act 1929 was implemented. This re-designated the Burghs into large burghs and Small Burghs. This new categorisation influenced the level of autonomy that the Burghs enjoyed from the county council. The act also abolished the parish as a unit of local government in Scotland. In Ayrshire in excess of 30 parishes were consolidated into ten district councils.

In May 1975 the county council was abolished and its functions transferred to Strathclyde Regional Council. The county area was divided between four new districts within the two-tier Strathclyde region: Cumnock and Doon Valley, Cunninghame, Kilmarnock and Loudoun and Kyle and Carrick. The Cunninghame district included the Isle of Arran, Great Cumbrae and Little Cumbrae, which had until then been administered as part of the County of Bute.

In 1996 the two-tier system of regions and districts was abolished and Ayrshire was divided between the unitary council areas of East Ayrshire (covering the area of the former Kilmarnock & Loudon District and Cumnock & Doon Valley District), North Ayrshire (covering the area of the former Cunninghame District Council) and South Ayrshire (covering the area of the former Kyle and Carrick District).

Parliamentary constituencies[]

There was an Ayrshire constituency of the House of Commons of the Parliament of Great Britain from 1708 to 1801 and of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1801 until 1868, when the constituency was divided into Ayrshire North and Ayrshire South.

During the whole of the 1708 to 1868 period, and until 1950, the burghs of Ayr and Irvine were parliamentary burghs, represented as components of Ayr Burghs. In 1832 Kilmarnock became a parliamentary burgh, to be represented as a component of Kilmarnock Burghs until 1918. Ayr Burghs and Kilmarnock Burghs were districts of burghs, and quite different in character from later Ayr and Kilmarnock constituencies.

From 1918 to 1983 Ayrshire and Buteshire were treated as if a single area for purposes of parliamentary representation, with their combined area being divided into different constituencies at different times. Scottish local government counties were abolished in 1975, in favour of regions and districts, but the next reform of constituency boundaries was not until 1983.

Constituencies covering Ayrshire may be listed by periods as below, but the story is somewhat more complicated than the lists may imply: until 1918, Ayr Burghs and Kilmarnock Burghs included burghs lying outside both Ayrshire and Buteshire; a particular constituency name may represent different boundaries in different periods; in 1974, there were boundary changes without the creation of any new constituency names.

Period Constituencies
1708 to 1832 Ayrshire and Ayr Burghs
1832 to 1868 Ayrshire, Kilmarnock Burghs and Ayr Burghs
1868 to 1918 North Ayrshire, Kilmarnock Burghs, Ayr Burghs and South Ayrshire
1918 to 1950 Bute and Northern Ayrshire, Kilmarnock, Ayr Burghs and South Ayrshire
1950 to 1983 Bute and Northern Ayrshire, Central Ayrshire, Kilmarnock, Ayr and South Ayrshire

Towns and villages in Ayrshire[]

Ayrshire.rivers.some

Ayrshire, with rivers and several towns.

Rivers in Ayrshire[]

The main rivers flowing to the Clyde coast are, from north to south, the following:

  • River Garnock
  • River Irvine
  • River Ayr
  • River Doon
  • River Girvan
  • River Stinchar

Interesting places[]

  • Auchenharvie Castle
  • Barony and Castle of Giffen
  • Cleeves Cove
  • Clyde Muirshiel Regional Park
  • Corsehill
  • Dalgarven Mill – Museum of Ayrshire Country Life and Costume
  • Dunlop cheese
  • Eglinton Country Park
  • Laigh Milton viaduct
  • Thurgartstone

Some notable people born in Ayrshire[]

  • Hew Ainslie (1792-1878), poet[5]
  • Sir Thomas Brisbane (1773-1860), Scottish soldier and colonial administrator, after whom the city of Brisbane is named.
  • John Boyd Orr (1880-1971), Nobel Peace Prize winner
  • Robert the Bruce (1274-1329), possibly at Turnberry Castle.
  • Robert Burns (1759-1796), poet, in Alloway;
  • Kenneth Campbell (1917-1941), RAF pilot, posthumous recipient of the Victoria Cross, born in Ardrossan.
  • Robert Craufurd (1764-1812), British Major-General;
  • Thomas Craig (1855-1900), noted professor of mathematics, editor, and author.[5]
  • John Dunlop (1840-1921), Scottish inventor of the pneumatic tire, in Dreghorn.
  • Andrew Fisher (1862-1928), 5th Prime Minister of Australia 1908-1909, 1910-1913, 1914-1915;
  • Sir Alexander Fleming (1881-1955), inventor/discoverer of penicillin, in Darvel;
  • John Galt (1779-1839), author.
  • Drew Galloway (1985-), professional wrestler on WWE's Raw brand as Drew McIntyre.
  • Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, current Australian Chief of Defence Force Emigrated to Australia in 1968
  • George Houston (painter) (1869-1947), landscape painter of Scottish locales;[6]
  • Tom Hunter, entrepreneur and philanthropist
  • Macdonald Brothers, recording artists and contestants on The X Factor
  • John McAdam (1756-1836), engineer, responsible for a system of road design;
  • James McCosh (1811-1894), noted philosopher of the Scottish School of Common Sense and president of what would be Princeton University.[5]
  • James McCosh Clark (1833–1898), Mayor of Auckland
  • Jai McDowall (1986-), winner of Britain's Got Talent in 2011
  • William McIlvanney, writer.
  • Sir Thomas McKillop, (1943-) CEO of AstraZeneca, born in Dreghorn
  • James Henry McLean (1806-1886), born in Ayrshire, physician and United States Congressman from Missouri.[5]
  • Colin Mochrie (born 1957) Scottish /Canadian Improvisational Comedian and Actor (Best known for being in Whose Line Is It Anyway?)
  • William Murdoch (1754 - 1839), Inventor of gas lighting and Engineer.
  • Simon Neil (1979-), James Johnston, and Ben Johnston of Biffy Clyro.
  • Bill Shankly (1913-1981), successful football manager
  • Robert Simson (1687-1768), noted mathematician and professor of mathematics for 50 years
  • David Thomson (1955- ), philosopher
  • Sam Torrance (1953- ), professional golfer born in Largs.
  • Malcolm Wallace, Father of William Wallace one of Scotland's greatest national heroes, in Riccarton, Kilmarnock.

References[]

  1. ^ Intayrnet.com
  2. ^ a b c d Douglas, William Scott (1874). In Ayrshire; a descriptive picture of the County of Ayr, with relative notes on interesting local subjects, chiefly derived during a recent personal tour. Kilmarnock M'Kie & Drennan. p. 2. 
  3. ^ This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
  4. ^ Murray, David (1924). Early burgh organization in Scotland: as illustrated in the history of Glasgow and of some neighbouring burghs. 2. Maclehose, Jackson & Co.. 
  5. ^ a b c d Who Was Who in America, Historical Volume, 1607-1896. Chicago: Marquis Who's Who. 1963. 
  6. ^ Euan Robson, George Houston: Nature's Limner (Atelier Books: Edinburgh, 1997).

External links[]

Coordinates: 55°30′N 4°30′W / 55.5, -4.5


This page uses content from the English language Wikipedia. The original content was at Ayrshire. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with this Familypedia wiki, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons License.
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