Mackessack Park
Mackessack Park is a football ground in the town of Rothes, Scotland.
Buckie (Scottish Gaelic: Bucaidh) is a burgh town (defined as such in 1888) on the Moray Firth coast of Scotland in Moray. Buckie was the largest town in Banffshire by some thousands of inhabitants before regionalisation in 1975 removed that political division from the map of Scotland. The town is the third largest in the Moray Council area after Elgin and Forres and within the definitions of statistics published by the General Register Office for Scotland was ranked at number 75 in the list of population estimates for settlements in Scotland mid-year 2006. Buckie lies virtually equidistant to Banff to the east and Elgin to the west with both communities being approximately 17 miles distant whilst Keith lies 12 miles to the south by road.
Population: 7,860
Latitude: 57° 40' 32.52" N
Longitude: -2° 57' 44.57" W
Mackessack Park is a football ground in the town of Rothes, Scotland.
Inverkeithny is a village in the Formartine area of Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
Grant Park is a football ground in the town of Lossiemouth, Moray, Scotland. It is the home ground of Lossiemouth F.C., who currently play in the Highland Football League. It is not to be confused with Grant Street Park, Inverness, which is home to …
Fordyce /fɔərˈdaɪs/ is a village in Aberdeenshire, Scotland that is slightly inland from the point where the Burn of Fordyce meets the sea between Cullen and Portsoy.
Fogwatt/Fywatt is a small village near Elgin, in Moray, Scotland. Fogwatt Community Hall is a local community hall that is situated on the main road towards Rothes.
Farmtown is a village in the Moray council area of Scotland.
Elgin High School is a secondary school situated on High School Drive Elgin, Moray, Scotland.
Cummingston is located on the north-east coast of Scotland in Moray. It lies on the B9012, sandwiched between the two fishing villages of Hopeman and Burghead. It was known as "the Collach", possibly from Scottish Gaelic an Coileach meaning "eddy".
Birnie Kirk is a Church of Scotland church situated 4 km south of Elgin, in Moray, northeast Scotland. The church was built c. 1140 and became the first cathedral of the Bishop of Moray. It remained the cathedral church until 1184 when Bishop Simon …
Urquhart Priory was a Benedictine monastic community in Moray. It was founded by King David I of Scotland in 1136 as a cell of Dunfermline Abbey in the aftermath of the defeat of King Óengus of Moray. It remained a dependency of Dunfermline, and by …
Turner Memorial Hospital is a UK National Health Service hospital in Keith, Morayshire, Scotland.
The Oaks is an NHS Scotland Palliative Care Day hospital in Elgin, Moray, Scotland, administered by NHS Grampian.
Spynie Hospital was a UK National Health Service hospital in Elgin, Scotland.
Spynie Canal is a canal in Moray, Scotland, which lies between Elgin and Lossiemouth.
Seafield Hospital is a UK National Health Service hospital in Buckie, Morayshire, Scotland.
The River Lossie (Scottish Gaelic: Uisge Losaidh) is a river in north east Scotland. Ptolemy (c.90 – c.168), the Greco / Roman geographer, named it as ost. Loxa Fl. The river originates in the hills above Dallas, in Moray, and has its source 400 met…
Milne's High School is a secondary school, located in the village of Fochabers, Moray.
Macduff railway station was a railway station serving the settlements of Banff and Macduff, Aberdeenshire.