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RESTORATION AND CONSERVATION OF THE WANLOCKHEAD MINERS' LIBRARY

Library Review

ISSN: 0024-2535

Article publication date: 1 March 1987

274

Abstract

At almost 1,500 feet above sea level Wanlockhead is the highest village in Scotland, lying in the Lowther Hills some eight miles above Sanquhar in Nithsdale and a similar distance from Abington in Lanarkshire, above the Clyde Valley. The name of its close neighbour, Leadhills, gives the clue to why inhabitants could have been induced to settle in such a remote, bleak and inhospitable location, for lead had been mined in the area since the Middle Ages. It was during the Seventeenth Century that mining in the area became a significant activity and in the Eighteenth Century the numbers of miners and their employees increased dramatically and social and village life developed.

Citation

JAMES, S. (1987), "RESTORATION AND CONSERVATION OF THE WANLOCKHEAD MINERS' LIBRARY", Library Review, Vol. 36 No. 3, pp. 191-194. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb012845

Publisher

:

MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1987, MCB UP Limited

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