Jump to content

英文维基 | 中文维基 | 日文维基 | 草榴社区

Creoch Loch

Coordinates: 55°24′33.8″N 4°13′5.0″W / 55.409389°N 4.218056°W / 55.409389; -4.218056
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Creoch Loch
Creoch Loch and the railway from the main road
Creoch Loch is located in Scotland
Creoch Loch
Creoch Loch
The location of Creoch Loch, East Ayrshire
LocationNew Cumnock, East Ayrshire, Scotland
Coordinates55°24′33.8″N 4°13′5.0″W / 55.409389°N 4.218056°W / 55.409389; -4.218056
TypeFreshwater loch
Primary inflowsA burn from the Black Loch, Rainfall and runoff
Primary outflowsTo the Loch o' th' Lowes
Basin countriesScotland
Max. length600 m (2,000 ft)
Max. width250 m (820 ft)
IslandsOne islet (19th century)
SettlementsNew Cumnock

Creoch Loch (NS 59259 15615), previously known as Little Creoch Loch,[1] is a freshwater loch in the Parish of New Cumnock in the East Ayrshire Council Area between Cumnock and New Cumnock, Scotland. It is located in a glacial kettle hole and is one of three linked lochs.

The loch

[edit]

McMichael records that in wet weather the three lochs combined as one and suggests that until the trap dyke on the River Nith below Corsancone Hill wore down the Cum Loch covered the whole area as far as the watershed at Sannock Hill and had a shape and surface area similar to Loch Doon.[2]

Creoch Loch is recorded as being just over 600 metres long.[1] Robert Gordon's map of 1636-52 shows a single loch with an outflow to the River Nith.[3] Blaeu's map of 1654, based on the earlier map by Timothy Pont, also shows a single loch named Loch of the Lowis [sic], however a Black Loch 'section' is recorded at the northern end.[4] Two dwellings named 'Krioch' are shown on this map, an Over and a North Krioch.[4]

The Creoch Loch is said to take its name from Creoch Farm which in turn is named for the Gaelic word crioch, meaning 'boundary'.[5]

The 'Runner' is a deep and broad ditch that was dug many years back to link the three lochs of Lowes, Black, and Creoch.[6]

The Lowes Burn was canalised and diverted away from the loch.

Cartographic evidence

[edit]

Blaeu's map of 1654, based on the earlier map by Timothy Pont, shows a single loch named Loch of the Lowis [sic], with a Black Loch 'section' recorded at the northern end.[6] Two dwellings named 'Krioch' are shown on this map, an Over and a North Krioch.[4] John Adair's map of 1685 shows a single 'L of Lon'.[7] Roy's map of 1747 shows the loch near Little Creoch.[8]

Armstrong's map of 1775, shows the loch with Lochside erroneously located on its shoreline and with no islands.[9] Thomson's 1832 map shows two additional minor inflows.[10]

The 1897 OS map shows no islets and no boathouse. A path at this point also runs from Little Creoch Farm to Lochside House with stepping stones over the loch outflow, the 'runner' that passes into the Loch o' th' Lowes.[11]

Uses

[edit]

Curling matches were held on the loch in 1829 and 1861, matches being Auchinleck vs Cumnock. A boat house is shown on the 1857 OS map, near the northern end of the loch, and close to the inflow from the Black Loch.[12] Regular local curling matches were held on the loch, usually at Christmas or New Years day.[4]

The 'Runner' is a deep and broad ditch that was dug many years back to link the three lochs of Lowes, Black, and Creoch.[6]

Micro-history

[edit]
Creoch Loch from near Mid Lowes Farm.

The Earl of Dumfries proposed to make a 'cut' from the River Nith in New Cumnock through the Loch o' th' Lowes and Creoch Loch to the Black Loch in order to provide a supply of water to power a factory he intended to build on the Glaisnock Water. This would have resulted in part of the waters of the River Nith flowing onto the Clyde rather than the Solway, however the development was never carried to fruition.[13]

Fanciful imagination has pictured a trout swimming up the River Ayr, passing into the Lugar Water at Barskimming, entering the Black Loch via the Glaisnock Water and thence into the Black Loch. The second outflow from the loch would carry the trout into Creoch Loch, then into the Loch o' th' Lowes, the River Nith and finally into the Solway Firth after a journey of around seventy miles.[14]

The 1864 OS map shows the main line railway cutting between Black Loch and Creoch Loch, running from the east to the western shore of Creoch Loch.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Groome's Gazetteer Retrieved : 2011-12-24
  2. ^ McMichael, Page 86
  3. ^ Gordon's Map Retrieved : 2011-12-24
  4. ^ a b c d Blaeu's Map Retrieved : 2011-12-24
  5. ^ Place-names of New Cumnock Retrieved : 2011-12-24
  6. ^ a b c Captain Number 2[permanent dead link] Retrieved : 2011-12-27
  7. ^ Adair's Map Retrieved : 2011-12-27
  8. ^ Roy's Map Retrieved : 2011-12-27
  9. ^ Armstrong's Map Retrieved : 2011-12-27
  10. ^ Thomson's Map Retrieved : 2011-12-27
  11. ^ 6" OS Map of 1895 Retrieved : 2011-12-27
  12. ^ 6" OS Map Retrieved : 2011-12-27
  13. ^ Warrick, Page 11
  14. ^ Warrick, Page 10

Sources

[edit]
  • Love, Dane (2003). Ayrshire : Discovering a County. Ayr : Fort Publishing. ISBN 0-9544461-1-9.
  • McMichael, George. Notes on the Way Through Ayrshire. Ayr : Hugh Henry.
  • Warrick, John (1899). The History of Old Cumnock. Reprint. Cumnock : Carn Publishing.