Blairlogie
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    • A Guided walk through Old Blairlogie
    • A guiided Walk to Old Logie Kirk
    • A Guided Walk to Jerah
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    • A Guided Walk Down Gogar Loan and Manor Loan
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      • Thomas Alexander
      • Major Frederick Crum
      • Moultrie Kelsall
      • The Sharpe Brothers 1914 to 1918
      • The Robb family from 1660s
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      • Butch Cassidy and the Blairlogie Connection
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WELCOME TO THE BLAIRLOGIE ARCHIVES WEBSITE

We hope that you enjoy the Blairlogie Archives Website. The active website is available at https://www.blairlogie.scot

Place Names of Stirlingshire

If you would like to know what some of the strange names in Stirlingshire mean, why not download the following book from the past and enjoy learning a bit about the reason why the places have been named.  Available from:  Place Names of Stirlingshire   

Old Faces, Old Places and Old Stories of Stirling Volume 1 and 2
These two old books give an insight into Stirling's past and the people who made it what it is today.   There are numerous photographs of the characters in the books and make a great wee read.  They are available from: Volume 1, Volume 2 


Robert Burns in Stirling
This is a wonderful book for both those who love Burns and those who are interested in Stirling. It is available from: robert_burns_in_stirlingshire_~_1899.pdf


The Archives database can be found at the Archive page where you can download the PDF files.   Every effort has been taken to maintain accuracy, but errors may be present due to transcription or typing.

Please use the Contact Us section to send any feedback concerning the site and about what could be done to make your visit more enjoyable.  During the summer we have had numerous people contacting the Archives Team and a number have visited the Archives to view items of interest.   We are always delighted to show people the village and the archives.   Please click here to send a message or request.

 
We think Blairlogie is such an exceptional place that we want you to have a virtual share of it with us.


Picture
This is Blairlogie from the south, with the mountain of Dumyat, in the winter of 2009-2010

Blairlogie

Blairlogie  is quite a wee place, less than a village: in Scots it’s a clachan or, in English, a hamlet.   It is the earliest of Scotland’s officially designated Outstanding Conservation Areas.  It’s now the centre of the Logie Community area, which is roughly the Parish of  Logie, whose centre was the old Logie Kirk, now ruined and replaced by the 19th century Logie Parish Church.

Beautiful Blairlogie
This beautiful place sits 5 miles North across the Forth from Stirling, at the foot of the magnificent scarp of the Ochil Hills, close to the  Abbey Craig with the towering national monument to William Wallace.   It’s partly on the A91, the new toll road built in 1820, and partly on the parallel old Hillfoots back road ( at one time “the King’s high road to Stirling”)

Farming and Health
The village is very picturesque, with its eclectic cluster of white houses mainly of the 18th and 19th centuries, though some are older, and a few newer. Many have the red pan-tiles roofs of the period.

Right above the village is Dumyat (Dum-EYE-at) with the iron age fort of the hill-dwelling Myaeti people: there is also the Carlie’s Craig, now called Witches’ Craig, where in past times the alleged witches were made to fly off the rock face…an earlier form of execution. 

There are arable fields and pasture and apple and pear orchards all around. The village used to be a health spa, where delicate folk came for the air, the fresh water and the goats’ milk from the herds kept here.

Picture
Kirk Green Road, Blairlogie 1898.
Picture
Kirk Green Road as it is today.
There are in the village itself about 30 houses, with as many more houses and farms outlying in the community area.    The total population is about 200.   Most people nowadays don’t work in agriculture and mining, the former staples: variety rules these days, and many commute.

Blairlogie is probably what the media call tight-knit (i.e. friendly and helpful), and the community life retains a lot of how small places used to work.  The various organizations (sometimes of the same people with different hats) help to keep this way alive.

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