Puneet Varma (Editor)

Penpont

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OS grid reference
  
NX8494

Country
  
Scotland

Post town
  
Thornhill

Local time
  
Sunday 2:58 PM

Dialling code
  
01848

Civil parish
  
Penpont

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Postcode district
  
DG3

Council area
  
Dumfries and Galloway

Scottish parliament
  
Dumfriesshire

Penpont

Weather
  
15°C, Wind E at 18 km/h, 45% Humidity

UK parliament constituency
  
Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale

Lieutenancy areas
  
Dumfries and Galloway, Dumfriesshire

A drive to thornhill penpont dumfries galloway 2012


Penpont is a village about 2 miles (3 km) west of Thornhill in Dumfriesshire, in the Dumfries and Galloway region of Scotland. It is near the confluence of the Shinnel Water and Scaur Water rivers in the foothills of the Southern Uplands. It has a population of about 400 people.

Contents

Map of Penpont, Thornhill, UK

Archaeology

There are several archaeological sites nearby, including Late Bronze Age hill forts on Tynron Doon and Grennan Hill and a long cairn at Capenoch Loch dating from the 2nd or 3rd century.

History

The toponym Penpont means "bridge-head" in the Cumbric language once spoken in the region.

The A702 road passes through Penpont. West of Thornhill it crosses the River Nith on a two-arched stone bridge in Penpont parish. It wsa built in the 1760s after the presbytery of Penpont raised £680 toward the cost. Work started about 1774, but in 1776 the bridge collapsed. The bridge was completed in 1778 and strengthened in 1930–31. It is a Category A listed building.

Penpont's Church of Scotland parish church is a Gothic Revival building completed in 1867. It is a Category B listed building. It has an Art Nouveau Communion table made in 1923.

Penpont's war memorial was made by Glasgow sculptor William Kellock Brown and installed in 1920. It is a bronze statue of an infantryman, with his rifle pointing downwards, his hands resting on the butt and his head slightly bowed.

Notable people

Sir Hugh Steuart Gladstone FRSE FZS (1877-1949) civil servant and ornithologist, Lord Lieutenant of Dumfries, lived at Capenoch House in Penpont.

Joseph Thomson (1858–95), the geologist and explorer after whom Thomson's Gazelle is named, was born in Penpont.

The sculptor Andy Goldsworthy has lived in the village since 1986 and has a workshop there. Many of his works are in the surrounding countryside, including a pinecone-shaped sculpture at Stepends Farm made to celebrate the year 2000. Each year Penpont holds a week-long festival called the Penpont Gala, beginning in the first week of July.

Kirkpatrick Macmillan, generally credited with the invention of the pedal driven bicycle, was born and died in Keir, one mile south of Penpont.

References

Penpont Wikipedia