Inverbervie

Inverbervie (Gaelic: Inbhir Beirbhe ), locally and historically by the local parish also called Bervie, is a village in the Scottish unitary authority Aberdeenshire. It lies on the North Sea coast at the mouth of Bervie Water about 16 km northeast of Montrose and about twelve kilometers south-west of Stonehaven. In 2001, Inverbervie recorded 2094 inhabitants.

In 1362, lifted David II, King of Scotland Inverbervie in the status of a Royal Burgh. This was probably the fact that the king at Inverbervie was shipwrecked on his return from exile in France and at this point again entered Scottish soil for the first time. 1788 the first flat mill in Scotland was built in Inverbervie and the town became a center of the textile and food industries. In 1969, a statue in honor of the most famous son of the city, Hercules Linton, the builder of the famous tea clipper Cutty Sark revealed.

The highway A92 ( Perth Stonehaven ) runs through Inverbervie and includes the village on to the road network. A few kilometers west runs the leading from Edinburgh to Fraserburgh A90. The nearest train stations are in Laurencekirk and Stonehaven. You will be served on the Glasgow to Aberdeen Line and the Edinburgh to Aberdeen Line First ScotRail.

Bridge over the Water Bervie

Cutty Sark Statue in Inverbervie

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