IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
Perrays Drive, DUMBARTON, G82 5HJ

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to Perrays Drive, G82 5HJ by members of the Geograph project.

The Geograph project started in 2005 with the aim of publishing, organising and preserving representative images for every square kilometre of Great Britain, Ireland and the Isle of Man.

There are currently over 7.5m images from over14,400 individuals and you can help contribute to the project by visiting https://www.geograph.org.uk

Image Map


Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
Notes
  • Clicking on the map will re-center to the selected point.
  • The higher the marker number, the further away the image location is from the centre of the postcode.

Image Listing (51 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
Perrays Drive
The foreground part of the road is in the same grid square as the photographer, but it crosses the grid line about 20 metres before reaching the houses. The area of housing as a whole is called Lennox Gardens, but the street names are all of a kind — Perrays Drive/Way/Crescent/Court/Grove — referring probably to nearby Image or, with a lesser likelihood, to other Perrays place-names formerly in use; see https://www.geograph.org.uk/snippet/17333 for a detailed discussion of these names. The small structure to the right of the road, just before the houses, is an electricity sub-station.
Image: © Lairich Rig Taken: 12 Jan 2020
0.05 miles
2
Perrays Drive
On entering Dumbarton from the direction of Cardross, by means of the main road, this is the first area of housing seen to the north of the road. See http://www.geograph.org.uk/snippet/17333 on the "Perrays" Name, which was associated with Image long before this housing was built.
Image: © Lairich Rig Taken: 9 Aug 2013
0.07 miles
3
A small roundabout in Lennox Gardens
It is on Image (near right and background left), with Perrays Grove branching off at the near left. The house behind the right-hand edge of the roundabout is on Maple Avenue, a part of Hawthornhill, an area of housing which is adjacent to Lennox Gardens, but distinct from it and separated from it by a fence.
Image: © Lairich Rig Taken: 12 Jan 2020
0.07 miles
4
Maple Avenue, Hawthornhill
This street is located just to the north of the western end of Image Immediately to the north of Maple Avenue is Image
Image: © Lairich Rig Taken: 24 Dec 2010
0.10 miles
5
Hawthornhill Road
This is the western end of the road. Not far ahead, where a car is parked beside an evergreen tree, Image leads off to the right. The photograph was taken from the top of a path that is shown, between two hedges, in Image This end of the road would fall within the area that is called Hawthornhill, but its other end is located in Castlehill. See Image and Image The point from which the present photograph was taken is close to Image; that farm is shown on the first-edition OS map (surveyed in 1860); it was located at Image The name appears as "Haithorn Hill" on the Pont/Blaeu map of the Lennox (surveyed in the 1580s-90s, published in 1654). On the Pont/Blaeu map, "Clerkhil" and "Heuack" are shown just to the south of "Haithorn Hill", and "Castelhill" and "Airdoch Beg" are just to the north. A convent ( http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2335961 ) later occupied the site of Clarkhill; Havoc was at the shore ( http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2411704 ), and its name is still associated with that area; Castlehill is the name of an area of Dumbarton ( http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2404694 ); and Ardochbeg is now a ruin ( http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/927345 ). In his "Old Cardross" (1880), David Murray discusses these farms, and gives an earlier name for Hawthornhill: "Turning south from Ardochbeg and below Whiteleys is Hawthornhill, or, as it used to be called, Latriehill [i.e., wet hill slope]. Beyond it, overlooking Clyde, is Clerkhill, and below the latter at the foot of the old raised beach is the Havock" (the bracketed comment on the meaning of Latriehill is the author's own remark, not mine). See the comments on "leitir" at Image for more on the signification of that element in Gaelic place-names (it differs a little from Murray's interpretation). Such a derivation would at least be appropriate here, in that the land at what is now Hawthornhill slopes down towards the Clyde.
Image: © Lairich Rig Taken: 24 Dec 2010
0.12 miles
6
Approaching Dumbarton from the west
Image: © Elliott Simpson Taken: 30 Apr 2016
0.14 miles
7
Hawthorn Avenue
Cardross Road runs across the image from left to right in the foreground. The road branching off from it is Hawthorn Avenue. The elevated viewpoint for this photograph was the top of a slope in front of neighbouring Westcliff.
Image: © Lairich Rig Taken: 24 Dec 2010
0.14 miles
8
Welcome to Dumbarton
Approaching the ancient capital of Strathclyde on the A814.
Image: © Barbara Carr Taken: 18 Apr 2013
0.14 miles
9
A814 Argyll and Bute
Image: © David Dixon Taken: 26 Sep 2019
0.15 miles
10
Hazel Avenue, Hawthornhill
This street leads away from, and is immediately to the north of, Image
Image: © Lairich Rig Taken: 24 Dec 2010
0.15 miles
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