1
Church Road, Tweedmouth
Image: © Jonathan Thacker
Taken: 22 May 2012
0.02 miles
2
The Wilson Monsoon at Berwick Port
About 30 ships a year are guided into the small port by a pilot boat and the usual cargo includes fertilizer, grains and animal feed. A high tide is essential for navigating the Tweed Estuary.
Image: © Walter Baxter
Taken: 26 Sep 2019
0.02 miles
3
The Church of St Bartholomew & St Boisil, Tweedmouth
Image: © Bill Henderson
Taken: 7 Jun 2013
0.03 miles
4
Tweedmouth Parish Church, St Bartholomew & St Boisil
The church dates from 1783 but the site is believed to have been a Christian place of worship since the 7th century.
Image: © Walter Baxter
Taken: 28 Apr 2019
0.03 miles
5
The weathervane at Tweedmouth Parish Church
The weathervane takes the form of a salmon which relates to the former salmon fishing industry on the Tweed Estuary.
Image: © Walter Baxter
Taken: 28 Apr 2019
0.03 miles
6
Ships at Berwick Docks
2 ships, Rebecca Hammann (furthest from the camera), and BBS Sky (nearest the camera) are docked at the Port of Berwick. They appear to have been delivering grain to the port, possibly for onward use at the large local maltsters, Simpsons Malt. One of their lorries is parked beside the crane on the far side of the Rebecca Hammann, potentially waiting for the rain to stop before continuing to unload the ship.
Image: © Graham Robson
Taken: 10 Apr 2013
0.03 miles
7
Cranes at the Port of Berwick
The port has three 360 degree hydraulic material handler cranes.
Image: © Walter Baxter
Taken: 26 Sep 2019
0.03 miles
8
Mill Strand, Tweedmouth
Looking northwest towards the harbour.
Image: © Barbara Carr
Taken: 30 Aug 2010
0.04 miles
9
St Bartholomew and St Boisil Churchyard at Tweedmouth
The church was built in 1783 on the site of an earlier church. There are some Elizabethan gravestones in the churchyard.
Image: © Walter Baxter
Taken: 30 Sep 2011
0.04 miles
10
3 Dock Road, Tweedmouth
Tweedmouth Character Appraisal informs us this was the former warehouse of Border Brewery Co. Ltd and describes it as 'the area’s tallest, most impressive commercial building'. However the 1922-24 OS map appears to show it as a 'Flour Mill' (connected to Mill Strand) with what appears to be a conveyor over the road to a railway line. Similarly the less detailed 1897-99 and 1938-47 maps also show this conveyor. It is not shown on the 1860-66 map but a building is shown here, unconnected to the Mill Strand building. As the OS map now numbers this '1 - 9 Mill Wharf' (an indicator to its previous use) I assume it is the flats or holiday homes, part of the development in the 1999 planning application.
Image: © Jo and Steve Turner
Taken: 21 Jun 2014
0.04 miles