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from Seamill beach, looking south-west over the lower Firth of Clyde towards the southern part of Arran and Ailsa Craig.

Seamill is a village in North Ayrshire on the west coast of Scotland, about 5 miles north of Ardrossan and 8 miles south of Largs, on the east coast of the Firth of Clyde.

It is sometimes considered part of West Kilbride, and sometimes considered as a village in its own right. The local authority has sought to consolidate it with West Kilbride by signposting it as "West Kilbride incorporating Seamill", however its location on the major A78 trunk road (West Kilbride proper is bypassed) means that it is still locally identified as an entity in its own right.

It is named after one of its oldest buildings, the Sea Mill, a grain watermill that appears in Johannes Blaeu's Atlas of Scotland published in Amsterdam in 1654. Seamill village has a golf club known as West Kilbride Golf Club, with a putting practice green and a course with eighteen holes.

It also has a hotel called the Seamill Hydro which has a swimming pool. The Seamill Hydro first opened in 1880, during the boom period of hydropathic establishments. These commenced as mostly as therapeutic establishments, but over time morphed into hotel format, with Seamill Hydro being one of the few such surviving facilities from that era.[1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Bradley, James; Dupree, Mageurite; Durie, Alastair (1997), "Taking the Water Cure: The Hydropathic Movement in Scotland, 1840-1940" (PDF), Business and Economic History, 26 (2): 426–437, retrieved 17 November 2009
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55°41′N 4°52′W / 55.683°N 4.867°W / 55.683; -4.867


📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

West Kilbride

Goat Fell and the Isle of Arran. West Kilbride and adjoining districts of Seamill and Portencross are generally considered to be a small town, having a combined

Portencross

Ayrshire, Scotland. Situated about three kilometres (two miles) west of Seamill and about two kilometres (1+1⁄4 miles) south of Hunterston B nuclear power

Sea Mills, Bristol

adjacent farm on the north side of the Trym, Seamill Farm, and to one of the earliest wet docks in England, Seamill Dock − where dock gates retained water at

North Ayrshire

Meikle Auchengree Montgreenan Nettlehirst Perceton Portencross Routenburn Seamill Sevenacres Shewalton Torranyard Blackwaterfoot Brodick Catacol Cladach

Ayrshire

Portencross Prestwick Priestland Rankinston Riccarton Saltcoats Seafield Seamill Skelmorlie Sorn Springside Stair Stevenston Stewarton Straiton Symington

Firth of Clyde

Port Glasgow, Portkil, Prestwick Rothesay Saddell, Sannox, Saltcoats, Seamill, Skipness, Skelmorlie, Sliddery, Southend, Stevenston, Strone Tarbert,

A78 road

through the Spango Valley, Inverkip, Wemyss Bay, Skelmorlie, Largs, Fairlie, Seamill and then bypasses the major towns of Ardrossan, Kilwinning, Irvine and

List of Category A listed buildings in North Ayrshire

And Cloister: Listed Building Report". Historic Scotland. "Seamill Centre, Formerly Seamill House, With Lodge, Boundary Walls And Gatepiers: Listed Building