The Forth and Clyde Junction Railway was a railway line in Scotland which ran from Stirling to Balloch. It was built with the expectation of conveying...
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The Forth and Clyde Canal is a canal opened in 1790, crossing central Scotland; it provided a route for the seagoing vessels of the day between the Firth...
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Drymen railway station served the village of Croftamie, Stirling, Scotland, from 1856 to 1934 on the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway. The station was...
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Fairfield Siding railway station co-served the village of Kippen, Stirling, Scotland, from 1861 to 1866 on the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway. The station...
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Gartness railway station served the hamlet of Gartness, Stirling, Scotland, from 1856 to 1934 on the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway. The station was...
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1964 on the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway. The station was opened on 26 May 1856 by the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway. To the east were two sidings...
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Ladylands Platform railway station co-served the village of Kippen, Stirling, Scotland, from 1861 to 1934 on the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway. The station...
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Kippen railway station co-served the village of Kippen, Stirling, Scotland, from 1856 to 1934 on the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway. The station was...
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Menteith railway station served the village of Port of Menteith, Stirling, Scotland, from 1856 by 1934 on the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway. The station...
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Gargunnock railway station served the village of Gargunnock, Stirling, Scotland, from 1856 to 1959 on the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway. The station...
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the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway. The station was opened as Kilmaronock on 26 May 1856 by the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway. To the south of the...
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Buchlyvie railway station served the village of Buchlyvie, Stirling, Scotland, from 1856 to 1959 on the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway. The station was...
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served by trains on the Strathendrick and Aberfoyle Railway and the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway, both of which closed in the 1950s. The station was...
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Glasgow to Aberfoyle Line (redirect from Campsie Branch Railway)
April 1896; closed 1 October 1951; Gartness Junction; route converged with Forth and Clyde Junction Railway; Balfron; F&CJR station, opened 26 May 1856;...
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railway station was opened to serve the town in 1856. It served as a junction between the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway and the Strathendrick and Aberfoyle...
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Croftamie, which generally meets at the But and Ben public house. Drymen station on the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway was situated in the village. Wikimedia...
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Buchlyvie Junction over the metals of the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway which had opened in 1856, and was also operated by the North British Railway. The...
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known as Stirling East, directly next to the main station. The Forth and Clyde Junction Railway opened a line to Balloch Central three years later serving...
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station) and Balloch Pier. Forth and Clyde Junction Railway at Forth and Clyde Junction Glasgow, Dumbarton and Helensburgh Railway at Dalreoch Junction and Bowling...
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ironworks at Kilsyth. North of the Campsie Fells the independent Forth and Clyde Junction Railway opened in 1856 from Balloch to Stirling, passing through largely...
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The Forth Bridge is a cantilever railway bridge across the Firth of Forth in the east of Scotland, 9 miles (14 kilometres) west of central Edinburgh....
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The Forth and Clyde canal pathway runs between the Firth of Forth and the Firth of Clyde and is a 106-kilometre-long (66 mi) footpath and cycleway that...
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Clyde Navigation Act was passed, authorising the Caledonian Railway to acquire the Forth and Clyde Canal, as well as the Monkland Canal and the Forth...
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carry vehicular traffic, cyclists and pedestrians across the Forth; railway crossings are made by the nearby Forth Bridge, opened in 1890. The Scottish...
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Kippen (section Railway Station)
sovereign at Stirling. A railway station, around 1 mile from the village, was opened by the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway in 1856 and was closed to passengers...
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only be handled by railways, and the Caledonian and the North British between them controlled that. In 1947 the Forth and Clyde Canal and the Bowling basin...
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Monkland Railways, the Wilsontown, Morningside and Coltness Railway and the Scottish Central Railway, and the Forth and Clyde Canal, the Union Canal and the...
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Queensferry Crossing (redirect from Second Forth Road Bridge)
(formerly the Forth Replacement Crossing) is a road bridge in Scotland. It was built alongside the existing Forth Road Bridge and the Forth Bridge. It carries...
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by the NBR Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway 10+1⁄4 miles (16 km) Edinburgh and Northern Railway Forth and Clyde Junction Railway 30+1⁄2 miles (49 km) Gifford...
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