Sandhead is a Village in southwest Scotland
- Dumfries and Galloway, 7 miles south of
Stranraer town, 8 miles southeast of
Portpatrick, 12 miles north of the
Mull of Galloway, furthest south
point in Scotland.
The Village is mainly a number of houses
along Luce Bay with a vast Grassland and long
Beach.
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The image top is looking along Sandhead Main
Street from the south with the Sandhead Tearoom
on the left.
The Tigh Na Mara
Hotel is on the Main Street in the centre
of the village. The hotel is a popular spot for
meals and drinks.
Sandhead beachside has a large grass area
with kids play and parking for many cars.
The Beach at Sandhead Bay is about 2 miles
long from the Sands of Luce Hoilday Park in the
north, to the high point in the south.
The Sands of Luce
Holiday Park is half of a mile north of
Sandhead. The park offers holiday homes,
touring, camping, watersports and beach
sports.
Balgreggan Motte and Sandhead War Memorial
are on the north side of Sandhead, between the
village and Holiday Park. The Motte is about
60ft high, thought to have had a wooden fort
for protection against Viking raids in the 600s
& 700s.
A Castle was built for Clan MacDowall
a short distance further inland, known as
Castle MacDowall, or Castle Freugh. This Castle
/ Tower House was destroyed by Cromwell troops
in the 1650s during the English Civil War that
spread into Scotland.
The MacDowall's built Balgreggan
House in the late 1600s close to where the
Castle stood. Balgreggan House was destroyed by
fire in the 1960s.
Kirkmadrine Church is
2 miles southwest of Sandhead. This small late
1800s church is built on the spot of a much
earlier chuch.
There are a number of stones on display at
the church that were discovered in the early
1800s. These stones date from the 400s to 1100s
AD. Three of the stones are among the oldest
Christian monuments in Scotland.
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