Where Dunbartonshire's Dark Stories Gather

Dunbartonshire’s haunted reputation is quieter and more fragmented than the better-packaged ghost lore of Edinburgh or the Highlands, but that is part of its appeal.

Preview for Where Dunbartonshire's Dark Stories Gather

Where Dunbartonshire’s haunted map begins

For this page, Dunbartonshire means the historic Scottish county, not only the modern council areas of West Dunbartonshire and East Dunbartonshire. That matters because old ghost stories do not obey present administrative borders. The historic county includes the Clyde-facing Dumbarton area, the Vale of Leven, Loch Lomond-side places such as Balloch and Luss, and the eastern detached area historically associated with Kirkintilloch and Cumbernauld. Wikishire notes that this detached portion, comprising the parishes of Kirkintilloch and Cumbernauld, lay between Stirlingshire and Lanarkshire and was annexed to Dumbartonshire in the medieval period through the earldom and sheriffdom arrangements of Wigtown and Dumbartonshire.[Wikishire]wikishire.co.ukOpen source on wikishire.co.uk.

Overview image for Where Dunbartonshire's Dark Stories Gather

This geography explains why Dunbartonshire’s supernatural material has a cross-border feel. Loch Lomond tales shade into Stirlingshire and Argyll; Clyde stories overlap with Glasgow and Renfrewshire; Campsie and Lennox material often appears under East Dunbartonshire, Stirlingshire or Greater Glasgow labels. For a haunted-county reader, the useful approach is to keep the historic county as the centre of gravity while recognising that folklore travelled along roads, cattle routes, rivers, estates, parish networks and newspapers rather than along modern council lines.

Dumbarton Castle: the county’s great haunted stage

Dumbarton Castle is the obvious starting point because it has the combination that ghost stories need: height, age, danger, imprisonment and a dramatic skyline. Historic Environment Scotland describes the castle as a site with deep strategic importance, captured by Edward I in 1296 and recovered after William Wallace’s victory at Stirling Bridge in 1297; three English knights were then held there as the castle’s first named prisoners.[Historic Environment Scotland]historicenvironment.scotOpen source on historicenvironment.scot. The official HES publication also stresses how ancient and layered the site is: Dumbarton Rock is a basalt outcrop rising about 74 metres, with evidence for early occupation, while much of the standing fortress fabric now visible belongs to the 17th and 18th centuries rather than to the early medieval stronghold of Alt Clut.[HES Publications]app-hes-pubs-prod-neu-01.azurewebsites.netHES Publications Dumbarton CastleHES Publications Dumbarton Castle

The ghostly claims attached to Dumbarton Castle are modern and secondary rather than well-documented early folklore. Paranormal sites and local retellings tend to speak of presences, watched corridors, prisoners and lingering figures, but these are usually anchored more in the castle’s atmosphere and history than in named, dated witness accounts. Spooky Isles, for example, presents the castle as a haunted stronghold whose supposed ghosts “keep watch” over the past, but its value is as a contemporary folklore retelling rather than as archival proof.[Spooky Isles]spookyisles.comhaunting of dumbarton castlehaunting of dumbarton castle

The more trustworthy haunted reading is not “Dumbarton Castle is proven haunted”, but “Dumbarton Castle is exactly the kind of place where haunting traditions gather”. It held prisoners, guarded the Clyde, witnessed conflict, and developed stories around William Wallace, French prisoners and the older fortress on the rock. The Dumbarton Castle Society records that the French Prison was built around 1790 and later used for Napoleonic prisoners, with artefacts made by prisoners preserved in the castle collection.[Dumbarton Castle Soc]dumbartoncastle.co.ukOpen source on dumbartoncastle.co.uk. The same society also notes the local tradition that Wallace may briefly have been held at the castle after his capture by Sir John Menteith, though it presents this as an “abiding local legend” rather than a settled fact.[Dumbarton Castle Soc]dumbartoncastle.co.ukOpen source on dumbartoncastle.co.uk.

That distinction matters. Dumbarton Castle’s supernatural force comes from historical density: a real prison, a real military site, a real national memory of betrayal and captivity, and a rock long associated with power. The ghost stories are thinner than the history, but the history gives them their charge.

Where Dunbartonshire's Dark Stories Gather illustration 1

Witches, saints and the rock hurled at Dumbarton

Dunbartonshire’s older supernatural material is not only ghostly; it also belongs to the world of witchcraft belief, saints’ legends and moralised landscape stories. One of the most striking examples concerns the supposed making of Dumbarton Rock itself. The University of Edinburgh’s Statistical Accounts blog preserves an account from the Old Statistical Account in which the Devil, enraged by St Patrick, sends witches against him at Kilpatrick. Patrick flees by boat, and the witches hurl a great piece of rock after him; missing their target, it falls and becomes the Castle of Dumbarton.[Library & University Collections]libraryblogs.is.ed.ac.ukwicked witcheswicked witches

This is folklore rather than geology, of course, and its interest lies in what it shows about local imagination. The rock is not merely a military landmark; it becomes a thrown missile, a failed act of supernatural violence, and a sign that the saint escapes while the landscape keeps the mark. For readers of haunted history, this is a reminder that not every “eerie” Dunbartonshire story involves a visible ghost. Some are origin legends that explain why a place feels charged.

The county also belongs to the wider Scottish history of witchcraft accusation. The University of Edinburgh’s Survey of Scottish Witchcraft contains nearly 4,000 known accused people from early modern Scotland and records where and when they were accused, tried and punished.[Witches]witches.hca.ed.ac.ukOpen source on ed.ac.uk. One Dunbartonshire-linked case in that database is Janet Boyd, whose trial record says she confessed to Dumbarton’s provost and bailies and was later recorded as executed, although the exact execution date and place are not given.[Witches]witches.hca.ed.ac.ukOpen source on ed.ac.uk.

Modern local remembrance has begun to reframe these stories away from Halloween caricature and towards memorial history. Clydesider’s 2026 article on the Witches of Dumbarton discusses the work of Remembering the Accused Witches of Scotland and the gap between popular witch imagery and the real people accused under early modern law.[Clydesider Creative]clydesider.orgCreative Witches of DumbartonCreative Witches of Dumbarton This is not a ghost story in the narrow sense, but it is one of the darkest strands of Dunbartonshire’s haunted inheritance: the fear of invisible harm, the power of accusation, and the survival of names in archives rather than in graveside memory.

Overtoun Bridge: the modern mystery that became folklore

Overtoun Bridge near Dumbarton is Dunbartonshire’s best-known modern “strange place”. It is usually framed as the bridge from which dogs have inexplicably jumped or fallen, earning it the grim nickname “Dog Suicide Bridge”. Historic Environment Scotland lists Overtoun House as part of a large mid- to late-19th-century designed landscape with picturesque burnside walks and formal garden remnants, while Forestry and Land Scotland presents the area as a walking landscape around the Kilpatrick Hills, Overtoun Glen and the old bridge.[Historic Environment Scotland]portal.historicenvironment.scotOpen source on historicenvironment.scot.

The supernatural version of the story says that dogs sense something unseen, or that the bridge and estate have a dark atmosphere. The more grounded explanations focus on animal behaviour, scent, sightlines and the bridge’s physical design. Reports summarised from investigations and press coverage suggest dogs may be attracted by the scent of mink or other mammals in the gorge below, then leap or topple over a parapet that conceals the true drop.[SBS Australia]sbs.com.auOpen source on com.au. The Scottish SPCA’s investigations have been reported as inconclusive, which leaves room for the mystery to persist without requiring a paranormal conclusion.[Wikipedia]WikipediaOvertoun BridgeOvertoun Bridge

Overtoun is a good example of how a haunting can form without a traditional apparition. There is no single old ghost with a name and backstory. Instead, repeated animal incidents, a beautiful but disorienting bridge, a wooded ravine, a grand house, and online retellings have created a modern legend. The best way to treat it is as Fortean folklore: a strange pattern, partly investigated, widely retold, and probably intensified by the human urge to turn troubling accidents into a story with intention.

Loch Lomond-side ghosts and old-road stories

Loch Lomond gives Dunbartonshire a different kind of haunted atmosphere: water, weather, inns, old estates, droving routes and houses set back from the shore. Here the stories are more scattered and often overlap with tourism writing. One frequently repeated claim concerns Rossdhu House near Luss, now associated with Loch Lomond Golf Club. A Loch Lomond Waterfront article says local legend identifies Lady Helen Sutherland, wife of Sir James Colquhoun, as a ghostly presence around the house and grounds, and connects her with Helensburgh’s name.[Loch Lomond Waterfront]loch-lomond-waterfront.co.ukLoch Lomond Waterfront Loch Lomond Ghosts and MonstersLoch Lomond Waterfront Loch Lomond Ghosts and Monsters

This is a good example of a picturesque estate ghost: a named woman, an old house, a family history, and a landscape where visitors already expect romance and melancholy. The evidence is not strong enough to treat the apparition as a documented case, but it is strong enough to record as a local legend attached to Loch Lomond’s gentry landscape.

Nearby Balloch Castle also belongs to the county’s haunted imagination even when specific ghost accounts are less firmly sourced. Historic Environment Scotland records Balloch Castle as a significant early 19th-century Gothic-style building by Robert Lugar, built for John Buchanan of Ardoch and associated with the wider development of secular Gothic architecture in Dunbartonshire.[Historic Environment Scotland]portal.historicenvironment.scotHistoric Environment Scotland BALLOCH CASTLE (LB123Historic Environment Scotland BALLOCH CASTLE (LB123 Its Gothic form, country-park setting and earlier Lennox associations make it a natural candidate for ghostly retelling, though responsible coverage should separate architectural atmosphere from confirmed folklore. In other words, Balloch looks like a haunted castle to modern visitors, but its stronger evidence lies in architectural and estate history rather than in a well-preserved apparition tradition.

Loch Lomond’s haunted tourism also draws in famous old inns and droving stories, some of which sit near or beyond the historic county boundary. The Drovers Inn at Inverarnan is often marketed as one of Scotland’s most haunted pubs, with stories of an old man in the bar, an upstairs family of ghosts, a drowned girl and a hanged man; The List reported these claims in the context of ghost-hunting around Loch Lomond.[List]list.co.ukOpen source on list.co.uk. For a Dunbartonshire page, such material is useful mainly as neighbouring route folklore: it shows the kind of ghost tradition that clung to the old Loch Lomond roads, even when an exact county label needs care.

Where Dunbartonshire's Dark Stories Gather illustration 2

Industrial ghosts: the Denny Tank and Dumbarton’s working memory

Not all Dunbartonshire hauntings belong to castles and old houses. The Paranormal Database records a 2009 haunting claim at Dumbarton’s Denny Tank Museum, naming shipbuilder Peter Denny, who died in 1895, as the suspected ghost behind sensations of a “presence”.[Paranormal Database]paranormaldatabase.comParanormal Database The Paranormal DatabaseParanormal Database The Paranormal Database This is a thinly sourced report, but it is interesting because it shifts the county’s eerie geography from medieval stone to industrial heritage.

The Denny Tank itself is historically important. The Scottish Maritime Museum notes that the Denny Ship Model Experiment Tank in Dumbarton has been recognised by the National Transport Trust’s Red Wheel scheme as the world’s oldest working model experiment tank and one of the UK’s significant transport heritage sites.[Scottish Maritime Museum]scottishmaritimemuseum.orgScottish Maritime Museum DENNY TANK AT THE SCOTTISHScottish Maritime Museum DENNY TANK AT THE SCOTTISH Visitor material describes it as a place where people can learn how ships were designed and tested in the Victorian Denny Shipyard.[Go Industrial]goindustrial.co.ukGo Industrial About the museumGo Industrial About the museum

That industrial setting changes the emotional register of the ghost story. A “presence” at the Denny Tank is not the same as a grey lady in a tower. It speaks to workshops, precision, family firms, lost employment and the haunting quality of machinery after the industry around it has faded. The claim itself is modest, but the setting gives it local meaning: Dumbarton’s industrial past is not only remembered in plaques and museums, but also, in folklore, as something still felt in the building.

Lennox Castle: when “haunted” risks hiding the real horror

Lennox Castle near Lennoxtown is often pulled into haunted and abandoned-place content because it is a ruined Gothic-looking building with a disturbing institutional past. Historic Environment Scotland lists it as an 1837–1841 sandstone castle by architect David Hamilton, built in a Norman Castle style and later used as a hospital.[Historic Environment Scotland]portal.historicenvironment.scotOpen source on historicenvironment.scot. The Buildings at Risk Register describes it as a Category A building at risk and, by 2024, a roofless ruin with security fencing believed to remain around the footprint.[Buildings at Risk Register]buildingsatrisk.org.ukBuildings at Risk Register Buildings at riskBuildings at Risk Register Buildings at risk

The strongest evidence around Lennox Castle is not paranormal; it is social history. The National Lottery Heritage Fund’s “Remembering Lennox Castle” project focused on preserving the memories of former residents of Lennox Castle Hospital, which closed in 2002, because that story was in danger of being forgotten.[The National Lottery Heritage Fund]heritagefund.org.ukOpen source on heritagefund.org.uk. C-Change likewise describes Lennox Castle Stories as an oral-history project involving former residents, their families and staff, many of whom had spent long periods of their lives in the hospital.[C-Change]c-change.org.ukC-Change History and PresentC-Change History and Present

For a haunted-history page, the ethical point is important. Lennox Castle may look like a ghost-hunter’s ruin, but its most serious “haunting” is the memory of institutional life, disability history, neglect, confinement and testimony. Paranormal claims about abandoned hospitals can easily turn real suffering into scenery. A careful Dunbartonshire account should therefore treat Lennox Castle as a place of dark memory first and a ghost-tour subject only with caution.

How credible are Dunbartonshire’s ghost stories?

Dunbartonshire’s haunted material falls into four broad levels of reliability.

Well-supported historical settings: Dumbarton Castle, Overtoun House, Balloch Castle, the Denny Tank and Lennox Castle are real, documented places with strong official or institutional records. Their architecture, dates, uses and historical roles can be checked through Historic Environment Scotland, museum sources, council archives and heritage bodies.[historicenvironment.scot]historicenvironment.scotOpen source on historicenvironment.scot.

Archival supernatural belief: Witchcraft cases and early folklore belong here. The Survey of Scottish Witchcraft does not prove witchcraft; it documents accusations, trials and punishments. The St Patrick and witches story does not explain geology; it preserves a landscape legend.[Witches]witches.hca.ed.ac.ukOpen source on ed.ac.uk.

Modern local and paranormal claims: Dumbarton Castle hauntings, the Denny Tank “presence”, Rossdhu’s Lady Helen and Loch Lomond inn ghosts are mostly preserved in paranormal databases, tourism writing, local articles and retellings. They are valuable as folklore, but they usually lack the dated witness chains, original newspaper reports or archival depth needed for high confidence.[paranormaldatabase.com]paranormaldatabase.comParanormal Database The Paranormal DatabaseParanormal Database The Paranormal Database

Investigated mysteries with plausible natural explanations: Overtoun Bridge is the clearest example. The incidents are widely reported, but the supernatural interpretation competes with explanations based on scent, sightlines, animal behaviour and the bridge’s design.[SBS Australia]sbs.com.auOpen source on com.au.

The result is not a weak haunted county, but a subtle one. Dunbartonshire’s best stories are not always the ones with the most dramatic ghost. They are the places where history, memory and atmosphere overlap: a prison on a rock, a bridge above a ravine, a model-testing tank from a vanished shipbuilding world, a lochside house with a lady’s name attached, and a ruined institution where the living testimony matters more than any rumoured apparition.

Where Dunbartonshire's Dark Stories Gather illustration 3

What visitors should look for

A reader visiting haunted Dunbartonshire should expect atmosphere before spectacle. Dumbarton Castle offers the strongest combination of scenery and history: the climb, the rock, the Clyde views and the prison associations do more work than any single ghost story. Overtoun Bridge is compelling because it is beautiful and unsettling at once, though dog owners should treat it as a practical safety concern rather than a paranormal challenge. The Denny Tank gives a rarer kind of haunting: industrial memory inside a museum. Balloch and Loch Lomond add the Gothic and watery landscape that helps legends travel, while Lennox Castle should be approached, if at all, through remembrance rather than thrill-seeking.

The county’s haunted history is therefore best read as a layered map. The oldest layer is saintly and witchcraft folklore; the next is fortress, prison and execution memory; then comes estate Gothic, industrial heritage, hospital ruin and modern mystery. None of this requires believing that ghosts are proven. It does require recognising why certain places keep attracting ghost stories: they hold unresolved feelings in public view.

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Endnotes

1. Source: clydesider.org
Title: Creative Witches of Dumbarton
Link:https://www.clydesider.org/witches-of-dumbarton/

2. Source: Wikipedia
Title: Overtoun Bridge
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overtoun_Bridge

3. Source: Wikipedia
Title: Dumbarton Castle
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dumbarton_Castle

4. Source: Wikipedia
Title: Lennox Castle
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lennox_Castle

5. Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunbartonshire

6. Source: Wikipedia
Title: Balloch Castle
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balloch_Castle

7. Source: Wikipedia
Title: Overtoun House
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overtoun_House

8. Source: Wikipedia
Title: Survey of Scottish Witchcraft
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Survey_of_Scottish_Witchcraft

9. Source: Wikipedia
Title: Lennox Castle
Link:https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lennox_Castle

10. Source: clydesider.org
Title: remembering the accused witches of scotland
Link:https://www.clydesider.org/remembering-the-accused-witches-of-scotland/

11. Source: wikishire.co.uk
Link:https://wikishire.co.uk/wiki/Dunbartonshire

12. Source: historicenvironment.scot
Link:https://www.historicenvironment.scot/visit/all/dumbarton-castle/history-and-stories/

13. Source: app-hes-pubs-prod-neu-01.azurewebsites.net
Title: HES Publications Dumbarton Castle
Link:https://app-hes-pubs-prod-neu-01.azurewebsites.net/api/file/48124661-f9d2-4792-9f83-afc7011e7c35

14. Source: spookyisles.com
Title: haunting of dumbarton castle
Link:https://www.spookyisles.com/haunting-of-dumbarton-castle/

15. Source: dumbartoncastle.co.uk
Link:https://www.dumbartoncastle.co.uk/the-french-prison

16. Source: libraryblogs.is.ed.ac.uk
Title: wicked witches
Link:https://libraryblogs.is.ed.ac.uk/statacc/2016/10/31/wicked-witches/

17. Source: witches.hca.ed.ac.uk
Link:https://witches.hca.ed.ac.uk/

18. Source: witches.hca.ed.ac.uk
Link:https://witches.hca.ed.ac.uk/trial/T/LA/508

19. Source: portal.historicenvironment.scot
Link:https://portal.historicenvironment.scot/apex/f?p=1505%3A300%3A%3A%3A%3A%3AVIEWTYPE%2CVIEWREF%3Adesignation%2CGDL00306

20. Source: sbs.com.au
Link:https://www.sbs.com.au/news/dateline/article/dog-suicide-bridge-why-do-so-many-pets-keep-leaping-into-a-scottish-gorge/rel3aowgr

21. Source: science.howstuffworks.com
Title: dog suicide bridge
Link:https://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/unexplained-phenomena/dog-suicide-bridge.htm

22. Source: loch-lomond-waterfront.co.uk
Title: Loch Lomond Waterfront Loch Lomond Ghosts and Monsters
Link:https://www.loch-lomond-waterfront.co.uk/blog/loch-lomond-ghosts-monsters/

23. Source: portal.historicenvironment.scot
Title: Historic Environment Scotland BALLOCH CASTLE (LB123)
Link:https://portal.historicenvironment.scot/apex/f?p=1505%3A300%3A%3A%3A%3A%3AVIEWTYPE%2CVIEWREF%3Adesignation%2CLB123

24. Source: list.co.uk
Link:https://list.co.uk/news/ghost-hunting-in-loch-lomond-28978

25. Source: paranormaldatabase.com
Title: Paranormal Database The Paranormal Database
Link:https://www.paranormaldatabase.com/lowlands/dumbdata.php

26. Source: scottishmaritimemuseum.org
Title: Scottish Maritime Museum DENNY TANK AT THE SCOTTISH
Link:https://www.scottishmaritimemuseum.org/denny-tank-at-the-scottish-maritime-museum-recognised-as-one-of-uks-most-important-sites-of-transport-heritage/

27. Source: goindustrial.co.uk
Title: Go Industrial About the museum
Link:https://www.goindustrial.co.uk/museum/scottish-maritime-museum/visitor-info/details/about-the-museum-scottish-maritime-museum

28. Source: portal.historicenvironment.scot
Link:https://portal.historicenvironment.scot/apex/f?p=1505%3A300%3A%3A%3A%3A%3AVIEWTYPE%2CVIEWREF%3Adesignation%2CLB4354

29. Source: buildingsatrisk.org.uk
Title: Buildings at Risk Register Buildings at risk
Link:https://www.buildingsatrisk.org.uk/details/896680

30. Source: heritagefund.org.uk
Link:https://www.heritagefund.org.uk/print/pdf/node/82002

31. Source: c-change.org.uk
Title: C-Change History and Present
Link:https://c-change.org.uk/history-and-present-lennox-castle-stories/

32. Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/RealCounties/photos/welcome-to-the-county-of-argyll-a-land-of-soaring-mountains-dramatic-peninsulas-/1089843243299242/

33. Source: visionofbritain.org.uk
Link:https://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/place/17472

34. Source: heritagefund.org.uk
Title: mapping scotlands accused witches through open data
Link:https://www.heritagefund.org.uk/news/mapping-scotlands-accused-witches-through-open-data

35. Source: heritagefund.org.uk
Title: remembering lennox castle hospital
Link:https://www.heritagefund.org.uk/projects/remembering-lennox-castle-hospital

36. Source: west-dunbarton.gov.uk
Link:https://www.west-dunbarton.gov.uk/libraries/archives-family-history/archives-collections

37. Source: west-dunbarton.gov.uk
Title: overtoun house
Link:https://www.west-dunbarton.gov.uk/leisure-parks-events/museums-and-galleries/collections/buildings/castles-and-country-houses/castles-and-country-houses-dumbarton/overtoun-house

38. Source: youtube.com
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SpfvRJbmkw&vl=en

39. Source: flickr.com
Title: Dumbarton Castle
Link:https://www.flickr.com/photos/joesonoftherock/52753028902

40. Source: wikishire.co.uk
Title: Historic Counties Standard
Link:https://wikishire.co.uk/wiki/Historic_Counties_Standard

41. Source: paranormaldatabase.com
Link:https://www.paranormaldatabase.com/reports/museum.php?pageNum_paradata=1

42. Source: paisleysenchantedthreads.co.uk
Title: the places
Link:https://www.paisleysenchantedthreads.co.uk/the-story/the-places/

43. Source: piningforthewest.co.uk
Title: dumbarton castle
Link:https://piningforthewest.co.uk/tag/dumbarton-castle/

44. Source: weewalkingtours.com
Title: dumbarton castle
Link:https://www.weewalkingtours.com/post/dumbarton-castle

45. Source: spookyisles.com
Link:https://www.spookyisles.com/tag/dunbartonshire/

46. Source: historicenvironment.scot
Link:https://www.historicenvironment.scot/visit-a-place/places/dumbarton-castle/history/

47. Source: portal.historicenvironment.scot
Link:https://portal.historicenvironment.scot/apex/f?p=1505%3A300%3A%3A%3A%3A%3AVIEWTYPE%2CVIEWREF%3Adesignation%2CLB43222

48. Source: brownsignblogging.com
Link:https://brownsignblogging.com/scottish-maritime-museum-dumbarton/

49. Source: atlasobscura.com
Title: overtoun bridge
Link:https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/overtoun-bridge

50. Source: reddit.com
Title: Lennox Castle Hospital
Link:https://www.reddit.com/r/AbandonedPorn/comments/doo1ul/lennox_castle_hospital_scotland/

Additional References

51. Source: visitscotland.com
Link:https://www.visitscotland.com/nl-nl/things-to-do/attractions/castles/haunted

52. Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/groups/510491645825101/posts/1398824880325102/

53. Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/HauntedScotlandInvestigates/posts/after-our-lennox-castle-video-former-staff-locals-and-families-all-kept-telling-/1357373256422399/

54. Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/groups/lovetovisitscotland/posts/25799389549760635/

55. Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/scotdrone/posts/balloch-castle-at-the-south-shores-of-loch-lomond-this-grand-19th-century-catego/1383940790086174/

56. Source: trove.scot
Link:https://www.trove.scot/place/42493

57. Source: lochlomond-trossachs.org
Link:https://www.lochlomond-trossachs.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Boturich-Survey-of-Gardens-and-Designed-Landscapes.pdf

58. Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/andythehighlander/videos/culross-is-full-of-ghost-stories-heres-one-about-the-man-in-the-funny-collarhave/1957913121667984/

59. Source: scoto.co.uk
Link:https://www.scoto.co.uk/denny-ship-model-experiment-tank/

60. Source: undiscoveredscotland.co.uk
Link:https://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/dumbarton/dumbartoncastle/index.html

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