[Cramond.
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OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH.
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has been erected by the duke near it, at the foot of
the Granton Road, and on the opposite side of the
way are the Custom-house and other edifices, the
nucleus of an expanding seaport and suburb.
The stone used in the construction of' the pier
was chiefly quamed from the duke's adjacent property,
and the engineers were Messrs. Walker and
Burgess of London. The length of the pier is
'1,700 feet, and its breadth is from 80 to 160 feet.
Four pairs of jetties, each running out go feet, were
designed to go off at intervals of 350 feet, and two
slips, each 325 feet long, to facilitate the shipping
and loading of cattle.
A strong high wall, with a succession of thoroughfares,
runs along the centre of the entire esplanade.
A light-house rises at its extreme point, and displays
a brilliant red light. All these works exhibit such
massive and beautiful masonry, and realise their
object so fully, that every patriotic beholder must
regard them in the light of a great national benefit.
The depth of the water at spring tides is twentynine
feet. By the 7th William IV., c. 15, the Duke
of Buccleuch is entitled to levy certain dues on
passengers, horses, and carriages.
Eastward of this lies a noble breakwater more
than 3,000 feet in length; westward of it lies
another, also more than 3,000 feet in length, forming
two magnificent pools-one 1,000 feet in
breadth, and the other averaging 2,500.
At the west pier, or breakwater, are the steam
cranes, and the patent slip which was constructed
in the year 1852 ; since that time a number of
vessels have been built at Granton, where the first
craft was launched in January, 1853, and a
considerable trade in the repair of ships of all
kinds, but chiefly steamers of great size, has been
carried on.
Through the efforts of the Duke of Buccleuch
and Sir John Gladstone a ferry service was established
between the new piers of Granton and
Burntisland, and they retained it until it was taken
over by the Edinburgh and Northern, afterwards
called the Edinburgh, Perth, and Dundee Railway
Company, which was eventually merged in the
North British Railway.
Westward of the west pier lie some submerged
masses, known as the General's Rocks, and near
them one named the Chestnut.
CHAPTER XXXVII.
THE ENVIRONS OF EDINBURGH.
Cmmond-Origin oh the Name-Cramond of that Ilk-Ancient Charters-Inchmickery-Lord Cramand-Barnton-Gogar and its Propfieto-
Saughton Hall-Riccarton.
WITHIN a radius of about five miles from the
Castle are portions of the parishes of Cramond,
Liberton, Newton, Lasswade, Colinton, and 'Duddingstone,
and in these portions are many places
of great historical and pictorial interest, at which
our remaining space will permit us only to glance.
Two miles and a half westward of Granton lies
Cramond, embosomed among fine wood, where the
river Almond, which chiefly belongs to Edinburghshire,
though it rises in the Muir of Shotts, falls
into the Firth of Forth, forming a small estuary
navigable by boats fo; nearly a mile.
Its name is said to be derived from cmr, a fort,
and avon, a river, and it is supposed to have been,
from a disinterred inscription, the Alaterva of the
Romans, who had a station here-the Alauna of
Ptolemy. Imperid medals, coins, altars, pavements,
have been found here in remarkable
quadtities; and a bronze strigil, among them, is
now preserved in the Museum of Antiquities. On
the eastern bank of the river there lay a Roman
mole, where doubtless galleys were moored when
the water was deeper. Inscriptions have proved
that Cramond was the quarters of the 11. and
XX. Legions, under Lolliiis LJrbicus, when forming
the Roman rampart and militaryroad in the second
century-relics of the temporary dominion of Rome
in the South Lowlands.
According to Boece and 'Sir John Skene, Constantine
IV., who reigned in 994, was slain here
in battle by Malcolm lI., in 1002, and his army
defeated, chiefly through the wind driving the sand
into the eyes of his troops.
In after years, Cramond-or one-half thereofbelonged
ecclesiastically to the Bishops of Dunkeld,
to whom Robert Avenel transferred it, and here
they occasionally resided. There was a family
named Cramond of that ilk, a son of which became
a monk in the Carmelite monastery founded
at Queensferry early in the fourteenth century by
Dundas of that ilk, and who died Patriarch of
Antioch.