The line closed to passengers on 13 August 1948 the day after large scale flooding took out the bridge over the Teviot at Nisbet.
Scottish people | Scottish Gaelic | London, Midland and Scottish Railway | Scottish Premier League | Scottish Parliament | Scottish Cup | Scottish Borders | Scottish National Party | Scottish Football League | Member of the Scottish Parliament | Borders Group | London Scottish F.C. | Scottish Government | Royal Scottish National Orchestra | Scottish Power | Scottish Green Party | Scottish Enlightenment | Scottish Rite | Richard Wilson (Scottish actor) | Royal Scottish Academy | Reporters Without Borders | Scottish Opera | Scottish independence | Scottish Football Association | Scottish clan chief | Scottish clan | Wars of Scottish Independence | Scottish Women's Premier League Cup | Scottish Women's Football League Second Division Cup | Scottish Women's Football League First Division Cup |
Scion of the ancient Borders family of Nisbet of Nisbet House, near Duns, Berwickshire, Alexander Nisbet was a grandson of Adam Nisbet, an Edinburgh lawyer.
Nisbet, Robert A. Conservatism: Dream and Reality. University of Minnesota Press, 1986.
The Border Counties Railway was a railway line in Northumberland, England, with a small section in Roxburghshire, in the Borders region of Scotland.
The Broughton Gallery is an art gallery in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, in the village of Broughton.
Although associated with a club from the Scottish Borders, Melrose and several of his team emanated from the capital.
Crystal Rig Wind Farm is an operational onshore wind farm located on the Lammermuir Hills in the Scottish Borders region of Scotland.
EaStMAN connects universities and colleges to one another and to Janet in the Edinburgh, Stirling, West Lothian and Borders areas of Scotland.
Galashiels Baptist Church is located in the town of Galashiels, in the heart of the Scottish Borders.
Horsburgh Castle, also known as Horsbrugh Castle or Horsbrugh Tower, is a ruined tower house castle by the River Tweed, on the A72 road from Peebles to Galashiels, near Glentress in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland.
A visit to Japan on the way back from the Test series in Australia in 1895 inspired him to apply knowledge that he acquired there to estate of Stobo Castle, near Peebles, in the Scottish Borders.
In addition to his own original designs, Bunting has released collaborative collections with noted interior designers, including Geoffrey Bradfield, Amy Lau, Amanda Nisbet, Jiun Ho, Jan Showers, Kris Lajeskie, Neri&Hu, David Rockwell, and DB Kim.
The Manor Water is a river in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland.
The office was first mentioned in 1438, and the title is derived from the royal castle of Marchmont, an older name for Roxburgh Castle in the Scottish Borders.
Melrose Rugby Football Club, located and founded in the town of Melrose in the Scottish Borders in 1877, is one of the oldest rugby clubs in the world.
Newtongrange will soon see the return of the Waverley Line with a new station being built near Murderdean Road, giving rail access to the Borders, Edinburgh Waverley station and eventually Carlisle.
Major-General Nisbet Balfour (Dunbog, 1743 – 10 October 1823, Dunbog) was a British soldier in the American War of Independence and later a Scottish Member of Parliament (MP) in the British Parliament.
Nisbeth is one of the many alternate spellings of the Scottish surname Nisbet.
The Northumberland National Park covers a large area of Western Northumberland and borders the English county of Cumbria and the Scottish county of The Scottish borders.
The main territory in which the Oliver surname lived and exercised control was Jedforest, an indeterminate area situated south west and south of the Border town of Jedburgh.
In May 1367 he confirmed to the monks of Coldingham Priory by charter to the Prior and Convent of Durham, the church and manor of Edrom, and Nisbet, with the agreement of his wife.
Robert-Adam, who assumed the surnames of Christopher and then Nisbet-Hamilton.
The Quair Water is a tributary of the River Tweed in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland.
Nisbet's grandson Douglas Robert Hadow (1846–1865) was killed in a mountaineering accident a few hours after taking part in the first ascent of the Matterhorn.
Christine Rosemary Payne (born Christine Rosemary Charters, 19 May 1933 in Kelso, Scottish Borders, Scotland) is a female discus thrower, who represented Great Britain at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich.
It consists of the committee areas of Eildon, Cheviot and Teviot and Liddesdale (the former (1975—1996) local government districts of Roxburgh and Ettrick and Lauderdale) within the Scottish Borders council area.
The main origin of rugby tens is perhaps the abbreviated code of rugby sevens which originated in the Scottish Borders, and was very successfully exported to produce the Hong Kong Sevens, where it still runs, and is a great missionary force for rugby in Asia.
They found worthy successors in later years — Maxwell, Fraser, Clark, Nisbet, Hope, Dockrell, Patricia Broadfoot, Spencer, John Raven, Ian Deary.
:not to be confused with Hutton Castle in the Scottish Borders
The Sunday Sun is a regional Sunday newspaper in North East England, Cumbria and the Scottish Borders, published in Newcastle Upon Tyne by Trinity Mirror.
The inspiration for the novel was Wells's glimpse of May Nisbet, the daughter of the Times drama critic, in a bathing suit, when she came to visit at Sandgate, Wells having agreed to pay her school fees after her father's death.
Wauchope Forest is a forest on the Rule Water, in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, south of Hawick, and including the A6088, the A68 and the B6357, as well as Newcastleton, Bonchester Bridge, Hobkirk, Southdean, Hyndlee, Carter Bar, Abbotrule, Chesters, Scottish Borders.
Whitsome is a small rural village in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, on the B6437, near Duns, Fogo, Ladykirk, Leitholm and Swinton.