Fochabers is a village in the Parish of Bellie, in Moray, Scotland, 10 miles (16 kilometres) east of the cathedral city of Elgin and located on the east bank of the River Spey. 1,728 people live in the town, which takes pleasure in an abundant music as well as cultural history. The town is additionally home to Baxters, the family-run producer of foodstuffs. The town owes its presence to Alexander Gordon, fourth Duke of Gordon (1743-1827). During the late-eighteenth century, throughout the Scottish Enlightenment, it was classy for landowners to discovered brand-new towns and towns; these can be recognised all over Scotland, since unlike their precursors they all have right, wide roads in primarily rectangle-shaped formats, a main square, and your homes built with their major altitudes alongside the street. The occupants gained from more large houses, as well as the Duke, it needs to be said, taken advantage of not having the hoi polloi living in hovels precisely the doorstep of Gordon Castle. Fochabers was founded in 1776, and also is just one of the very best examples of a planned town. It is a sanctuary, with a lot of the structures in the High Street noted as being of historic or architectural rate of interest, as is Bellie Kirk, the Roman Catholic church St. Mary's Fochabers, which houses works by significant craftsmen, and also the Episcopalian church, Gordon Chapel, which boasts the largest collection of Pre-Raphaelite stained glass in Scotland. Electricity was offered the town in 1906 by Charles Gordon-Lennox, 7th Duke of Richmond provided from a little hydro-electric producing station built in 1905 in the Quarters district on the financial institutions of the fast-flowing Spey. For a while in the mid-twentieth century, Fochabers was the residence of three duchesses - Hilda, Duchess of Richmond as well as Gordon; Ivy, Duchess of Portland and Helen, Duchess of Northumberland. In between 1893 as well as 1966 the village had a train station, Fochabers Community, although after 1931 this was open just to products. For nearly 3 decades, the people of Fochabers campaigned for a bypass, as the town is situated on the A96, the only direct route from Aberdeen to Inverness, as well as subsequently experiences serious web traffic troubles. Construction work with a bypass for Fochabers as well as the adjoining town of Mosstodloch began on 2 February 2010 as well as was finished in January 2012, at a cost of £31,500,000. The project was considerably delayed because of contrast regarding the proposed course, and discovery of a Neolithic negotiation on the site of the bypass.