Sanquhar
Sanquhar is a town on the River Nith in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. It lies north of Thornhill and west of Moffat. It is a former Royal Burgh. Sanquhar is remarkable for its small post office, developed in 1712 and held to be the oldest working post office on the planet. It was also the place where the Covenanters, who opposed episcopalisation of the church, signed the Sanquhar Declaration renouncing their obligation to the King, an event celebrated by a monolith generally street. The church of St Brides consists of a memorial to James Crichton, a 16th-century polymath. The damages of Sanquhar Castle stand close-by. Nithsdale Wanderers, the neighborhood group, were formed in 1897. In 1924-- 25, Wanderers won the Scottish Division Three.