Brora
Brora is a village in the eastern of Sutherland, in the Highland location of Scotland. Brora is a tiny commercial town, contending one-time a coal pit, boat building, salt frying pans, fish healing, lemonade manufacturing facility, the new Clynelish Distillery (in addition to the old Clynelish distillery which is currently called the Brora distillery, woollen mill, bricks as well as a rock quarry. The white sandstone in the Clynelish quarry belongs to the Brora Formation, of the Callovian as well as Oxfordian stages (previously Middle Oolite) of the Mid-Late Jurassic. Rock from the quarry was used in the construction of London Bridge, Liverpool Cathedral and Dunrobin Castle. When in operation, the coalmine was the most northern coalmine in the UK. Brora was the starting point in the north of Scotland to have electrical energy thanks to its wool sector. This difference triggered the neighborhood nickname of "Electric City" at the time. Brora also houses a baronial style clock tower which is a war memorial.