Maybole
Maybole is a burgh of barony and cops burgh of South Ayrshire, Scotland. Pop. (2011) 4,760. It is positioned 9 miles (14 km) south of Ayr and also 50 miles (80 kilometres) southwest of Glasgow by the Glasgow and South Western Railway. Maybole has Middle Ages origins, obtaining a charter from Donnchadh, Earl of Carrick in 1193. In 1516 it was made a burgh of regality, although for generations it stayed under the suzerainty of the Kennedys, afterwards Earls of Cassillis as well as (later) Marquesses of Ailsa, the most effective household in Ayrshire. The Marquess of Ailsa lived at Cassillis House, simply outside Maybole until its sale in 2007. In the late seventeenth century, a census recorded Maybole was house to 28 "lords and landowners with estates in Carrick and beyond." In former times, Maybole was the resources of the area of Carrick, Scotland, and for long its particular feature was the family members estates of the barons of Carrick. Maybole Castle, a previous seat of the Earls of Cassillis, dates to 1560 and also still remains, although facets of the castle are considered as "of worry". The general public structures include the town-hall, the Ashgrove and the Lumsden fresh-air biweekly residences, and also the Maybole mix poorhouse. Maybole is a brief distance from the native home of Robert Burns, the Scots nationwide poet. Burns's mother was a Maybole resident, Agnes Brown. In the nineteenth century, Maybole came to be a centre of boot and also footwear manufacturing. Margaret McMurray (?? -1760), one of the last indigenous audio speakers of a Lowland dialect of Scottish Gaelic, is recorded to have lived at Cultezron (not to be confused with neighboring Culzean), a farm on the borders of Maybole.