Innerleithen
Pitlochry is a burgh in the county of Perthshire in Scotland, pushing the River Tummel. It is administered as part of the council location of Perth and Kinross, and has a population of 2,776, according to the 2011 census. It is greatly a Victorian town, which turned into a tourist resort after Queen Victoria and Prince Albert saw the location in 1842 as well as got a highland estate at Balmoral, and the arrival of the train in 1863. It remains a prominent tourist hotel today and also is especially understood for its Pitlochry Festival Theatre, salmon ladder and also as a centre for hillwalking, bordered by mountains such as Ben Vrackie as well as Schiehallion. It is prominent as a base for trainer vacations. The community has kept several stone Victorian structures, and also the high street has an uncommon period cast iron canopy over one side.