Newmilns
Newmilns as well as Greenholm is a tiny burgh in East Ayrshire, Scotland. It has a population of 3,057 people (2001 census) and also lies on the A71, around 7 miles east of Kilmarnock and also twenty-five miles southwest of Glasgow. It is situated in a valley where the River Irvine runs and, with the neighbouring towns of Darvel and Galston, forms an area known as the Upper Irvine Valley (locally described as The Valley). As the name suggests, the burgh exists in two components - Newmilns to the north of the river and Greenholm to the south. The river likewise separates the churches of Loudoun as well as Galston, which is why the burgh, although generally referred to as Newmilns, has kept both names. Of the mills themselves, bit now stays. The last in operation was Pate's Mill, which remained on Brown Street opposite the train station (contemporary Vesuvius building). Famous in Allan Ramsay's poem, "The Lass o Pate's Mill", it was knocked down in 1977 and all that currently continues to be becomes part of the mill's exterior wall surface. The only mill structure still undamaged can be located at the foot of Ladeside. Now used as housing, Loudoun Mill (formerly the Meal Mill/ Corn Mill of Newmilns) remained in usage from 1593 till it stopped creating dish in the 1960s. In 1970, the mill wheel was removed and the lade filled in, with the only remaining pointer of the site's previous usage being a motto, "No Mill, No Meal - JA 1914" etched on the external wall.