OS1/1/66/29

List of names as written Various modes of spelling Authorities for spelling Situation Description remarks
RIVER DON Don (The)
The Don
Don River
River Don
River Don
River Don
River Don
River Don
Fullarton's Gazetteer
Old Statistical Account
County Map
New Statistical Account
Guide to Donside
Mr. Alexander Watt
Mr. G. Cruikshanks
Mr. J. Christie
066 "A river in Aberdeenshire. It forms a sort of twin-stream to the Dee, and is next to that river in Aberdeenshire as regards at once basin, note, and magnitude, and resembles it also in possessing much volume, and much fine Scenery, with very little commercial importance; yet differs essentially from it in some great characters, and even presents some striking contrasts.
It rises on the skirts of Ben Avon, 6 miles west of Curgarff, amongst the mountains which bound Aberdeenshire on the South-west, at the head of Strath-Don, and which divide it from the head of Strath- Deveron in Banffshire. Its source is considerably lower than that of the Dee; the altitude is 1640 feet above sea-level. A great part of its run, though somewhat parallel to the Dee, and at no great distance from it, is through districts much less mountainous, and abounding far more in plains and expanded meadows; so that, instead of the impetuosity and fitfulness of the Dee, it displays a prevailing current of gentleness, calmness, and regularity. Running eastward in a very Sinuous career, through the whole breadth of the county, it flows into the German Ocean on the north side of Aberdeen. Its whole length of course is about 62 miles, though in a direct line from its source to its termination, the distance is only 41 miles. In its earliest stretches through the parish of Strath-Don, which it divides into two equal parts, it is joined on both sides by 7 or 8 burns, seperated from each other by considerable hills, and most of them running through deep hollows, and glens. The principal are the Einan and the Nochtie. All these burns abound with excellent trout; and salmon is even here very frequently found in the Don, at least towards the lower end of this parish. Turning northward, and dividing for a short distance the parish of Glenbucket from Migvie, it receives from the latter the Deskry, and from the former the Bucket. Then again flowing eastward, it passes through the parish of Towie, and winding northward, reinforced by other tributaries, round Gorieshill, it at once becomes remarkably enlarged near Westside; after which it resumes its eastern route, dividing various parishes, particularly Forbes and Alford, from the latter of which, on the south, it derives the waters of the Lochel, the most considerable tributary it has yet received. In passing hitherto through the high parts of the district of Alford, the Don flows through a narrow gullet amongst the western mountains, while its banks are now partly wooded. Perpetually changing its course to the north and even the west, to the east and then through Monymusk parish to the south, the next considerably tributary which there enlarges it is the Den burn from the south; when immediately it turns to the north again between Kenmay and part of Chapel-Garioch parishes, and arrives at a point a little to the south of the royal burgh of Inverury, where, in its northward bank stands the building formerly occupied as a Roman Catholic college of Aquhorties. This point is about 16 miles from the source of the river, and its vicinity constitutes, perhaps, the most interesting as well as important part of its whole course. Here, at the Bass, a conical mount of considerable elevation standing in the midst of the confluence, it is joined by its principal tributary, the River Urie, from the district of Strathbogie. The Don here very much increased by the water of the Urie, notwithstanding the previous diversion of a large portion of its waters into the Inverury Canal, flows southward from the Bass, between the parish
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Parish of Newhills

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CorrieBuidhe- Moderator, June Lobban

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