Grantown-on-Spey is a small burgh in the Scottish Highlands founded in 1765, as a planned town on the River Spey with a population of 3,409 [1]. It lies at the northern edge of the Cairngorm mountains, about twenty miles south east of Inverness, and is in the traditional county of Inverness-shire. It possesses a small museum[2]. A sign in Linlithgow, Scotland. ... The Scottish Highlands are the mountainous regions of Scotland north and west of the Highland Boundary Fault. ... 1765 was a common year starting on Tuesday (see link for calendar). ... The River Spey is a river in Scotland that runs 107 miles (172 km) to the Moray Firth at Spey Bay, making it the second longest river in Scotland. ... The Cairngorms: Ben Macdhui seen from Carn aMhaim The Cairngorms refers to a mountainous region in the Eastern Scottish Highlands. ... Inverness (Inbhir Nis in Scottish Gaelic) is the only city in the Scottish Highlands. ... The traditional counties of Scotland are historic and cutural divisions of Scotland. ... Inverness-shire (Siorrachd Inbhir Nis in Gaelic) is one of the traditional counties of Scotland. ... A museum is typically a non-profit, permanent institution in the service of society and of its development, open to the public, which acquires, conserves, researches, communicates and exhibits, for purposes of study, education enjoyment, the tangible and intangible evidence of people and their environment. ...
Grantown on Spey-Accommodation in Grantown-Businesses in Grantown-Visitor Attractions in Grantown-salmon and trout fishing
Grantown on Spey is a fine example of a Georgian planned town, the brainchild of Sir James Grant, the local laird.
The River Spey is also justly famed as one of the premier salmon and trout fishing rivers in the country, and the location for numerous Speyside whisky distilleries.
Grantown on Spey lies at a height of 220m in Upper Speyside and is by far the largest settlement for some distance in any direction.
This was bypassed when a new bridge was built across the Spey to carry the military road from Corgarff Castle in Donside to Fort George in 1754.
The other strand leading to Grantown on Spey's creation dates back to about 1500 with the building of Ballo Castle on higher ground about a mile north of where Grantown on Spey is today.