Home of the Mulberry Harbour
That Garlieston is a planned village is immediately obvious from the elegance of the North and South Crescents on the seafront; the 7th Earl of Galloway, following on from his father's building of Galloway House in 1745, developed the village in the 1760's. The harbour was once home to a large fishing fleet, and connected with the railway, introduced in 1876. At the north end of the magnificent sands was a rope-walk; beyond that, there is now a footpath around Eggerness point.
The village played a dramatic role in the Second World War, as the commemorative boulder on the Square tells, when it was the testing ground for the prototypes which eventually became the Mulberry Harbours, installed off Normandy to supply the advancing Allied troops in the Battle of France.
Beyond the harbour, southwards, a coastal path leads into the policies of Galloway House, where successive Earls of Galloway spent lavishly on trees and improvements to the estate. A walk through the Gardens leads to the remains of Cruggleton Castle, whose history is intertwined with the Scottish Wars of Independence, and the restored mediaeval Cruggleton Church. Watch for waders, cliff-nesting birds and falcons along the way. read more