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United Kingdom
Scotland
South Scotland
Loreburn

Lincluden Abbey Ruins – Dalswinton Barony Church loop from Dumfries

Routes
Road cycling routes
United Kingdom
Scotland
South Scotland
Loreburn

Lincluden Abbey Ruins – Dalswinton Barony Church loop from Dumfries

Easy

24

riders

Lincluden Abbey Ruins – Dalswinton Barony Church loop from Dumfries

01:53

42.7km

250m

Road cycling

Easy road ride. Great for any fitness level. Mostly well-paved surfaces and easy to ride. The starting point of the route is accessible with public transport.

Last updated: May 20, 2026

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After 961 m for 63 m

Waypoints

A

Start point

Train Station

Get Directions

1

992 m

Robert Burns House

Highlight • Historical Site

It was in this simple sandstone house in a quiet Dumfries street that Robert Burns, Scotland’s national poet, spent the last years of his life. He died here in 1796 at the age of just thirty seven. The house shows us how the poet and his family lived in the late eighteenth century, and is now a place of pilgrimage for Burns enthusiasts from around the world. The sales area has books, gifts and keepsakes, all with a Burns connection. Robert Burns' Mausoleum is only a short distance from Burns House in St Michael's Kirkyard. From Monday 25th March through to Monday 30th September 2024, the mausoleum will be opened for visits on Mondays to Saturdays at 11.15am and 2.15pm. No need to book, just turn up and a member of our team will show you in and share some of the history.

dgculture.co.uk/venue/robert-burns-house

Tip by

2

1.80 km

Devorgilla Bridge

Highlight • Bridge

One of the oldest standing bridges in Scotland crosses the River Nith in Dumfries. Devorgilla Bridge is also sometimes known as Devorgilla's Bridge or the Old Bridge and is named after Devorgilla, Lady of Galloway, the mother of King John Balliol.

All the land to the west of the River Nith traditionally formed part of Galloway, which only truly became part of Scotland during Alexander II's reign in the 1230s. Dumfries was therefore a frontier town for much of its early history and had grown up on the east side of a ford that provided the lowest crossing point of the River Nith. By 1186 the town was sufficiently well established to be made a Royal Burgh.

According to some sources the first bridge was built across the River Nith at Dumfries during the 1260s by Devorgilla, Lady of Galloway. No trace of this bridge has ever been found, and if it existed at all it seems very likely that it was made of wood.

There is rather more evidence for the immediate predecessor of the bridge you see today. Construction began on a stone bridge in about 1430, and a papal indulgence of 1432 recorded the Pope's approval for a call for subscribers to pay for the completion of the bridge. This bridge survived for a little under two centuries before being partially destroyed in a major flood in 1620 or 1621. Once more accounts differ, but it seems that the east half of the bridge was swept away and what was left might well have been severely damaged.

undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/dumfries/devorgillabridge/index.html

Tip by

3

4.08 km

Lincluden Abbey Ruins

Highlight • Monument

The Lincluden Collegiate Church is the ruins of a collegiate church in the Scottish town of Dumfries in the Council Area Dumfries and Galloway. In 1981 the building was included in the Scottish list of monuments in the highest monument category A.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

4

13.0 km

Waterfall

Highlight • Waterfall

15.8 km

Craigloft Wood

Forest

24.3 km

Crory Wood

Forest

7

27.3 km

Auldgirth Bridge

Highlight • River

Great sunset views over surrounding hills

Tip by

8

31.3 km

Dalswinton Barony Church

Highlight • Monument

Built in 1881 the church is one of the few remaining examples of ‘tin’ churches that were popular in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
The owner of the Dalswinton Estate at the time, Mrs McAlpine-Leny, was unhappy with the larger Kirkton Parish Kirk and so bought her own for Dalswinton. At the first service, 300 people attended!
These churches were made in kit form in Edinburgh and Glasgow and exported overseas as well as being used frequently in Scotland. Corrugated iron buildings were frequently used at this time in new and remote communities especially, due to the material’s quick and inexpensive qualities. The six-bay church has Gothic windows and a bellcote with a steep spire at the east gable. There is a small porch at the north-east corner. The interior of the church is timber-lined, and features original pitch-pine pews, pulpit and panelling, and has an open roof. A chancel was formed between a vestry and laird’s pew at the west end. Stained glass windows were added in 1950 and 1975. The earlier window is a one-light window of David, while the 1970s one is a semi-abstract window, with scenes of King David.

Tip by

B

42.7 km

End point

Train Station

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Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

34.4 km

2.93 km

2.62 km

2.23 km

441 m

< 100 m

Surfaces

39.8 km

2.13 km

624 m

< 100 m

< 100 m

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Elevation

Elevation

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Highest point (110 m)

Lowest point (0 m)

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Weather

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Saturday 11 July

23°C

13°C

-- %

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