Kirk Yetholm ('kirk yet-ham') is a village in the Scottish Borders region of Scotland, 8 miles (13 kilometres) southeast of Kelso and less than 1 mile (2 kilometres) west of the border. The first mention is of its church in the 13th century. Its sister town is Town Yetholm which lies 1⁄2 mile (800 metres) across the Bowmont Water. The population of the two villages was recorded as 591 in the 2001 census.[1]
^Scotland's Census Result OnLine Archived 2012-03-22 at the Wayback Machine
KirkYetholm ('kirk yet-ham') is a village in the Scottish Borders region of Scotland, 8 miles (13 kilometres) southeast of Kelso and less than 1 mile...
Town Yetholm ('town yet-ham') is a small village in the Scottish Borders in the valley of the Bowmont Water opposite KirkYetholm. The town colours are...
over a distance of around 268 miles (431 km) from Edale, England, to KirkYetholm, Scotland, along the Pennine Way. Participants are allowed seven days...
in Scotland in May 1540. Patrick was the first recorded Gypsy King at KirkYetholm. Along with seven other Gypsies he was "sentenced to be transported to...
through the Yorkshire Dales and Northumberland National Park and ends at KirkYetholm, just inside the Scottish border. The path runs along the Pennine hills...
Yetholm is the parish that contained the villages of KirkYetholm and Town Yetholm in the east of the former county of Roxburghshire, nowadays in the Scottish...
Isles, is in Edale, in the Peak District, while the other end is at KirkYetholm, in the Southern Uplands of Scotland. The southern part of the Peak District...
include Cessford and Eckford to the west; Linton to the north; Town Yetholm and KirkYetholm to the east; and Hownam and Mowhaugh to the south. The place-name...
long-distance footpath crosses the three hills on its route from nearby Edale to KirkYetholm in Scotland. Kinder Scout featured on the BBC television programme Seven...
goods and selling the items chiefly in Northumberland while based in KirkYetholm in Roxburghshire. By 1874, these Gypsies were commented on as "Having...
the northernmost few miles of the Pennine Way, before the descent into KirkYetholm. The Cheviot was formed when melting in the crust over 390 million years...
trail between KirkYetholm in the Scottish Borders and Cape Wrath in the far north of the Scottish Highlands. The trail starts in KirkYetholm, at the end...
Romanichal. In the 1860s, John's nominal descendant, Esther Faa Blythe of KirkYetholm, used a tinsel coronet with the Scottish thistle. Several 15th-century...
from Fort William The Scottish National Trail, 460 mi (740 km) from KirkYetholm on the Scottish border. Cape Wrath is also the turning point for the...
northernmost leg of the Pennine Way runs from Byrness in England to KirkYetholm in Scotland. It is the longest, and most exposed, on the whole of the...
Southern Upland Way, to Melrose, and St. Cuthbert's Way, from Melrose to KirkYetholm, and on to the Anglo-Scottish border via the Pennine Way. In England...
expedition he returned to Scotland to manage his family estates at Niddrie and Yetholm, which he had recently inherited. The coal mines of Niddrie were highly...
Innerleithen: Standard Bearer (and Lass) Jedburgh: Callant Kelso: Kelsae Laddie KirkYetholm, Scottish Borders: Bari Gadgi and Bari Manushi Kirkcudbright: Cornet...