Alva (Allamhagh in
Gaelic) is a small town in
Clackmannanshire, set in the
Central Lowlands of
Scotland. It is one of a number of towns situated immediately to the south of the
Ochil Hills, collectively referred to as the
Hillfoots Villages or simply The Hillfoots. Alva had a resident population of 5,
181 at the
2001 census but has since been revised to 4,960 in
2006.
During the
Industrial Revolution, Alva developed as a textile manufacturing centre and the woollen mills provided employment for locals and migrant workers to the area.
The Mill Trail Centre, next to
Cochrane Park, houses permanent exhibitions about the history of the old woollen industry and the experiences of the many people employed in the industry.
On the site of the town's post office there used to be an old weaving shed, which was rented out to
William Nicholl and Son, a locally famous cabinet maker and upholster. This shed was also haunted by the sounds of looms spinning on the uninhabited first floor.
Alva lies right at the foot of the Ochil Hills. The
Ochil Fault, movement of which gave rise to the steep southern scarp of the
Ochils, coincides approximately with the old road along the base of the hills. The rock beneath the carse in this area is carboniferous.
The town is situated on slightly higher ground than the surrounding carse, being on two overlapping alluvial fans, made up of material deposited by the Carnaughton
Glen and Alva Glen burns. The spectacular Alva Glen cuts into the Ochils immediately north of the town. Alva
Burn flows from the glen, through Alva, and into the
River Devon.
To the east of Alva Glen, and parallel to it, is the
Silver Glen, where silver was mined at one time.[4] In the
19th century coal was mined at the
Caroline Pit to the south of the town beside the River Devon, and has been mined in the higher ground to the south for a much longer period.[citation needed] A more recent attempt, the
Glenochil Colliery, was not a success, and the site is now a prison.
Alva has many shops, three
Christian places of worship: a small but growing Baptist fellowship, a well established
Church of Scotland and
St John Vianney Roman Catholic; a few pubs, a small library and a medical practice. There are two large parks -
Johnstone Park and Cochrane Park, which contains the local hall (
Cochrane Hall). Every second Saturday in July, Johnstone Park is host to the
Famous Alva
Games, the last highland games event in Clackmannanshire. The McArthur Braes, at the foot of Alva Glen, was once a formal park that has fallen into neglect; it is now being regenerated.
The town has both a primary school and a secondary school.
Alva Academy takes pupils from several primary schools in the Hillfoots area.
The school was relocated on a new campus early in 2009.
The new Alva Academy has been built at the end of
Greenhead, a street on the south-east side of the town
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alva,_Clackmannanshire
- published: 19 Feb 2012
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