- Barry, Angus
Barry, Angus is a small
village inAngus ,Scotland at the mouth of theRiver Tay . The recent completion of a bypass for the village on the road fromDundee toCarnoustie is something that was originally planned before the Second World War. There is a water mill operated by theNational Trust for Scotland . The village is served byBarry Links railway station . The village was formerly served by Barry primary school which closed in 2007.Barry Buddon Training Area
There are Ministry of Defence-owned
rifle range s and a large training area (Barry Buddon Training Area) on the nearbyDune s, adjacent toCarnoustie Golf Links . The history of its present function dates back to the mid-19th century when the area was used for at least 30 years by the Forfarshire Rifle Volunteers, theFife and Forfar Yeomanry the Panmure Battery of the Forfarshire Artillery Brigade, and aRoyal Naval Reserve Battery. In 1897 the land was sold by Lord Panmure to theWar Office for use as a military training area, for which it has been used ever since.Barry Buddon covers 2,300 acres (930 hectares), of which 600 acres (240 hectares) is
Foreshore , with at least an equal amount of sea danger area, due to the position of the ranges. The camp itself was redeveloped in the late 1990's, with accommodation for 507. It is one of the best equipped camps in Scotland, and as a result is commonly referred to by Service-personnel as "BarryButlins ". Typically, with all camps and facilities in use, about 30,000 personnel pass through annually from theBritish Army and the other arms of theBritish Armed Forces , such as45 Commando based inArbroath , as well as youth cadets and some civilian organisations. With 20 different ranges, it forms the largest rifle range complex in Scotland, although not all can be used simultaneously. The ranges were used in the1986 Commonwealth Games and are planned to be used in the2014 Commonwealth Games . The camp is primarily an infantry training area, and small arms, light and medium mortars, and some anti-tank weapons are fired. Due to the legacy of unexploded ordnance from years of military use, the public are restricted to the metalled roads and are free to walk along the beaches, when the red signal flags are down and red lights extinguished.Most of the training area is a
Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) and an EUSpecial Area of Conservation (SAC), as well as aSpecial Protection Area (SPA) for birds under the European Birds Directive.External links
* [http://www.army.mod.uk/ate/public/scotland.htm Army Training Estate]
ee also
*
List of places in Angus
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