FRASERBURGH
We are a group of Lads n Lassies from Fraserburgh who love to follow Scotland either Home or Away.You will usually find us drinking in our local the Elizabethan Bar.
The town had an early start, being chartered in 1546, and was already in use as a harbour before the first stone pier was built here in 1576 by Sir Alexander Fraser. This was the start of extensive work on the harbour over the following centuries. Three years earlier Sir Alexander had also built a tower on Kinnaird Head, at the northern tip of Fraserburgh. Sir Alexander's name was no coincidence: the town he founded was named after him.
In 1787 the newly formed Lighthouse Board leased the tower on Kinnaird Head from the Fraser family and converted it into the Kinnaird Head light. This remained in use as a manned lighthouse until 1992, when it was passed by the Northern Lighthouse Board to Historic Scotland.

It has since formed a part of the attractive new Scottish Lighthouse Museum, housed in purpose-built premises at Kinnaird Head. It is well signposted from the centre of Fraserburgh and you know when you have arrived from the large numbers of buoys, lighthouses and other artefacts usually found in or near the sea. When you have visited the museum, the nearby Fraserburgh Heritage Centre is also well worth a look.

In 1894 there were over 800 fishing boats based in Fraserburgh: almost one for every ten people living here at the time. If you walk around Fraserburgh Harbour today you realise that the number of boats has shrunk, but also that their size has increased. Some of the very large fishing boats on view dwarf what you will see in most other Scottish fishing ports. You get a sense that some of these ships really mean business: it is only a shame that this is not an industry with brighter prospects in these days of quotas and overfishing.
Fraserburgh's harbour is wrapped around the east side of a strikingly handsome grey stone town. At its heart is the Mercat Cross in a busy square overlooked by the Saltoun Arms Hotel (and the Sweetie Shop) on one side, and the Tourist Information Centre on the other. The square lies at one end of the main shopping street.
Fraserburgh also retains elements of its time as a traditional old-fashioned seaside resort. These days it successfully caters for modern visitors wanting to look at the boats or the lighthouse museum, or the sea, the sand and the rocks.
About Fraserburgh