. • In
Aberlady,
East Lothian there was a Loupin' on stane with six steps. It figures in a 1935 photograph in the Valentine collection held by the St. Andrew's Photographic Archive. • The kirk of Saint Dodins (NT 2832 7261) at
Duddingston in
Edinburgh still has its Loupin-an-stane. • In front of
Jedburgh's Bank of Scotland branch, in the grounds, is the "Loupin' - on - stane". At one time, this was the house of one of
Sir Walter Scott’s friends, Sheriff Shortreed. • In the yard at the old
Shewalton Mill on the
River Irvine in
North Ayrshire is a glacial erratic boulder that was retained as a useful loupin on stane. • Outside the Old Person's Cabin in the main street of
Kilmaurs in
East Ayrshire is a large sandstone block which was a horse-block or Loupin'-on-stane. This large sandstone block also has a concavity in its upper surface which is reminiscent of the '
plague stones' which would be filled with
vinegar into which money could be placed either as gifts to the church or as gifts to the sick. It has possibly been reused, however no local traditions survive concerning it. An example of a plague stone used by lepers survives at
Greystoke village church in
Cumbria. • Outside the Cellars Inn at the seaside village of
Maidens in
South Ayrshire were a set of Loupin stanes which are said to have been used by
Robbie Burns. •
Oxnam in the
Scottish Borders has a loupin stane outside the kirk. • On the shores of
Loch Lomond, this old priory is the scene of a curse, for after the
Battle of Culloden in 1746, where Bonnie Prince Charlie had his Jacobite uprising quashed, the
Marquess of Tullibardine fled for his life. He came to
Ross Priory and asked James Buchanan, 5th of Ross, for a safe house. James however secretly sent word to
Dumbarton Castle and King George’s soldiers duly arrived and took him away as a prisoner. The Marquess called to Buchanan with a curse
There will be Murrays on the Braes of Atholl land when there’s ne’er a Buchanan at the Ross. In fulfilment of that curse, all three sons of that marriage died before their father- the last of them breaking his neck at the “loupin’ stane” at the front door. • The old village of Rossie in what is now
Perth and Kinross, was demolished by the 7th
Earl of Kinnaird about 1795 when constructing a park for Rossie Priory. All that remains are the parish church, a fine market cross which stood in the centre of the village and a stone called the 'Loupin-on Stane' at Map reference: NO 2921 3072. The Loupin-on stane formerly stood by the village inn door. • At
Mertoun Kirk, beside the driveway up to the church, is a red sandstone loupin an stane with a set of steps up the back allowing the rider to come forward some 4 feet above ground level. Unusually it has a side wall, acting as a 'hand rail', to help the person mounting. • The
Treaty Stone in
Limerick,
Ireland originally served as a mounting block for horses. • In Minnigaff,
Dumfries & Galloway, a
louping-on is illustrated by MacGibbon & Ross as standing next to a market cross which bore a sun-dial. • At
Walton-on-the-Hill in Lancashire the old church font was set up as a mounting stone outside the nearby public house. • At
Chollerton in Northumberland a fine example stands by the churchyard gate. • Marnock Old Kirk (
Aberdeenshire) has a loupin-on stane just outside the kirkyard wall and probably dates from around 1780. • The poet
Walt Whitman's house in
Camden, New Jersey (USA) has a stone mounting block near the curb. It is engraved with the initials "W.W." in the village of
Sleepy Hollow, New York (USA). == References ==