The village now features a lead mining museum and industrial equipment from the 18th century and is a popular
tourist destination. Wanlockhead is on the
Southern Upland Way, a walking trail that traditionally starts at
Portpatrick on the west coast, in Dumfries & Galloway, and finishes some away at
Cockburnspath on the east coast, in the Scottish Borders. The village is also the home of the highest pub in Scotland, the Wanlockhead Inn, which opened in 2003; an earlier pub on a track rising from the other side of the main road through the village was considerably higher, but closed in the late 1990s. The village is the setting for the
BBC television drama series
Hope Springs.
Wanlockhead library Wanlockhead Miners' Library is the second-oldest subscription library in Great Britain and was established on 1 November 1756 with 32 male members who mainly funded the purchase of the books, etc.; a contribution was also made by mining companies who were keen to encourage such acts of 'self-improvement' amongst the miners. The Duke of Buccleuch, as the land owner, was a major patron of the library. The library was essential in facilitating a level of educational achievement that allowed some miners and their children to escape the toil of mine work. The school housed the library at first, but as the number of books increased, it became necessary in 1787 to move the library to a cottage given for this express purpose by the mine overseers. However the cottage was a small one and it was found to be necessary to construct a larger building. The number of books purchased through subscription eventually rose to over 2,000 and in 1851 a new library was built and survives to this day. In 1974 the Wanlockhead Museum Trust took over the running of the library. The Miners' Library became a
Recognised Collection of National Significance in October 2007.
Meadowfoot cemetery This lies approximately from the village and dates from 1751. Before Wanlockhead had its own graveyard, coffins had to be transported along a typical
corpse road the 8 miles (13 km) to the nearest graveyard, which was at
Sanquhar. William Philip Minder who died on 2 April 1751 aged just 10 months was the first burial at the newly opened burial site. == Beam engine ==