Castlecary
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This article is about the village near Cumbernauld in Scotland, for the village in Somerset see Castle Cary.
Castlecary is a small village on the border between the North Lanarkshire and Falkirk council areas in Scotland. Within the vicinity of the new town of Cumbernauld, Castlecary is like many other settlements in the area tied to the Roman history of Scotland, with the route of the Antonine Wall passing very close to the village. A Roman camp existed at Castlecary, first being constructed around the year 80 AD possibly during the fourth campaign season of governor Gnaeus Julius Agricola. The Roman fort was excavated in 1902 and found to have probably been devastated by the 2nd Century.
There is little in the village today which is sited to the west of the A80 road and south of the Forth and Clyde canal, save for the local Castlecary House Hotel and Castlecary Bowling Green, which was opened in 1932. The nearby Castlecary brickworks in Allandale at one stage provided local employment, but the site is now derelict and awaiting redevelopment. One suggested use of this site has been the construction of a new "park and ride" railway station, which will be called Allandale. It had been previously suggested that the station be called Castlecary, but representations were made to the scheme's sponsors not to call it this given the existence of a Castle Cary station in Somerset and the potential for confusion between the two.
There was previously a Castlecary railway station but it is now closed. This was the site of a rail accident on December 10, 1937, when two trains collided with one another. The accident cost the lives of 35 people, with a further 179 injured.
Castlecary also lends its name to a viaduct which crosses the A80. These are commonly known as the "Castlecary Arches".
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