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Forfar » Lifestyle And Shopping » Auctions
Forfar Auctions
Everybody loves to buy and sell valuables at Auction and hunt for bargains so why not check out the UFindUs Auction directory for a vast range of auctions at various venues around the country where you can buy and sell almost anything you wish. If you want quality, a professional service and value for money then please browse the listings here at the UFindUs Auctions directory. The directory can provide you with auctions dealing with a wide variety of categories so that it is easier for you to seek the products and goods you are wishing to buy or which would be the most suitable auction for you to sell your valuables. All of the auctions are lead by qualified auctioneers so you can rest assure that you can find the product you want at reasonable prices and that the goods you are selling are kept secure until they are auctioned.
About Forfar - show infohide info
Forfar is a town of approximately 13,500 people, located in the unitary authority of Angus in Scotland. It is the district capital and administrative centre of Angus and was the county capital of the former counties of Angus and its predecessor, Forfarshire. The town is also the market town for the farms of Strathmore in central Angus. The town is extremely old. According to Hector Boece, Pictish chiefs met at a castle by Forfar loch to plan how best to repel the Romans who invaded on several occasions between the first and fourth centuries AD. The town is located just off the main A90 Perth to Aberdeen road, which now bypasses the town but once passed through the town. The town had a railway station until 1967 when it closed as part of the Beeching cuts. It was located on the main line of the Caledonian Railway from Glasgow to Aberdeen, which was the furthest north link in the chain of the West Coast Main Line from London. Lines also went to Dundee, Arbroath, Brechin and Kirriemuir. There was a major locomotive shed here too, which is still standing today but appears to be used for industrial purposes. Some bridges and cuttings still survive as well as the site of the goods station, which was also the town's original railway station before the one near the county buildings was built.
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