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About
Cullen
Cullen is an extremely attractive
town originally built around the mouth of the Burn of Deskford. When
seen from the sea it is framed from behind by higher ground carrying
a disused railway line over a series of spectacular viaducts.
The town is in two parts. Sandwiched between the sea wall on one
side, and the curve of the main road on the other is the fishing
village, Seatown. This is a unique collection of a couple of a
hundred small stone fishermen's cottages. At the seaward side they
turn their ends to the sea, which on this north-facing coast can be
much less placid than implied by the images on this page.
Wandering around Seatown is a slightly other-worldly experience. It
was obviously a planned community; but the plans were interpreted in
any number of slightly different ways as individual cottages were
built. One fascinating feature is the brightly-coloured appearance
of the render applied over the joins between the stones forming many
of the cottages, but not over the faces of the stones themselves,
producing an odd patch-work effect.
There are other examples of similar cottages elsewhere along this
coast, and other settlements with their own "Seatown", but nowhere
else have we found the effect to be quite so complete as here. A
wonderful place for a stroll on a quiet summer evening. The best
views of Seatown can be had from the footpath that now runs along
the old railway line on the hillside behind.
The "inland" side of Cullen stretches up an imposing main street
that continues from Seatown under the most easterly of the three
railway viaducts. Here you can find a collection of local services
and attractive small shops that service the local community: but
again no sign of the commercialisation that has elsewhere
overwhelmed attractive coastal settlements of this sort.
At the eastern end of Seatown, just below where the main road
emerges from its viaduct, is Cullen's harbour. Again, a relatively
quiet place that marks the junction between the Seatown's sandy
beach and the rockier seascape to the east. People enjoy this beach,
but most prefer the much larger expanses of sand to be found
immediately to the west of Cullen, and easily walkable from it.
Cullen has a long history. It was established by 1189 and a church
was built in 1236. Its wealth in the 1700s was built on textiles,
and thread making in particular. However the main period of growth
came with the herring boom in the 1800s. Seatown was built in the
1820s, close to the pier built by Thomas Telford in 1819.

This fishing heritage lies behind Cullen's main claim to fame: a
form of smoked haddock, potato and onion soup named after the town:
Cullen Skink. The slightly odd name comes from the Gaelic word for
"essence".
On Seafield Street as it heads uphill from the viaduct is the
wonderful Ice Cream Shop, regarded by many as Scotland's best ice
cream shop.
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