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The Harbour and Waterfoot
Port Street branches off the High Street at Bridge House. It is
now the official Sustrans cycle route leading to the new cycle
bridge. Its imposing private houses belonging to port officials
and merchants are reminders of Annan's success in trade and shipbuilding.

Many of the old warehouses are gone, but the harbour quay has
been partially restored.
In the 18th and 19th Centuries Annan was a major point for emigration.
Waterfoot Road runs along the riverside merse to the remains
of the two piers where families caught boats for the New World. The
Burns Cairn, erected by Annan's Solway Burns Club, commemorates the fact
that Robert Burns as an exciseman patrolled the shore here.
(information
on the Solway Burns Club)
Shrimp boats still anchor in the Annan river mouth, and the
haaf net fishermen can often be seen standing out in the tide
for salmon and sea trout. The
views across the Solway are sensational - the Lake District
mountains to the south, here photographed at sunset, Criffel
to the west, and the Pennines to the south east.

There is
also a good view of the sandstone-faced embankment of the
old railway viaduct, built in 1865-9.
The metal
viaduct itself was demolished in 1934-5, but the embankment
still
provides a popular walk.
The
large boulder known as the Altar Stane, visited by the riders
at the annual Annan
Riding of the Marches, is just to the east of the
line of the viaduct and on the edge of the main channel of
the Solway. It marks the seaward boundary of the Royal Burgh.
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