Plean


title: "Plean" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["villages-in-stirling-(council-area)"] topic_path: "general/villages-in-stirling-council-area" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plean" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox UK place"]

FieldValue
countryScotland
official_namePlean
label_positiontop
static_image_nameThe Plean Tavern, Stirlingshire - geograph.org.uk - 160338.jpg
static_image_captionThe Plean Tavern on the town's Main Street
coordinates
population
population_ref()
os_grid_referenceNS835869
civil_parishSt. Ninians
unitary_scotlandStirling
lieutenancy_scotlandStirling and Falkirk
constituency_westminsterStirling and Strathallan
constituency_scottish_parliamentStirling
post_townSTIRLING
postcode_districtFK7
postcode_areaFK
dial_code01786
::

| country = Scotland | official_name = Plean | gaelic_name = | label_position = top | static_image_name = The Plean Tavern, Stirlingshire - geograph.org.uk - 160338.jpg | static_image_caption = The Plean Tavern on the town's Main Street | coordinates = | population = | population_ref = () | os_grid_reference = NS835869 | civil_parish = St. Ninians | unitary_scotland = Stirling | lieutenancy_scotland = Stirling and Falkirk | constituency_westminster = Stirling and Strathallan | constituency_scottish_parliament = Stirling | post_town = STIRLING | postcode_district = FK7 | postcode_area = FK | dial_code = 01786

Plean is a village, in the Stirling council area of central Scotland, located on the main A9 road from Falkirk. At the 2001 census, Plean had a population of 1,740. Plean has some historic buildings, some council houses and an estate.

Landmarks

Plean has a Church of Scotland Church with an attached graveyard, a petrol station, chip shop, a small clinic, small library, pub, pharmacy, cafe, Indian takeaway and three convenience stores. East Plean Primary School was formerly housed in a traditional building dating from 1874. Many of the original features of the building were retained in the refurbishment of the school, which was completed in summer 2000, including the addition of a purpose-built nursery. The school building was damaged beyond repair in November 2010 when a fire was deliberately started in a hut to the rear. The building was subsequently demolished and a new modern school is being built on the site. Andrew Stretton, 18, set fire to a cardboard box in a shed, but the blaze spread to the main building causing serious damage. Stretton was sentenced at Stirling and ordered to carry out 300 hours of community service, and put on probation for two years.

Plean Estate

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b9/The_ruins_of_Plean_House_-geograph.org.uk-_160341.jpg" caption="Ruins of Plean House in Plean Country Park"] ::

The Plean Estate was once owned by the Earl of Dunmore; he had sold it to the Robert Haldane who was already the owner of the Airthrey Estate in Stirling. It stayed in the Haldane family until it was sold in 1799 to Francis Simpson, a former captain with the East India Company.

Simpson's wife Jean Sophia Cadell, daughter of William Cadell of Banton, was only twenty-one when she died in 1806, she left behind two children for Simpson to look after; one son, William, and a daughter, Frances. In 1819, Francis built Plean House and the other estate buildings.

William Simpson's Home is a local charity based in Plean, established by Francis Simpson, providing residential social care for men with alcohol-related brain damage, and with underlying mental health illness.

Plean Country Park is located in Plean, in the grounds of the now-ruined Plean House. Entry is free and the park is maintained by Stirling Council. Nearby Plean Castle, or Plane Tower, was once a home of the Somerville family. It was restored from ruin twice in the twentieth century and is now a private house.

Notable people

Transportation

Plean railway station served the village from 1904 to 1956.

References

References

  1. {{Scottish settlement population citation
  2. "Comparative Population Profile for the Plean locality". Scotland's Census Results Online (SCROL).
  3. (7 November 2010). "East Plean primary school badly damaged by fire". STV.
  4. "Friends of Plean Country Park - Social History of Plean Estate".
  5. (2016-01-08). "Governor's House, William Simpson's Asylum, Plean, 1907".
  6. Edit, St Ninians Old Parish Church {{!}} powered by Church. "St Ninians Old Parish Church {{!}} From the past".
  7. (2010). "1800s care home to open to women".
  8. Salter, Mike, ''Castles of the Heartland of Scotland'', Folly (1994), 131.
  9. Holley, Duncan. (2003). "In That Number – A post-war chronicle of Southampton FC". Hagiology Publishing.
  10. (31 December 2013). "Statistics at boxrec.com". boxrec.com.

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