Need a Data Recovery? - Follow the simple steps below!

Step 1

 

3 Send your Hard Disk to Salvation Data, 105 Upper Lisburn Road, Belfast, BT10 0LG

 

3Send us your Hard Drive. Make sure to include your name and address inside package.

 

 

Step 2

 

We will Recover your Data from your PC or Mac Hard Disk for 249.99+vat within 24-72 Hours not Weeks! We offer the best value service within UK.

Step 3

 

3 You verify the data via email or telephone.

3We will let you decide what method you want the data backed up.

3 We dispatch data to you on a next day service

Our Address: Salvation Data 105 Upper Lisburn Road, Belfast BT10 0LG Email us 24x 7 at sales@salvationdata.co.uk

 

Maxwelltown Data Recovery


Maxwelltown

Maxwelltown (Scottish Gaelic: Ceann Drochaid) was formerly a burgh of barony and police burgh in the county of Kirkcudbrightshire in south west Scotland. In 1928 Maxwelltown was merged into Dumfries.

Maxwelltown lies to the west of the River Nith. The river was formerly the boundary of Kirkcudbrightshire and Dumfriesshire. Maxwelltown was a hamlet known as Bridgend up until 1810, in which year it was erected into a burgh of barony under its present name. Maxwelltown comprises several suburbs such as Summerhill, Troqueer, Janefield, Lochside, Lincluden, Sandside and Summerville.

The oldest remaining building within the Dumfries urban conurbation is on the Maxwelltown side of the Nith, Lincluden Abbey. Queen of the South football ground is also on the Maxwelltown side. Some of the most notable local players to have played for the club are from the same side of the Nith, Ian Dickson, Billy Houliston and Ted McMinn.[1] Other buildings of note are the former Dumfries Mill, now the Robert Burns Centre Museum and in the evenings becoming a Film Theatre, Dumfries Museum and observatory up on the hill, the Sinclair Memorial, the former Dominican Convent of St Benedict, Dumfries Prison and the former Maxwelltown Court House. Maxwelltown railway station in the Summerhill area on the Castle Douglas and Dumfries Railway closed in 1965.


 

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