Wolfhill

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Wolfhill is a small village in Perthshire with a population of 316 (2001 Census). Formerly known as Carolina, it was given the nickname of "Snipetown" many years ago by locals, owing to the high numbers of lapwings that used to inhabit the area.

The village is near the source of the Burrelton Burn and lies between the Sidlaw Hills and the River Tay, 2 miles (3 km) north east of Guildtown and 7 miles (11 km) north-east of Perth.

In close proximity to Wolfhill are many examples of pre-historic standing stones. One of the best-known sites in folklore is "The Witches' Stane" located between Wolfhill and St Martins. According to local legend, this was the stone to which Macbeth's witches were chained, and it does indeed bear chain marks! "MacBeth's Castle" (actually the ruin of a Roman fort) can be found at the nearby village of Collace, near the Council Quarry on the Sidlaws.

It is also said that the last wolf in Scotland was killed in Wolfhill but many other villages across the country lay claim to the same interesting story. There is no doubt that wolves certainly did inhabit the area at one time. The monks of nearby Coupar Angus Abbey, who formerly owned the land, stipulated in certain mid-16th-century lease agreements recorded in the document known today as the Rent Book of Coupar-Angus Abbey (Rogers 1880; pages 251, 262) that tenants were required to "... sustene and nwrice ane leche of hundis for tod and wolf.." – that is to say, "...sustain and nourish a leash of hounds for (hunting) fox and wolf..".