Tranent is the largest of a string of villages in East Lothian in central Scotland, 9 miles east of Edinburgh city centre. In 2022 it had a population of 20,700. The other villages, also described here, include Prestonpans, Cockenzie, Longniddry and Port Seton.

Understand

edit

This area has been industrial since medieval times. Monks from nearby Newbattle Abbey mined coal here from the 13th century, and worked salt pans along the coast (hence "priest-town-pans", Prestonpans). There were also quarries, distilleries, breweries, tanneries, metal-working, potteries and brickworks. These all became uneconomic in the 20th century and the mining industry dwindled. Today the area is a commuter belt for Edinburgh.

Around Tranent is lowland and fertile, with good transport links along the coast and inland towards Berwick-upon-Tweed and Newcastle. In 1745 Prestonpans saw the first battle of Bonnie Prince Charlie's Jacobite rebellion.

Get in

edit
1745: the Redcoats flee Prestonpans

By road: vehicles approach on A1, and look for the turn-off onto the old road. Bicycles aren't allowed on the A1 so follow its old route, nowadays A199.

By bus: East Coast Bus 104 runs every 30 min from Edinburgh via Musselburgh, Wallyford and Tranent to Haddington. Bus 106 starts from Fort Kinnaird retail park then follows the same route from Musselburgh through Tranent to Haddington; change at Haddington for buses to Dunbar and Berwick-upon-Tweed. Bus 113 runs from Edinburgh via Musselburgh, Wallyford, Tranent and Ormiston to Pencaitland. There are night buses along these routes.

East Coast Bus 124 / X24 runs from Edinburgh along the coast via Musselburgh, Prestonpans, Aberlady and Gullane to North Berwick.

Night buses run from Edinburgh between midnight and 4AM. N26 runs nightly, hourly across the city from Clerwood to Musselburgh, Prestonpans and Seton Sands. N106 runs after midnight F Sa to Musselburgh, Wallyford, Tranent, Macmerry, Haddington, East Linton and Dunbar. N113 runs nightly after midnight to Musselburgh, Wallyford, Tranent and Ormiston. N114 runs F Sa after midnight to Musselburgh, Wallyford, Prestonpans, Aberlady, Dirleton, Gullane and North Berwick.

1 Prestonpans is the nearest railway station, 1½ miles northwest of Tranent. It has trains between Edinburgh and North Berwick hourly 7AM-11PM; all the others flash through non-stop, so from Newcastle you have to ride into Edinburgh then come out again. The station has ticket machines and a waiting room but no toilets. There are ramps to both platforms.

Get around

edit

Lothian Bus 26 runs every 30 min to Edinburgh from Tranent via Prestonpans, Musselburgh, Joppa, Meadowbank, Leopold Place, North St David Street and Haymarket (for airport tram and bus) then out to Clerwood in the western city.

Taxi firms in Tranent include AC's ( +44 131 665-5000), Tartan Taxis ( +44 1875 613171) and Premier Taxi ( +44 1875 613099).

  • 1 Tranent Tower is the stumpy remnants of a 16th century tower. It's unsafe and you can't go in.
  • 2 Fa'side Castle 2 miles southwest of Tranent is a 15th-century tower house in an L-plan, restored in the 1980s. It's privately owned and you can't visit.
  • 3 Battle of Prestonpans Monument commemorates the first battle of "The 45". Bonny Prince Charlie landed in the Highlands in July 1745 to reclaim the throne for the Stuarts; he and his Jacobites marched south to Edinburgh armed with little more than a promise of French support. Government forces under Sir John Cope assembled at Dunbar in September and the Jacobites marched out against them. They met at Prestonpans. Cope's men were green and fled from the Highlanders' wild charge, and the Government side were routed within half an hour. It was a huge boost to Jacobite confidence and credibility, and they marched down into England with high hopes. A monument on Prestonpans hill commemorates the event.
  • 4 Battle of Prestonpans Museum, 157B High St, Prestonpans EH32 9AY, +44 1875 819922. Sa Su 11AM-4PM. Local history museum within Town Hall. The star exhibit is the Prestonpans Tapestry, a 2010 embroidery depicting the battle and loosely modelled on the Bayeux Tapestry. Only two sections are on display at any time.
  • Preston Tower is the shell of a 14th-century tower house, 300 yards north of Prestonpans railway station. Close by is the imposing Northfield House, but you can't visit.
  • 5 Prestongrange Museum, Morrison's Haven, Prestonpans EH32 9RX, +44 131 653 2904. Apr-Sep daily 11:30AM-4:30PM. Museum in a 400-year-old industrial complex, centred around the coal mine with beam engine and winding gear. Occasional guided tours. Free. Prestongrange Museum (Q7242047) on Wikidata Prestongrange Museum on Wikipedia
  • 6 Seton Collegiate Church, Longniddry EH32 0PG. Apr-Sep daily 9:30AM-5:30PM. Ruin of a 15th-16th century church. Seton Castle adjacent is privately owned and you can't visit. Adult £6. Seton Collegiate Church on Wikipedia
Church Street, Tranent
  • Walk the coast with views over to Fife; the path is part of the long-distance John Muir Way. West, a short walk brings you past the lagoons and racecourse into Musselburgh. East, Prestonpans and Cockenzie have a lot of brownfield gaps, and the beach is muddy until Seton Sands. The trail continues past Craigielaw and eventually to Aberlady and Gullane.
  • Golf: Royal Musselburgh GC is based at Prestongrange House rather than in Musselburgh. Longniddry GC is further east, then Craigielaw and Kilspindie at Aberlady mark the start of the Costa Golf stetching to Dunbar.
  • Glenkinchie Distillery is 5 miles south near Pencaitland.
  • Lammermuir Festival is classical music in Prestonpans and other venues across East Lothian. It's next held 4-15 Sept 2025.
  • Tranent has an Aldi open M-Sa 8AM-10PM, Su 9AM-8PM, and Prestonpans has a Lidl, but big-ticket shopping is at Fort Kinnaird retail park along A1 at the east edge of Edinburgh.
  • Tranent has several takeaways, one of the few sit-down places is Giancarlo's on High Street, open daily.
  • Prestonpans has Dragon Way, open W-M.

Drink

edit
Table tombstone in Tranent churchyard

Sleep

edit
"Hey Johnnie Cope are you wauking yet, or are your drums a-beating yet?"
- The redcoat army turned out not to be morning people.
  • Tranent lacks accommodation. With your own car, try the Premier Inn further west along A1, and other options near Musselburgh.
  • 1 Anchorage B&B, 1 Elcho Place, Port Seton EH32 0DL, +44 1875 813947. Clean welcoming place on the coast. B&B double £100.
  • Seton Sands on the coast two miles north of Tranent has camping and caravan pitches plus static caravans for hire.

Connect

edit

As of Oct 2024, Tranent and the A1 have 4G from Vodafone, and 5G from EE, O2 and Three. The signal is patchy in the lanes to the south.

Go next

edit
  • You can't miss seeing Edinburgh, as the crags of Arthur's Seat are visible from Tranent and Prestonpans.
  • Go to the races at Musselburgh.
  • At Haddington you escape commuterland and industry into open country. Here is East Fortune airfield, with the Museum of Flight.
  • The coast improves greatly east of Aberlady: attractive villages are Dirleton, Gullane, North Berwick and Dunbar.


This city travel guide to Tranent is a usable article. It has information on how to get there and on restaurants and hotels. An adventurous person could use this article, but please feel free to improve it by editing the page.