ABERFELDY, a village, partly in the parish of Dull, and partly in that of Logierait, county of Perth, 65 miles (N. E.) from Kenmore; containing 823 inhabitants. This is a considerable and thriving village, situated on the southern bank of the river Tay, and on the great Highland road. It belongs solely to the Marquess of Breadalbane, but is held, with a few exceptions, under building leases, of ninety-nine years' duration. The village is surrounded with thick and luxuriant wood of hazel and birch; and in its vicinity are the falls of Moness, remarkable for the beauty and grandeur of the scenery, and the majesty of their torrents, which rush furiously from precipice to precipice, with a tremendous and fearful roar; the ascent is from the village, and is attained by pleasing and varied walks, with seats at intervals for the accommodation of the visiter. The Moness mineral water, which was accidentally discovered a few years ago, has been pronounced by conlpetent authority to be an excellent chalybeate. The river is crossed at Aberfeldy by a bridge, erected by General Wade. Some fairs are held at the village; also a quarterly sheriff's court for small debts. In 1846 an act of parliament was passed "for making a raiUvay from the line of the Perth and Inverness railway to Aberfeldy, to be called the Strathtay and Breadalbane railway." There are places of worship for Independents and members of the Free Church; a post office, a branch bank, and a savings' bank. The Evangelical Library, instituted in 1823, has nearly 400 volumes, and there is a literary society of recent formation, with a library in connexion with it. See Dull.