Showing posts with label Tour Scotland Oban. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tour Scotland Oban. Show all posts

Old Photographs George Street Oban Scotland

Old photograph shops, buildings and people on George Street, Oban, Scotland. Oban occupies a beautiful setting in the Firth of Lorn. Oban Bay is a near perfect horseshoe bay, protected by the island of Kerrera, and beyond Kerrera is Mull. To the north is the long low island of Lismore, and the mountains of Morvern and Ardgour. Oban is also known as "The Gateway to the Isles.



All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

View the most recent Tour Scotland photographs.

Old Photographs Oban Scotland

Old photograph of a pier in Oban, Scotland. Oban occupies a beautiful setting in the Firth of Lorn. Oban Bay is a near perfect horseshoe bay, protected by the island of Kerrera, and beyond Kerrera is Mull. To the north is the long low island of Lismore, and the mountains of Morvern and Ardgour. Oban is also known as " The Gateway to the Isles ". The town of Oban is by Dunollie, a sixth-century Dalriadan stronghold and later seat of the MacDougall clan. Despite the long human history of its surroundings, Oban is a comparatively recent foundation. Planned town building in Scotland can be divided into two major periods, the first from the twelfth to the fourteenth century, the second covering the eighteenth century, and Oban belongs firmly in the second period. The first known house on the site was built around 1715, and by 1767 it had a post office and a customs house, although poor roads frustrated early attempts to improve Oban as a fishing station. The Duke of Argyll assisted the development of Oban, funding a new school and building a mansion house near the town, but more instrumental were the Stevenson family, who built a distillery and other significant buildings at the very heart of Oban. By 1800 the town was a registered port and a fast growing urban settlement, by 1811 a burgh of barony, and after 1833, it was a parliamentary burgh. From 586 people in 1791, the population of Oban had grown to 1,940 in 1861.

Old photograph of Oban, Scotland.



Old photograph of Oban, Scotland.

Old photograph of Oban, Scotland.

Old photograph of George Street, Oban, Scotland.


Old photograph of Oban and Oban Distillery, Scotland.

Old photograph of Oban, Scotland.

Old photograph of Oban, Scotland.

Old photograph of Oban, Scotland.

Old photograph of Oban, Scotland.

Old photograph of Oban, Scotland.

Old photograph of Oban, Scotland.

Old photograph of Oban, Scotland.

Old photograph of Oban, Scotland.

Old photograph of the Woolleen Mill Oban, Scotland.

Old photograph of Oban, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

View the most recent Tour Scotland photographs.

Tour Scotland Photographs Oban


Tour Scotland photograph of Oban, Scotland. In the eighteenth century, the land where Oban now stands supported very few households, sustaining only minor shipbuilding and quarrying. The modern town of Oban grew up around the distillery that was founded there in 1794. By the late nineteenth century, Oban was a busy port which shipped wool, whisky, slate and kelp to Liverpool and Glasgow. The arrival of the railways brought new prosperity to Oban, revitalising local industry and giving birth to local tourism. It was at this time that McCaig's Tower, a folly and prominent local landmark, was constructed.


Tour Scotland photograph of McCaig's Tower, Oban, Scotland.



All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

View the most recent Tour Scotland photographs.

Street View Clach na Carraig Scotland


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Street view of Clach na Carraig standing stone, near Oban, Scotland. Spelt variously Clach na Carra, Clach Dhiarmaid, Carragh Dhiarmaid, Diarmaid's Stone or Pillar, this is a massive granite monolith. It is said to mark the spot where Diarmaid, the Fingalian hero, died and was buried.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.



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Old Photograph Kirk Douglas Scotland


Old Photograph of Kirk Douglas in Oban, Scotland. To Catch a Spy is a 1971 comedy spy film directed by Dick Clement and starring Kirk Douglas, Marlène Jobert, Trevor Howard, Richard Pearson, Garfield Morgan, Angharad Rees and Robert Raglan. It was written by Clement and Ian La Frenais. It was a co-production between Britain, the United States and France, which was filmed in Bucharest, Romania. It was also part filmed on Loch Awe in n Argyll and Bute.



All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

View the most recent Tour Scotland photographs.