Old Photograph Beach Scarinish Scotland


Old photograph of the beach by Scarinish, the main village on the Isle of Tiree located South West Of Coll which is West of Isle Of Mull, Scotland. There is a ferry service from here to Oban on the Scottish mainland.



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Old Photograph Caledonian MacBrayne Ferry Colintraive Scotland


Old photograph of the Caledonian MacBrayne Ferry at Colintraive village on the Cowal peninsula in Argyll and Bute, Scotland. Colintraive lies on the A886 road, which crosses to the Isle of Bute here. A ferry crosses the 400 yard gap to Rhubodach on Bute, giving access to the tourist town of Rothesay. The name Colintraive derives from Gaelic and means " swimming strait " or " swimming narrows ". In the past, cattle were swum over from the Isle of Bute to Colintraive on their way to the markets of lowland Scotland.



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Old Photograph Duisdale Hotel And Gardens Isleornsay Isle Of Skye Scotland


Old photograph of Duisdale Hotel and gardens Isleornsay on the Isle Of Skye, Scotland. Emigration from the Highlands and Islands was endemic in the 19th century and the company that ran the Isleornsay store, MacDonald and Elder, acted as emigration agents from the early 1800s. In 1822 they advertised that they were able to " to fit out transports for the conveyance of passengers from Inverness and the West Coast of Scotland to the east coast of Canada. " In the 1830s a programme of assisted passages to Australia from the Sleat peninsula was organised. The William Nicol sailed to Sydney from Isleornsay in July 1837 with 322 passengers including 70 families from Sleat. At the time it was reported that so many local people wished to emigrate that the ship could not accommodate all those who wanted to embark.



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Old Photograph Witches Rock Glen Tilt Scotland


Old photograph of the Witches Rock overlooking the River Tilt in Glen Tilt by Blair Castle in Highland Perthshire, Scotland. Scottish women who were deemed to be witches were thrown off the rock. Those who were supposed to be witches could save themselves from drowning; those who weren’t drowned !



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Old Photograph Panmure Hotel Edzell Scotland


Old photograph of the Panmure Hotel in Edzell, Angus, Scotland. The existing village of Slateford was expanded in the early 19th century by the Earl of Panmure. The new parish church, replacing the one in the old village, was built in 1818 on the village's north boundary, and led to the official renaming of the village as Edzell. In 1861, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert visited Edzell, as part of a Royal progress through Angus and Kincardineshire, just weeks before Albert's sudden death. Edzell was not connected to the railway until 1896, and only had a passenger service until 1931, although it reopened experimentally in the summer of 1938. The line closed to freight traffic in 1964.



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