The latter days of Duchess of Argyll

on Oct 13, 2018

The early service of the Duchess of Argyll from her launch in 1906 for the Caledonian Steam Packet Co. Ltd., to her incorporation into the control of the L.M.S. Railway in 1923, has been recorded earlier in two articles. The present essay is mainly a photographic account beginning in 1925 when the standard livery with buff black-topped funnels was introduced for the combined south-bank railway fleet. As one of the original Caledonian Steam Packet Company’s steamers, Duchess of Argyll was retained under their ownership that allowed greater flexibility in sailing to destinations in Loch Fyne, Kintyre and Lochranza than was possible for the former members of the Glasgow and South Western Railway that were under direct railway control. It was on the Arran route from Princes Pier by way of the Kyles that Duchess of Argyll was best known. In the middle of the 1925 season, however, there was...

Toward Pier

on Sep 28, 2018

“About 6 miles from Dunoon the district of Toward commences, and extends along the coast for a distance of about 4 miles. There is no village of the name; but about the centre of the district there is a chapel in connection with the Established Church (Rev. James Geekie). Close beside the church is Toward pier and lighthouse, and Castle Toward. Old Castle Toward was at one time the seat of the ancient family of Lamont of Ardlamont. It was purchased many years ago, along with Auchenvulline and other adjoining estates, by the late Kirkman Finlay, Esq., of Glasgow, who erected the present stately mansion, and is now the seat of his son, A. S. Finlay, Esq., late M.P. for Argyllshire. The view from Castle Toward is most magnificent. Situated on a rising ground, it commands a prospect of great extent, including parts of Renfrewshire and Ayrshire, the two Cumbraes, Bute, and the distant hills...

Hunter’s Quay

on Sep 8, 2018

When a Greenock merchant, James Hunter, acquired the Hafton estate from its original Campbell owners in 1816 he extended the existing Hafton House and began to develop feuing in the area. One of the early arrivals was James Ewing, then Lord Provost of Glasgow, who built the Castle House in Dunoon 1822. It was such gentlemen and their families that attracted the early steamboat traffic to the area. As in other coastal communities, feuing was encouraged by the provision of a pier and James Hunter provided one of the first on the Cowal shore in 1828. Hunter’s Quay was a stone built quay with a wooden extension where the steamboats could dock. Isle of Bute approaching Hunter’s Quay in 1841 The building of villas along the south shore of the Holy Loch and the Cowal shore of the Firth followed quickly afterwards. The location of the pier at Hunter’s Quay was protected from the worst of...

Pointing Porters of Rothesay

on Aug 18, 2018

The licensing and regulation of carters and porters was a feature of many municipalities around the Clyde, and the Burgh of Rothesay was no exception. The porters on Rothesay Pier were particularly famous for their “pointing” during the late Victorian and Edwardian period. They had a brief resurrection after the first world war but seem to have disappeared sometime during the 1920s. “No person shall be permitted to ply for hire as a Porter until licensed by the Trustees and furnished with a badge which must be constantly conspicuously affixed to his breast and his name painted on his barrow and all porters must be sober, steady and civil to every person and they shall not go on board the steamboat until called by some one of the passengers whose directions shall be immediately obeyed without waiting any other hire. No separate charge shall be made for letters and parcels or goods which...

Innellan Pier

on Aug 13, 2018

The origins of Innellan date from the 1840s. Before that time the coastal area, five miles or so south of Dunoon, was sparsely populated. There were a few secluded summer homes for some of the wealthy businessmen from Paisley and Glasgow but the coast was in a state of nature. The name Innellan supposedly refers to the Perch, a rocky island off the coast but its present spelling derives from the time, around 1850, when feus were made available. Greenock Telegraph, December 28, 1849 Greenock Telegraph, August 30, 1850 “The New Watering Place.—Innellan promises to become a favourite locality for summer retirement. It is only a week or two since it was proposed to feu there, and we hear that already almost a dozen feuars are forward, and as there is a certainty of many tasteful villas making their appearance in that quarter in the course of the next two or three months. Innellan is...

Ossian on Loch Etive

on Aug 10, 2018

The Callander and Oban Railway runs along the southern edge of Loch Etive from Taynuilt to Connel Ferry from where it takes a sweep to the south to Oban. When the railway was opened in 1880, it provided an opportunity for a steamboat service on Loch Etive, and a pier was built at Auchnacloich where the railway adjoined the Loch. The steamer allowed access to the remote head of the loch from where a coach completed a tour through the attractive and dramatic scenery of Glen Etive and Glen Coe to Ballachulish Pier where steamer connections to Oban and Fort William were available. “Steamer on Loch Etive. On Saturday the new steamer Glen Etive, with a specially-invited party and the owners board, sailed up Loch Etive the head of the Loch. That route, which is to opened to the public to-day, is one of the most interesting in Scotland, the scenery being grand, and the historical associations...