Walter M‘Gregor—an Inversnaid boatman

on Jul 1, 2022

It is not often that I come across some old glass slides that identify a person or persons at their work. In this case it is the work of a boatman, Walter M‘Gregor, at the Loch Lomondside hamlet of Inversnaid in 1892. Walter M‘Gregor Inversnaid features in history as a convenient spot on the remoter east bank of Loch Lomond where access to Loch Arklet and Loch Katrine could be obtained. The Arklet falls are a distinguishing feature, though much diminished in recent years since the Loch was converted to a reservoir. Inversnaid is in Montrose country and there was a military garrison posted there in the late 17th century. Around 1790, the Duke of Montrose had a lodge built there for fishing and hunting, and the spot achieved fame with Wordsworth’s poem “To a Highland Girl” from his tour of the Highlands in 1803. However, it was the publication of the “Lady of the Lake,” and “Rob Roy” by...

Irvine Harbour

on Jun 11, 2022

The port of Irvine is a natural harbour on the south bank of the river Irvine, extending inward from near the confluence of the river with the Garnock to where it takes a meander from the town to the north. It was a very important trading center from the late middle-ages and indeed was considered the third port of Scotland at one time. The rights to the river frontage were contested for many years but in 1573 came into the possession of the Corporation of Irvine and the port was run by the town council. Irvine Harbour around 1890 (Washington Wilson) In 1815, with the arrival of the steamboat age, Irvine was a call made by the Greenock, on her weekly sojourn to Ayr. The return journey was made the following day. The Greenock was sold off the river the following year. “Steam Boat Greenock, Anderson & M‘Cowan, Captains, Sails every lawful day, to and from Glasgow to Greenock, and...

The Unfortunate Thistle

on May 21, 2022

The iron paddle steamer, Thistle, was built for Messrs Laird’s Glasgow & Londonderry Steam Packet Co., by Messrs Robert Napier at Govan in 1848. She was 198½ feet in length by 26¼ feet in breadth with a depth of 16 feet. At her launch on Friday, September 1st, she stuck on the ways but finally entered the water the following day. She was fitted with two watertight bulkheads with her engine amidships. The engine providing 350 hp, was salved from the Rambler built by Messrs Napier for Messrs Laird in 1845, but sunk after a collision on the Mersey the following year. “Launch of the Thistle Steam Ship. On Friday this fine iron steamer, which was built by Mr. Robt. Napier, at his new building-yard, Govan, was partially launched. This vessel is the property of the Glasgow and Londonderry Steam Packet Co., and is the largest that they have as yet been furnished with. She is 200 feet keel...

Lost in fog

on May 13, 2022

On Sunday, November 14, 1909, a stubborn anticyclone settled in to dominate the weather pattern over the West of Scotland and Northern Ireland over the following week. On Monday morning, November 15, the weather forecast for Glasgow predicted light to moderate north-easterly breezes; cloudy to fair or fair, with local rain, hail, or sleet, nothing particularly out of the ordinary for mid-November. It was a cold morning, and inland there was widespread frost. The Campbeltown steamer Kinloch sailed from the Kintyre port at 3:30 p.m. for Carradale, Pirnmill, Lochranza, Gourock, Greenock, and Glasgow. There was only one steamer on the service at this time of the year, and she was expected to return from Glasgow the following morning at 6 a.m., connecting with the 7:55 am. train from St Enoch at Prince’s Pier and with the 8:35 a.m. train from Central at Gourock Quay. On her inward journey...

Puffers on the Forth and Clyde Canal

on May 1, 2022

The passage of commerce through the Forth and Clyde Canal was conducted mainly by horse-drawn barges until the 1850s, when the introduction of the marine screw that did not damage the canal banks, provided the opportunity for steam propulsion. The steam- or screw-lighter is generally acknowledged to date from 1856, when the barge, Thomas, was fitted with a steam engine and screw propellor by the Forth and Clyde Canal Company, and allowed to ply between Grangemouth and Glasgow. Steam lighters on both the Clyde and the Forth were not unknown by this time and there are some inklings that other experiments were also in progress such as the following court proceedings from 1854 that mentions a screw or lighter on the Canal. “Sheriff Criminal Court.—The following cases at the instance of the Procurator Fiscal have been disposed of summarily at this Court, before Mr Sheriff Robertson, during...

Bowling

on Apr 1, 2022

Until the latter years of the eighteenth century, the Bay of Bowling was best known for its sandy beach in the bend of the Clyde just upriver from the rocky Dunglass Point where the ancient keep of the Colquhoun Family stood in ruins. There was an inn and a hotel and it was a pleasant, sheltered spot for bathing. At Littlemill, on the Auchentorlie Burn, there was a disused mill that by the early 1770s had been at one time used as a bleaching works and then taken over as a distillery. It was the designation of Bowling as the western terminus of the Forth and Clyde canal that changed the Bay’s fortunes. Originally, the canal was meant to enter the Clyde at Dalmuir, but this was changed in 1785 when Robert Whitworth was appointed chief engineer of the Canal Company. Over the next few years the sea-lock and canal basin were excavated to meet the western extension of the canal from...