Loch Lomond Steamboats in Mid-Victorian Years

on Jun 1, 2023

A previous article details the development of the Lochlomond Steam-boat Company to 1855. At that time, the Company had two steamers, Prince Albert, built in 1850, with a flush deck, and Queen Victoria, built in 1852 to incorporate the engines of the old Waterwitch. She had a raised quarter-deck that gave her better saloon accommodation. On the Loch itself, there were piers at all the calling places. The route ran from Balloch to the Inverarnan Canal, where connections with coaches to Perthshire and the north were made. At Tarbert, there were coach connections to Inveraray, Oban and the west, and to Arrochar where the Dumbarton steamers called to provide a circular tour from Glasgow. At Inversnaid, there were connections with the Trossachs tour and Loch Katrine. That year, a consortium of interested hotel proprietors and the Lochlomond Company shared the cost of a new steamer, Rob Roy,...

Lochlomond Steamboat Company—Early Years

on Jul 19, 2022

The Lochlomond Steamboat Company formed from an amalgamation of the New Lochlomond Steamboat Company, owners of the steamer Water Witch, and the assets of Messers Napier and M‘Murrich, owners of the steamer Lochlomond, in 1845. The agreement between the companies is presented below. It was drawn up in 1844 but the legal issues to obtain agreement with all the parties took several months. The basic agreement split the 80 shares of the new company equally between the original owners of the Water Witch (40 shares) and Messers Napier (20 shares) and M‘Murrich (20 shares). John M‘Murrich was in ill-health and 15 of his shares were sold to three new shareholders Duncan Mitchell (5 shares), James M‘Kinlay (5 shares), and William M‘Niven (5 shares). This also diluted the power of the Napier faction. Much of the information quoted comes from “Lochlomond Steamboat Companies,” by Donald Macleod...

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...

Early Loch Lomond Steam-boats

on Jul 22, 2021

In 1816, just four years after the Comet commenced her role as the pioneering steamboat on the Clyde, the engineer, David Napier, had a small steamboat built by Archibald MacLachlan of Dumbarton, and Napier himself provided the machinery. Napier named his little boat Marion, after his wife, and for just over a year she was well known on the Clyde. The Greenock Directory of 1817 gives a list of the river steamers that were plying at the time and an idea of the type of service they provided to the towns around the Firth: “Marion, Captain Smith, sails every lawful day to and from Glasgow to Greenock.” “On May 26, 1817.—The Marion steamboat will commence sailing to-morrow for Greenock and Helensburgh, and every lawful day at 8 o’clock morning and on Saturday evening at 6 o’clock. Will leave Greenock for Glasgow at 2 o’clock every afternoon, and on Monday morning at 4 o’clock. Those...

William M‘Kim — Renton photographer

on May 14, 2021

William M‘Kim was born in 1883 in the village of Renton in the Vale of Leven where his father was postmaster. He was apprenticed as a draughtsman. Early in his life he and his younger brother David, developed an interest in photography that led to the production of postcards, mainly of scenes around his native village. “The Renton” as it is known was a thriving centre for the bleaching and dyeing industry. Renton from the lower slopes of the Carman hill, looking to Dumbarton and showing the chimneys of Dalquhurn works around 1908. The railway station is on the extreme right. Renton from the west looking down King Street to Renton Cross around 1908. In the foreground are the houses of Back Street and beyond those of the Main Street. Across the River Leven are the policies of the Strathleven estate. Renton Main Street with the tramline to Loch Lomond. Renton from further north on the...

Loch Lomond Frozen—1895

on Apr 22, 2021

In the first week of January 1895, the West of Scotland experienced a severe frost and the southern reaches of Loch Lomond began to freeze. This phenomenon was not unknown or particularly unusual. It had last frozen over in the winter of 1880-81 and indeed the year before that, on both occasions bearing the weight of a person for several weeks. It is the broad, shallower, southern stretch of the loch that is susceptible to freezing, the narrow, fijord-like northern arm is too deep. Freezing as far as Luss was not considered possible, but the frost of January and February 1895 proved this wrong. “King frost on his throne.—(from our Glasgow Correspondent) Glasgow, Wednesday Forenoon. The frost in Glasgow and the West of Scotland to-day is the greatest for years and Loch Lomond is frozen for the first time for twelve years. There is still no communication between Glaagow and the West...