#Rothesay
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Barone Hill, Isle of Bute
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Rothesay Castle, Scotland, UK
British "hold to light" vintage postcard
#postkaart#rothesay castle#carte postale#briefkaart#hold#rothesay#old#sepia#postkarte#vintage#postal#british#castle#uk#photography#light#ephemera#postcard#scotland#tarjeta#photo#ansichtskarte#historic
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Green is the theme here. A quiet section of the Mount Stuart House gardens. This lane actually exits the property.
#original photography#original photographer#photographers on tumblr#green#driveway#gardens#mount Stuart house#isle of bute#scotland#island life#Rothesay#Marquees of Bute#gothic architecture#coal-mining#cardiff castle#UK#summer holidays
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TWENTY-TWO
I shall never forget the fervour with which a sick young friend once exclaimed, when suffering severely from the high, sharp, arrow-like winds of Edinburgh, ‘Oh! What would I not give for one single gasp of Rothesay air.
CATHERINE SINCLAIR, Scotland and the Scotch (1840)
WHEN THE NOVELIST sailed into Rothesay, she considered it to be ‘the Montpelier of Scotland’ – where invalids with consumption could benefit from the soft, balmy breezes of the west; and Bute, of which Rothesay is the capital, was a prosperous and exclusive island during the Victorian era. Guidebooks of the period likened it to Torquay or called it ‘the Brighton of the Clyde’. Sinclair mentioned a budding entrepreneur who had talked for years of turning Rothesay into a Cheltenham or a Constantinople, but his intentions had ebbed and flowed for so long, she feared the sea would ‘cease to be salt' before he finally made up his mind.
Bute impressed Sinclair with its deep, intensely blue ocean framed in a circle of noble mountains: ‘... the church bells at Largs are distinctly heard chiming on Sunday, in pleasing unison with the loud dash of the ocean, while the wind blows a sort of trumpet accompaniment through the waving forests; and this, with the warbling of some hundred birds, must make a charming natural orchestra, which might find a ready echo in every heart.’
Skyeman Martin Martin, who included Bute in his book A Description of the Western Islands of Scotland in 1703, wrote of the locals: ‘They are very industrious fishers, especially for Herring, for which they are furnished with about 80 large Boats.’
Nowadays several shops in Rothesay are boarded up. The Scottish Parliament Information Centre says one in five folk left the island between 2001 and 2020. There is a dearth of housing, and few jobs and opportunities. There is dereliction.
As we walk along the waterfront’s Albert Place, we spot a plea to the local authority emblazoned beneath the dilapidated Royal Hotel. Someone has graffitied ‘Council help stop Rothesay crumbling’ on an empty shop window. Just up the road, the iconic Rothesay Pavilion – a traditional entertainment venue – remains closed more than seven years after it was shut for a £15m refurbishment. It was stalled by the collapse of the building firm that took on the project. Argyll and Bute Council says that as part of its five-year plan it will work with the Rothesay Pavilion Charity Trust to lobby for funding to complete the refurbishment.
In 2023 Argyll and Bute MP Brendan O’Hara (SNP) was furious that the UK government had snubbed the region for ‘levelling-up projects’. There was no money to save Dunoon’s iconic Victorian Pier or Rothesay’s crumbling Royal Hotel. More than £1.1 billion of the £1.6 billion was awarded in England to areas with a Conservative MP, including the Prime Minister’s Richmond constituency. O’ Hara told the newspapers:
‘This decision of the UK Government not to fund these projects is a major blow to Argyll and Bute, and it is doubly disappointing to then discover that our economically fragile, rural constituency has been overlooked at the expense of far more affluent constituencies, including the Prime Minister’s own in Richmond.
'It appears that in this round, funding has been disproportionately awarded to areas with Conservative MPs in England, whilst Scotland’s share of the fund has declined, with some of Scotland’s most impoverished areas nowhere to be seen on the list.’
The inequalities of wealth are easy to find in Scotland, not just in inner cities and rundown former mining, shipbuilding, steel or tourist centres. You only have to compare the slogan on the abandoned Bute hotel to glossy brochures advertising islands. In 2019 Strutt and Parker advertised the uninhabited 660-acre island of Inchmarnock off the west coast of Bute, albeit for what they called the reasonable price tag of £1.4 million. The talk of the pubs is that Rothesay’s drunks were exiled there in the 19th century to dry out.
Lord Smith of Kelvin, who owns a vineyard in South Africa, bought Inchmarnock in 1999, the year he was knighted. He became a life peer in 2008 and is a former governor of the BBC. Irene Adams is secretary and a fellow director of Inchmarnock Ltd. In 2001 she was criticised in national newspapers for having claimed £200,000 as a Labour peer in the House of Lords, although she had only spoken once in five years.
Back on the mainland of Ayrshire, the rain comes in fits and starts and we re-acquaint ourselves with the Clyde Flyer for Gourock. If Wemyss Bay station is Lionel Messi, then Gourock railway station is a pub bore who had an unsuccessful trial with a Sunday league football team. We see four gentlemen aged anywhere between 30 and 70 dangling their fishing roads off the station wall into the harbour. Each could be sitting on a tranquil and picturesque riverbank rather than on a concrete concourse in full view of the madding crowd. Each has come armed with alcohol. Their beverages appear to range from Carlsberg Special to Buckfast by way of Thunderbird and Co-op Strong Cider. For non-Scots, unfamiliar with ‘Buckie’, here are two appreciations from anonymous online wine buffs:
‘Barnyardy funk (in a bad way) almost like a dead animal in a bird’s nest. A mix of flat Coca Cola and caramel with a whiff of gun metal.’
‘You’re not drinking Buckfast properly unless that dinner was given to you in a polystyrene box and you’re eating it under a bridge.’
This is a convenient juncture to relate that the term ‘steaming’ originated from travellers who overdid the booze on the steamboats. Licensing laws introduced in 1841 meant you could only get a drink in Scotland if you were a bona-fide ‘traveller’. The angling hobbyists at Gourock are not noticeably steaming but, going by the heft of their carry outs, they may become so before their angling outing is finished for the day.
There used to be a grand mansion where Gourock Park now sits. Gourock House was built on the site of an old castle in the late 18th century by Duncan Darroch, who had made a fortune in Jamaica. His family eventually gifted the estate to the town. The mansion was an ARP HQ during the war and was demolished in 1947.
It is too cold today for Gourock Outdoor Pool, the oldest heated swimming pool in Scotland, which was chosen by Damon Albarn to grace the cover of one of Blur’s albums. There are some hardy souls within it, but I’m with Hippocrates, who believed:
‘If any person will heat himself very much, either by a hot bath, or a great fire, and afterward continue in the same place, and same habit, as he who was much cooled, he will appear more cold and will become more shivering than the others.’
Fishermen and sailors used to dance seven times around a neolithic standing stone in Gourock for good luck. Most megaliths go hand in glove with romantic scenery, but not Granny Kempock, who stands like a petrified hunchback in a hood, on a rocky crag among tenements and shops. Today the place from where she faces the sea is advertised by a black metal sign next to a bin for dog shit. In 1662, the god-fearers burned Mary Lamont for allegedly having attended a coven at which it was planned to topple Granny Kempock into the sea. Witchfinding was a fashionable skill set back then.
When a Swedish cargo vessel sank off Dunoon in April 1956 with the loss of her six crewmen, a story circulated that one man had been given mouth-to-mouth resuscitation by an old female passenger who was never identified. The word on the street was that it had been Granny Kempock in human form. There is a long tradition, which continues, of people leaving trinkets, coins and flowers at the stone, but any recent tributes must have been pinched by a hard-up local.
We’re in town waiting for the boat to take us across the firth to ‘Scotland’s Secret Coast’, Cowal. The woman at the chipshop reckons:
‘It’s an old altar to a pagan god, where they used to offer sacrifices. A few years ago, they used to put clothes on her on Hogmanay and have a few cans. Salt and vinegar?’
In 1904 the Rev Walter Mathams wrote in the Greenock Telegraph: ‘If she would only speak, she would tell a tale unrivalled in the annals of Scotland.'
A letter in a later edition of the Telegraph referred the council to ‘a hillock of refuse and ashes three feet deep right across the path’ and urged the council to deal with it. They did. And their eventual successors in 2021 had to do so again. I’m not the superstitious kind and, even if I wanted to dance about it before our short voyage to Dunoon, I couldn’t. It is now surrounded by iron railings. We are off to catch a boat on ‘that Fyrth on the west side, with all the islands up towards the most northerne headland, being inhabited by the old Scotts or wilde Irish…… which live by feeding cattle up and downe the hills, or else fishing and fowleing, and formerly, till that they have of late been restrayned, by plaine downeright robbing and stealeing.’ (Report by Thomas Tucker upon the settlement of the revenues of excise and customs in Scotland, 1666.) Tucker was an official in Oliver Cromwell’s regime.
#Bute#rothesay#granny kempock#megaliths#catherine sinclair#martin martin#argyll and bute#inchmarnock#gourock
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Glasgow Memories Gourock Wemyss Bay Dunoon Rothesay Rouken glen
How's aboot gaun tae Gourock , takin the train tae Wemyss Bay or even headin doon the watter fur a wee jaunt in days of yor when big hats wir a must huv fashion item ,beachwer wis made fae jaggy Tweed an sensible shoes wir yased fur paddlin insteed eh flippers ?
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Sea swimming baths, Rothesay, date unknown.
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The Duke of Rothesay attended the Thistle Service at St Giles’ Cathedral in Edinburgh, Scotland || 3 JULY 2024
#british royal family#british royals#royalty#royals#brf#royal#british royalty#prince of wales#the prince of wales#prince william#william prince of wales#royaltyedit#royalty edit#my edit#will edit#duke of rothesay#william wales#ThistleService24
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The Prince of Wales, known as The Duke of Rothesay in Scotland, and The Duke of Edinburgh attend the Order of the Thistle Service at St Giles' Cathedral in Edinburgh, Scotland -July 3rd 2024.
📷 (1 & 2) : Andrew Parsons/Kensington Palace.
#prince william#prince of wales#duke of rothesay#prince edward#duke of edinburgh#british royal family#england#2024#july 2024#order of the thistle service#order of the thistle service 2024#scotland#scotland 2024#the wales#my edit
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The Duchess of Rothesay visiting Scotland on 2nd November 2023.
#duchess of rothesay#the princess of wales#kate middleton#british royal family#royal family#british royal fandom#royal style#catherine princess of wales#scotland#royal visit
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#king charles lll#queen camilla#prince of wales#duke of edinburgh#duchess of Edinburgh#duke of Rothesay
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Alisdair, Isle of Bute
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Prince of Wales Visits Aberdeen To Recognise Work Of The Homelessness Sector
Prince William, known as the Duke of Rothesay when in Scotland, speaks during an event hosted by Homewards Aberdeen on 19 September 2024 in Aberdeen, Scotland.
📸: Russell Cheyne - WPA Pool / Getty Images
#Prince William#Prince of Wales#Duke of Rothesay#British Royal Family#Aberdeen#Scotland#Homewards Aberdeen#homelessness#The Royal Foundation
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Wherever I wander, wherever I rove; the hills of the highland for ever I love.
Robert Burns
HM King Charles III has a love and respect for tartan. The King regularly can be seen in Scotland wearing his kilt collection, including Hunting Stewart, Balmoral and until recently the Rothesay tartan.
The Rothesay tartan technically belongs to the Duke of Rothesay which is a dynastic title of the heir apparent to the British throne (David Stewart, son of Robert III, became the first Duke of Rothesay in 1398 and was heir apparent to the throne of the Kingdom of Scotland). Between the Union of the Crowns in 1603 and Edward VIII’s time as heir apparent (1910 to 1936), the the style Duke of Rothesay was informally dropped out in favour of Prince of Wales, the premier British title for the eldest son.
Prince William is now the Duke of Rothesay when Charles ascended to the throne.
#burns#robert burns#quote#tartan#HM king charles III#duke of rothesay#rothesay tartan#balmoral tartan#royal stewart tartan#scotland#prince of wales#highlands#monarchy#british monarchy
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The Duke of Rothesay poses for a portrait following the Thistle Service at St Giles’ Cathedral in Edinburgh, Scotland || 3 JULY 2024
#british royal family#british royals#royalty#royals#brf#royal#british royalty#prince of wales#the prince of wales#prince william#william wales#duke of rothesay#royaltyedit#royalty edit#william prince of wales#3072024#ThistleService24#my edit
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The Prince and Princess of Wales, known as The Duke and Duchess of Rothesay when in Scotland, attend Sunday Church service, at Crathie Kirk in Balmoral, Scotland -September 22nd 2024.
#prince william#prince of wales#duke of rothesay#princess of wales#duchess of rothesay#british royal family#england#2024#september 2024#scotland#scotland 2024#balmoral#balmoral 2024#crathie kirk#the wales#my edit
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The Duchess of Rothesay
#duchess of rothesay#catherine princess of wales#british royal family#royal family#royal style#british royal fandom#princess kate#duchess of cambridge#kate middleton
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