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Dunoon

Dunoon (/duˈnn/; Scottish Gaelic: Dùn Omhain) is the main town on the Cowal peninsula in the south of Argyll and Bute, Scotland. It is located on the western shore of the upper Firth of Clyde, to the south of the Holy Loch and to the north of Innellan.[2] As well as forming part of the council area of Argyll and Bute, Dunoon also has its own community council.[3] Dunoon was a burgh until 1976.[4]

Dunoon
Town

Harbour at Dunoon, looking north over Dunoon Pier to the Firth of Clyde and Dunoon Harbour from Castle Hill
Dunoon
Location within Argyll and Bute
Population7,660 (mid-2020 est.)[1]
OS grid referenceNS173769
• Edinburgh67 mi (108 km)
• London364 mi (586 km)
Council area
  • Argyll and Bute
Lieutenancy area
  • Argyll and Bute
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townDUNOON
Postcode districtPA23
Dialling code01369
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
List of places
UK
Scotland
55°57′03″N 4°55′34″W / 55.9509°N 4.9262°W / 55.9509; -4.9262Coordinates: 55°57′03″N 4°55′34″W / 55.9509°N 4.9262°W / 55.9509; -4.9262

The early history of Dunoon often revolves around two feuding clans: the Lamonts and the Campbells. Dunoon was a popular destination when travel by steamships was common around the Firth of Clyde; Glaswegians described this as going doon the watter.[5] This diminished, and many holidaymakers started to go elsewhere as roads and railways improved and the popularity of overseas travel increased.

In 1961, during the height of the Cold War, Dunoon became a garrison town to the United States Navy. In 1992, shortly after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, they closed their Holy Loch base in Sandbank, and neighbouring Dunoon suffered an economic downturn. Since the base's closure, the town and surrounding area are again turning to tourism, marketing to outdoor enthusiasts and wildlife lovers, as well as promoting festivals and competitions. The largest annual event held in the town is the Cowal Highland Gathering, which has been held since 1894.[6] The Royal National Mòd has been also been held in the town.[7]

History

 
Dunoon Pier, looking southeast
 
East Bay, looking north, including the Argyll Hotel

Dunoon Castle was built on a small, partly artificial, conical hill beside the Firth of Clyde in the 12th century, of which low walls remain.[8] It eventually became a royal castle with the Earls of Argyll (Campbells) as hereditary keepers, paying a nominal rent of a single red rose to the sovereign. Mary, Queen of Scots visited Dunoon Castle on 26 July 1563 and granted several charters during her visit.[9] In 1646 the Dunoon massacre of members of Clan Lamont by members of Clan Campbell took place. The castle was destroyed during Argyll's Rising, a rebellion in 1685 against James VII.[10]

In the early 19th century, the town's main street, Argyll Street, stopped at Moir Street. Instead of continuing to Dunoon Pier, it turned right at today's Sinbad's Bar. Before Dunoon Burgh Hall was built, beginning in 1873, the land was an open field, owned by McArthur Moir, leading to an area known as the Gallowhill. There were no streets and houses between Argyll Street and Edward Street. Argyll Street, roughly as it is seen today, was completed by 1870. Moir donated some of his land for the building of the Burgh Hall, but he did not get to see its completion; he died by suicide in 1872.[4]

Dunoon in the 21st century is overlaid with the ghost of a town which, in 1885, possessed two banks, 21 insurance agencies, 10 hotels, a gas company, two bowling greens, three weekly papers, the West of Scotland Convalescent Sea-side Homes (complete with Romanesque hydropathic spa) and the lavishly appointed second homes of some of Scotland's most successful people.

— Saving the Hall (Jay Merrick, 2017)[11]

The two banks mentioned above were the Union Bank of Scotland and the City of Glasgow Bank.[12] The hydropathic spa, meanwhile, was "an elegant new baths building, named Ardvullin, erected a little to the north of the village as a hydropathic establishment, where baths - hot, cold, artificial salt, and Turkish — may be had at moderate charges."[13]

Many of the town's early villas had their own private bathing ground or boxes.

The best bathing place for ladies is the West Bay. Gentlemen's bathing places: Rocks, foot of Castle Hill, deep at all states of the tide. Sand: beyond Baugie Burn, beginning of Bullwood, shallow and sandy. Rocks: behind Argyll Hotel, available only at high water. Kirn Pier and Hunters Quay, deep water.

— Colegate's Guide to Dunoon, Kirn, and Hunter's Quay (John Colegate, 1868)[13]

The population of the united parishes of Dunoon and Kilmun in 1861 was 5,444; in 1866 the estimated population of Dunoon, from Baugie Burn to Hunters Quay, was 3,000.[14]

 
Submarine passing Kirn. Viewed from Gourock

During the Second World War, as the main part of the Firth of Clyde defences, an anti-submarine boom was anchored to the shore in Dunoon.[15][16] A Palmerston Fort and camp at Ardhallow in the south of the town, provided one of the coastal defence gun emplacements that covered the anti-submarine boom and Firth of Clyde waters. There also was a gun emplacement on top of Castle Hill.

In 1961, as the Cold War intensified, the Holy Loch's importance grew when the U.S. Navy submarine tender USS Proteus brought Polaris ballistic missiles, nuclear submarines to the Firth of Clyde at Sandbank. Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament protesters drew this to the public's attention.[17] Holy Loch was, for thirty years, the home port of US Navy Submarine Squadron 14 and Dunoon, therefore, became a garrison town.

In 1991, the Holy Loch base was deemed unnecessary following the demise of the Soviet Union and was subsequently withdrawn. The last submarine tender to be based there, the USS Simon Lake, left Holy Loch in March 1992, leading to a major and continuing downturn in the local economy.[11]

In May 2012, Dunoon and Campbeltown were jointly named as the rural places in Scotland most vulnerable to a downturn in a report by the Scottish Agricultural College looking at 90 places.[18][19]

Government and politics

Dunoon is represented in the Scottish Parliament by Jenni Minto of the Scottish National Party (SNP), who holds the Argyll and Bute seat.[20] Dunoon also lies within the Highlands and Islands electoral region, from which a further seven additional members are elected to produce a form of proportional representation for the region as a whole.

In the House of Commons Dunoon is represented by the SNP's Brendan O'Hara, who holds a seat also entitled Argyll and Bute,[21] although this seat has different boundaries from the one used for the Scottish Parliament.

Argyll and Bute Council is the Local Authority for the council area covering Dunoon. It is one of 32 such council areas across Scotland. Dunoon forms a single ward for elections to Argyll and Bute Council, electing three councillors via the single transferable vote system. At the last election, held in May 2017, one independent and one member from each of the SNP and the Conservatives was elected to represent the town.[22]

Dunoon has a community council,[23] whose primary role is to represent the views of the community to the Local Authority and other public bodies.[24]

Religion

There is evidence of an episcopal seat at Dunoon from the latter part of the 15th century. No remains of the Bishop's Palace now exist, with the site now occupied by the playground of Dunoon Primary School, between Hillfoot and Kirk Streets.[25]

Today, there are a number of churches in Dunoon, including:

 
The High Kirk, built in 1816

Church of Scotland

Roman Catholic

  • Our Lady and St Mun's Church[26]

Other churches

Kingdom Hall

  • Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses[31]

Culture

Architecture

Dunoon Pier

 
Dunoon Pier, pictured in 2011

Dunoon's Victorian pier was extended to the current structure between 1896 and 1898.[32] It was shortened to allow the building of a breakwater in 2005, just to the south of the pier. As well as protecting the pier and its architecture from storm surges, a new link span was installed alongside the breakwater. This was to allow the berthing and loading of roll-on/roll-off ferries instead of the side-loading ferries that used to serve the pier. A tender to serve the new link-span between two interested parties, Caledonian MacBrayne and Western Ferries, came to nothing. Prior to June 2011, the pier was in daily use by Caledonian MacBrayne, who ran a regular foot passenger and car-ferry service to Gourock. However, after June 2011, a renewed tendering process produced a passenger-only ferry service (Argyll Ferries, owned by Caledonian MacBrayne) using the breakwater for berthing. On 1 September 2004, during the construction of the breakwater, the cargo vessel Jackie Moon (82 metres in length) ran aground on the breakwater, with six people on board. Since the breakwater became operational in June 2011, Argyll Ferries operate from this docking facility. The Waverley struck the breakwater on 26 June 2009, with some 700 people on board. The pier was partially refurbished by Argyll and Bute Council during 2015. Now containing meeting rooms, it is purely a tourist attraction.[33]

Burgh Hall

Dunoon Burgh Hall opened in 1874, the work of notable Glasgow architect Robert Alexander Bryden, who is buried in Dunoon Cemetery, a mile to the north. It is a Scottish baronial-style building that housed the municipal offices and had a hall accommodating 500 people.[34] The Category B listed building re-opened in June 2017, and is a fully accessible venue for exhibitions, performances and gatherings. Alongside a gallery and theatre, the venue offers creative workshop space, a garden and a café.[35][36][37]

Other buildings

On 20 August 2021, several Argyll Street buildings were destroyed in an arson attack.[38]

Landmarks and attractions

 
Highland Mary statue

Mary Campbell (1763–1786), also known as "Highland Mary" and "Bonny Mary O' Argyll", was born at Auchamore in Dunoon. She started an affair with the bard Robert Burns. The Highland Mary statue was erected in 1896; it is prominently sited on Castle Hill, overlooking the breakwater in Dunoon.[39][40][41][42][43]

The war memorial of Dunoon is located in the Castle Gardens, overlooking the pier.[44]

The Queen's Hall is the town's major multi-function hall complex.[45] It is situated opposite the head of the Victorian pier and built in 1958. It was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 11 August 1958.[46] The building houses four function suites and a large main hall. The main hall has a stage with professional sound and lighting equipment, and attracted popular acts such as Pink Floyd,[47] Blur, the Saw Doctors, David Gray. Morrissey, the Red Hot Chilli Pipers, Primal Scream and comedians Kevin Bridges, Bill Bailey and Roy Chubby Brown. In late 2015 the Queen's Hall was closed to enable a major refurbishment. In December 2016 it was announced that the refurbishment would not commence until January 2017.[48] The Queens Hall reopened in August 2018.[49]

Riverside, swim and health centre, including an indoor pool (25m long) and associated facilities, located in the centre of Dunoon, next to the Firth of Clyde on Alexandra Parade. Facilities include a main pool, teaching pool, gym including a sauna and a water flume.[50]

Dunoon Library is situated in the rebuilt Queens Hall at the Castle Gardens.[51]

A small group of rocks, known as the Gantocks, lie off the coast at Dunoon. The navigation beacon on the Gantocks in the Firth of Clyde is close to the coast at Dunoon. It was built in 1886.[52]

The Clan Lamont Memorial, also known as the Dunoon Massacre Memorial, is on Tom-A-Mhoid Road close to Castle Hill. It was dedicated in 1906 and commemorates the Dunoon massacre of 1646, when the Campbell Clan attacked the Lamont Clan, killing over 200 people.[53][54]

Local wildlife includes seals, otters, dolphins, basking sharks, roe deer, red deer, red squirrels, and many species of birds.[55]

The Castle House Museum opens during the summer season. It holds historical information and displays for Dunoon and the Cowal peninsula.[56]

Festivals

 
Panoramic view of the 2014 Cowal Highland Gathering

The Cowal Highland Gathering, established in 1894, attracts contestants and spectators from all over the world.[57] It is held annually over the final weekend in August at Dunoon Stadium.[58]

Cowal Open Studios, held over a fortnight in September, gives the opportunity to visit the studios of artists around Dunoon and Cowal.

Cowalfest, celebrates the outdoors activities like rambling around Dunoon for ten days in October.

Since the 1930s Dunoon has hosted the Royal National Mòd a number of times – 1930, 1950, 1968, 1994, 2000, 2006, 2012 and 2018.[59]

In 2013, the first Dunoon Film Festival was held over three days and opened with first public screening of Your Cheatin' Heart, a series made by the BBC that had last been shown on television in 1990.[60]

Transport

 
The steamboat Caledonia departing Dunoon Pier in 1967
 
Argyll Flyer in the current CalMac livery, approaching Dunoon Pier
 
The paddle steamer Waverley arriving at Dunoon Pier

Dunoon is accessible by direct land and sea routes and indirectly by rail at Gourock. Dunoon lies towards the southern end of the A815 road. At its northernmost point, near Cairndow, this road joins the A83 and provides access to the town by road from Loch Lomond / Glasgow in the east, from Inveraray / Oban in the north and from Campbeltown in the west. Two ferry operators provide services to Dunoon, Cowal peninsula from Gourock, Inverclyde. The public service route provided by the Scottish Government-owned Caledonian MacBrayne, which is a foot passenger only service between Dunoon Breakwater and Gourock pier, giving easy access to the National Rail Network.[61] Local company Western Ferries (Clyde) LTD, carries motor vehicles and foot passengers between McInroy's Point, (A770, Cloch Road) and Hunters Quay near Dunoon.[62]

Modern Dunoon owes its existence to steam power; as late as 1822 there were only three or four slated houses, the rest of the residences being traditional Highland cottages.[63] In the New Statistical Account, the MP James Ewing from Glasgow is named as beginning the expansion of the village when he built Castle House close to Dunoon Castle.[64] The growth of the village increased from that time, paralleling the engineering-led growth of the steamers.[65] Other infrastructural advances also helped like the construction of a 130-yard-long (120-metre) jetty in 1835.[66] From 1812 to the late 1960s, thousands of holiday-makers travelled doon the watter from Glasgow and industrial Lanarkshire to Dunoon and to numerous other town piers on the Firth of Clyde.

In 1868, the following summer excursions by water could be had from Dunoon (going and returning the same day):[67]

Only one Clyde steamer, the Waverley, satisfies demand for this business today. It berths at the breakwater when visiting Dunoon during its summer season.[68]

At Gourock Pier, a ScotRail train service provides access to the National Rail network via the Inverclyde Line at Glasgow Central.[69] Public transport within Dunoon and the surrounding area is provided under government subsidy by bus and coach operator West Coast Motors.

West Coast Motors' route 486 provides a regular return journey from Dunoon town centre to Inveraray, where it connects with a Scottish Citylink service 926 and 976 onward to Campbeltown, Oban, Glasgow and points in-between.[70]

Education

Dunoon is served by three primary schools. Dunoon Primary School is on Hillfoot Street; this building was the original 1641 location of Dunoon Grammar School. St Muns Primary School[71] is on Pilot Street and Kirn Primary School is on Park Road.[72]

Dunoon Grammar School is located on Ardenslate Road in Kirn.

The University of the Highlands and Islands' Argyll College has a campus in Dunoon, located in the West Bay, near to the breakwater and Castle Hill.[73]

Sport and recreation

 
Dunoon Stadium, pictured in 2019, looking southeast towards the town

The town's sporting arena is Dunoon Stadium, which is located in the north of the town, near Dunoon Grammar School. When it hosted football matches, it had the largest capacity of any amateur ground in Scotland.[citation needed] It later became the focal point of the Cowal Highland Gathering. Motorcycle dirt track racing (or speedway) was staged at the stadium on 18 June 1932 as part of the annual Dunoon and Cowal Agricultural Show. A demonstration event had been staged in May 1932.

Fishing locations surround Dunoon, both fresh and sea water.[74]

Mountain biking trails are available.[75]

Dunoon Camanachd was established in 2015; the shinty team started competing in South Division 2, in 2016.

Cowal Golf Club is situated on the hillside above Kirn. It is an eighteen-hole, 6251-yard course with a par of seventy.[76][77]

The two bowling clubs in Dunoon are Dunoon Argyll Bowling Club, on Mary Street, and Bogleha' Bowling Club, on Argyll Street.

In 2006 and 2007, the town hosted a six-a-side swamp football tournament that attracted around 500 players and 1000 spectators.[78][79]

Cowal Rugby Club was formed in 1976. In 2008 it scored its first league victory in the Scottish Hydro Electric Western Regional League West Division 2.

Dunoon Amateurs F.C. was founded in 1975 and play football at Dunoon Stadium and Dunoon Grammar School.

The Dunoon Youth Football League (DYFL), founded in 1981, is a voluntary organisation that teaches football skills to all interested children with ages between 4 and 17. The DYFL have their own clubhouse and changing facilities at Dunoon Stadium. All coaches are parents who have received coaching certification through the Scottish Youth Football Association (SYFA), and the club has a PGA officer and coaches with Sports Injuries First Aid Certification. As of January 2015 the club had a membership of over 125 children. DYFL consists of 4 main sections. 2007, 2008, 2010 and 2012.

Castle Tennis Club is situated in the town's Castle Garden. The club has two concrete and two all-weather courts, all lighted.

Every year in June the town hosts the Argyll Rally, a motorsport event that takes place on closed public roads around the local area. The rally counts as a round of the Scottish Rally Championship and brings competitors from all over United Kingdom.[80]

Walks

 
Tom Odhar summit, Bishop's Glen track

The town and surrounding area are becoming recognised as a destination for outdoor pursuits, including walking, running, golfing, kayaking, sailing, fishing, climbing, triathlon and mountain biking.

Trails (walks, running and mountain biking) thread through the hills surrounding Dunoon. Corlarach Hill has waymarked routes for walkers, mountain biking and horse riders.[81][82] These trails are located next to the Bishop's Glen.

Puck's Glen is a popular short walk set in the hills close to Benmore Botanic Garden. (The arboretum at Benmore Botanic Garden, formerly a private garden for the Younger family,[83] is now open to the public. It comprises 60 hectares (150 acres) and features some of the tallest trees in Britain, including the avenue of Giant Redwoods (Sequoia), some of which are over 37 metres (120 ft) high.[84] One of Dunoon's listed buildings is the Grade 2 Victorian fernery, which was reopened in 2009 after an 18-month restoration.)[85] Part of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, the Garden is 7 miles (11 kilometres) north of the town, just before Loch Eck. A tumbling burn, criss-crossed by bridges, is enclosed by rocky walls heavily hung with mosses and overshadowed by dense trees. The walk has clear, waymarked paths. The glen is named after Puck, from A Midsummer Night's Dream.[86]

Morag's Fairy Glen is a short gorge walk, with trails alongside the Berry Burn, located on the hill behind the West Bay area of Dunoon.[87][88][89]

Bishops Glen trail follows the shore of the remaining one of three reservoirs in the glen, that used to supply fresh water to Dunoon. The reservoir is damming the Balgaidgh Burn (Balgie) and is now a fresh water rod fly fishing location.[90] Access to the hills behind Dunoon, including Corlarach Hill, is available from the Bishop's Glen Reservoir trails.[91]

Media

Dunoon's local weekly newspaper is the Dunoon Observer and Argyllshire Standard, which was founded in 1871 in Sandbank by William Inglis Sr.,[92][93] who was editor and proprietor. (The town once had three other newspapers, namely the Cowal Watchman (1876),[94] Dunoon Herald and Cowal Advertiser[95] and the Dunoon Telegraph.)[96]

Dunoon Community Radio was launched in 2009.[97] Broadcasting on 97.4 FM from the Dunoon Observer building, Dunoon Community Radio is an independent social business entirely staffed by volunteers. Often abbreviated to "DCR" by its presenters, the station has a variety of programming to meet the needs of people living in around Dunoon.

The town was the inspiration behind Damon Albarn's song "The Selfish Giant" on his 2014 solo album Everyday Robots. The song makes particular references to the town ("Walking down Argyll Street when the evening colours call").[98]

Notable people

Gallery

Geography

Dunoon is on the west coast of the Firth of Clyde,[116] and on the east coast of the claw-shaped Cowal peninsula.

Much of the Cowal peninsula is covered with forest, particularly in the northern stretches and to the west and south with small patches in the south-east and east. To the north and north-west is the Argyll Forest Park that was established in 1935.[117]

Climate

As with the rest of the British Isles, Dunoon has a maritime climate with cool summers and mild winters. It is an exceptionally wet part of the country, particularly so for a place near sea-level, with annual average rainfall totals nearing 2,400 mm (94 in).

Recorded temperature extremes since 1960 range from 29.6 °C (85.3 °F) during July 1983[118] to as low as −13.9 °C (7.0 °F) during January 1982.[119]

Climate data for Benmore Botanic Gardens 12m asl, 1971–2000, extremes 1960– (Weather station 7 mi (11 km) to the North of Dunoon)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 14.4
(57.9)
14.5
(58.1)
17.2
(63.0)
23.6
(74.5)
27.0
(80.6)
28.9
(84.0)
29.6
(85.3)
29.0
(84.2)
25.1
(77.2)
21.7
(71.1)
16.5
(61.7)
14.2
(57.6)
29.6
(85.3)
Average high °C (°F) 6.5
(43.7)
6.8
(44.2)
8.6
(47.5)
11.4
(52.5)
14.9
(58.8)
16.8
(62.2)
18.4
(65.1)
18.0
(64.4)
15.3
(59.5)
12.2
(54.0)
8.9
(48.0)
7.2
(45.0)
12.1
(53.8)
Average low °C (°F) 1.0
(33.8)
1.3
(34.3)
2.2
(36.0)
3.4
(38.1)
5.8
(42.4)
8.5
(47.3)
10.7
(51.3)
10.4
(50.7)
8.6
(47.5)
6.1
(43.0)
2.9
(37.2)
1.7
(35.1)
5.2
(41.4)
Record low °C (°F) −13.9
(7.0)
−11.1
(12.0)
−11.1
(12.0)
−4.4
(24.1)
−2.5
(27.5)
−0.6
(30.9)
2.2
(36.0)
2.6
(36.7)
−0.9
(30.4)
−4.1
(24.6)
−6.8
(19.8)
−11.5
(11.3)
−13.9
(7.0)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 298.76
(11.76)
214.43
(8.44)
233.63
(9.20)
119.48
(4.70)
105.12
(4.14)
108.54
(4.27)
127.66
(5.03)
160.85
(6.33)
220.49
(8.68)
257.6
(10.14)
257.82
(10.15)
282.98
(11.14)
2,387.36
(93.98)
Source: Royal Dutch Meteorological Institute[120]

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External links

  • Visit Scotland, Dunoon page
  • Webcam looking over the East Bay, towards Dunoon

dunoon, this, article, about, scottish, town, other, uses, disambiguation, scottish, gaelic, dùn, omhain, main, town, cowal, peninsula, south, argyll, bute, scotland, located, western, shore, upper, firth, clyde, south, holy, loch, north, innellan, well, formi. This article is about the Scottish town For other uses see Dunoon disambiguation Dunoon d u ˈ n uː n Scottish Gaelic Dun Omhain is the main town on the Cowal peninsula in the south of Argyll and Bute Scotland It is located on the western shore of the upper Firth of Clyde to the south of the Holy Loch and to the north of Innellan 2 As well as forming part of the council area of Argyll and Bute Dunoon also has its own community council 3 Dunoon was a burgh until 1976 4 DunoonScottish Gaelic Dun OmhainTownHarbour at Dunoon looking north over Dunoon Pier to the Firth of Clyde and Dunoon Harbour from Castle HillDunoonLocation within Argyll and ButePopulation7 660 mid 2020 est 1 OS grid referenceNS173769 Edinburgh67 mi 108 km London364 mi 586 km Council areaArgyll and ButeLieutenancy areaArgyll and ButeCountryScotlandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townDUNOONPostcode districtPA23Dialling code01369UK ParliamentArgyll and ButeScottish ParliamentArgyll and ButeList of places UK Scotland 55 57 03 N 4 55 34 W 55 9509 N 4 9262 W 55 9509 4 9262 Coordinates 55 57 03 N 4 55 34 W 55 9509 N 4 9262 W 55 9509 4 9262The early history of Dunoon often revolves around two feuding clans the Lamonts and the Campbells Dunoon was a popular destination when travel by steamships was common around the Firth of Clyde Glaswegians described this as going doon the watter 5 This diminished and many holidaymakers started to go elsewhere as roads and railways improved and the popularity of overseas travel increased In 1961 during the height of the Cold War Dunoon became a garrison town to the United States Navy In 1992 shortly after the dissolution of the Soviet Union they closed their Holy Loch base in Sandbank and neighbouring Dunoon suffered an economic downturn Since the base s closure the town and surrounding area are again turning to tourism marketing to outdoor enthusiasts and wildlife lovers as well as promoting festivals and competitions The largest annual event held in the town is the Cowal Highland Gathering which has been held since 1894 6 The Royal National Mod has been also been held in the town 7 Contents 1 History 2 Government and politics 3 Religion 4 Culture 4 1 Architecture 4 1 1 Dunoon Pier 4 1 2 Burgh Hall 4 1 3 Other buildings 4 2 Landmarks and attractions 4 3 Festivals 5 Transport 6 Education 7 Sport and recreation 7 1 Walks 8 Media 9 Notable people 10 Gallery 11 Geography 11 1 Climate 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditSee also List of listed buildings in Dunoon Dunoon Pier looking southeast East Bay looking north including the Argyll Hotel Dunoon Castle was built on a small partly artificial conical hill beside the Firth of Clyde in the 12th century of which low walls remain 8 It eventually became a royal castle with the Earls of Argyll Campbells as hereditary keepers paying a nominal rent of a single red rose to the sovereign Mary Queen of Scots visited Dunoon Castle on 26 July 1563 and granted several charters during her visit 9 In 1646 the Dunoon massacre of members of Clan Lamont by members of Clan Campbell took place The castle was destroyed during Argyll s Rising a rebellion in 1685 against James VII 10 In the early 19th century the town s main street Argyll Street stopped at Moir Street Instead of continuing to Dunoon Pier it turned right at today s Sinbad s Bar Before Dunoon Burgh Hall was built beginning in 1873 the land was an open field owned by McArthur Moir leading to an area known as the Gallowhill There were no streets and houses between Argyll Street and Edward Street Argyll Street roughly as it is seen today was completed by 1870 Moir donated some of his land for the building of the Burgh Hall but he did not get to see its completion he died by suicide in 1872 4 Dunoon in the 21st century is overlaid with the ghost of a town which in 1885 possessed two banks 21 insurance agencies 10 hotels a gas company two bowling greens three weekly papers the West of Scotland Convalescent Sea side Homes complete with Romanesque hydropathic spa and the lavishly appointed second homes of some of Scotland s most successful people Saving the Hall Jay Merrick 2017 11 The two banks mentioned above were the Union Bank of Scotland and the City of Glasgow Bank 12 The hydropathic spa meanwhile was an elegant new baths building named Ardvullin erected a little to the north of the village as a hydropathic establishment where baths hot cold artificial salt and Turkish may be had at moderate charges 13 Many of the town s early villas had their own private bathing ground or boxes The best bathing place for ladies is the West Bay Gentlemen s bathing places Rocks foot of Castle Hill deep at all states of the tide Sand beyond Baugie Burn beginning of Bullwood shallow and sandy Rocks behind Argyll Hotel available only at high water Kirn Pier and Hunters Quay deep water Colegate s Guide to Dunoon Kirn and Hunter s Quay John Colegate 1868 13 The population of the united parishes of Dunoon and Kilmun in 1861 was 5 444 in 1866 the estimated population of Dunoon from Baugie Burn to Hunters Quay was 3 000 14 Submarine passing Kirn Viewed from Gourock During the Second World War as the main part of the Firth of Clyde defences an anti submarine boom was anchored to the shore in Dunoon 15 16 A Palmerston Fort and camp at Ardhallow in the south of the town provided one of the coastal defence gun emplacements that covered the anti submarine boom and Firth of Clyde waters There also was a gun emplacement on top of Castle Hill In 1961 as the Cold War intensified the Holy Loch s importance grew when the U S Navy submarine tender USS Proteus brought Polaris ballistic missiles nuclear submarines to the Firth of Clyde at Sandbank Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament protesters drew this to the public s attention 17 Holy Loch was for thirty years the home port of US Navy Submarine Squadron 14 and Dunoon therefore became a garrison town In 1991 the Holy Loch base was deemed unnecessary following the demise of the Soviet Union and was subsequently withdrawn The last submarine tender to be based there the USS Simon Lake left Holy Loch in March 1992 leading to a major and continuing downturn in the local economy 11 In May 2012 Dunoon and Campbeltown were jointly named as the rural places in Scotland most vulnerable to a downturn in a report by the Scottish Agricultural College looking at 90 places 18 19 Government and politics EditMain articles Dunoon ward Argyll and Bute Scottish Parliament constituency and Argyll and Bute UK Parliament constituency Dunoon is represented in the Scottish Parliament by Jenni Minto of the Scottish National Party SNP who holds the Argyll and Bute seat 20 Dunoon also lies within the Highlands and Islands electoral region from which a further seven additional members are elected to produce a form of proportional representation for the region as a whole In the House of Commons Dunoon is represented by the SNP s Brendan O Hara who holds a seat also entitled Argyll and Bute 21 although this seat has different boundaries from the one used for the Scottish Parliament Argyll and Bute Council is the Local Authority for the council area covering Dunoon It is one of 32 such council areas across Scotland Dunoon forms a single ward for elections to Argyll and Bute Council electing three councillors via the single transferable vote system At the last election held in May 2017 one independent and one member from each of the SNP and the Conservatives was elected to represent the town 22 Dunoon has a community council 23 whose primary role is to represent the views of the community to the Local Authority and other public bodies 24 Religion EditThere is evidence of an episcopal seat at Dunoon from the latter part of the 15th century No remains of the Bishop s Palace now exist with the site now occupied by the playground of Dunoon Primary School between Hillfoot and Kirk Streets 25 Today there are a number of churches in Dunoon including The High Kirk built in 1816 Church of Scotland High Kirk St John s ChurchRoman Catholic Our Lady and St Mun s Church 26 Other churches Cowal Baptist Church 27 Dunoon Baptist Church Centre 28 Dunoon Free Church built 1843 29 30 Holy Trinity Episcopal ChurchKingdom Hall Kingdom Hall of Jehovah s Witnesses 31 Culture EditArchitecture Edit Dunoon Pier Edit Main article Dunoon Pier Dunoon Pier pictured in 2011 Dunoon s Victorian pier was extended to the current structure between 1896 and 1898 32 It was shortened to allow the building of a breakwater in 2005 just to the south of the pier As well as protecting the pier and its architecture from storm surges a new link span was installed alongside the breakwater This was to allow the berthing and loading of roll on roll off ferries instead of the side loading ferries that used to serve the pier A tender to serve the new link span between two interested parties Caledonian MacBrayne and Western Ferries came to nothing Prior to June 2011 the pier was in daily use by Caledonian MacBrayne who ran a regular foot passenger and car ferry service to Gourock However after June 2011 a renewed tendering process produced a passenger only ferry service Argyll Ferries owned by Caledonian MacBrayne using the breakwater for berthing On 1 September 2004 during the construction of the breakwater the cargo vessel Jackie Moon 82 metres in length ran aground on the breakwater with six people on board Since the breakwater became operational in June 2011 Argyll Ferries operate from this docking facility The Waverley struck the breakwater on 26 June 2009 with some 700 people on board The pier was partially refurbished by Argyll and Bute Council during 2015 Now containing meeting rooms it is purely a tourist attraction 33 Burgh Hall Edit Dunoon Burgh Hall 2012 Dunoon Burgh Hall opened in 1874 the work of notable Glasgow architect Robert Alexander Bryden who is buried in Dunoon Cemetery a mile to the north It is a Scottish baronial style building that housed the municipal offices and had a hall accommodating 500 people 34 The Category B listed building re opened in June 2017 and is a fully accessible venue for exhibitions performances and gatherings Alongside a gallery and theatre the venue offers creative workshop space a garden and a cafe 35 36 37 Other buildings Edit On 20 August 2021 several Argyll Street buildings were destroyed in an arson attack 38 Landmarks and attractions Edit Highland Mary statue Mary Campbell 1763 1786 also known as Highland Mary and Bonny Mary O Argyll was born at Auchamore in Dunoon She started an affair with the bard Robert Burns The Highland Mary statue was erected in 1896 it is prominently sited on Castle Hill overlooking the breakwater in Dunoon 39 40 41 42 43 The war memorial of Dunoon is located in the Castle Gardens overlooking the pier 44 The Queen s Hall is the town s major multi function hall complex 45 It is situated opposite the head of the Victorian pier and built in 1958 It was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 11 August 1958 46 The building houses four function suites and a large main hall The main hall has a stage with professional sound and lighting equipment and attracted popular acts such as Pink Floyd 47 Blur the Saw Doctors David Gray Morrissey the Red Hot Chilli Pipers Primal Scream and comedians Kevin Bridges Bill Bailey and Roy Chubby Brown In late 2015 the Queen s Hall was closed to enable a major refurbishment In December 2016 it was announced that the refurbishment would not commence until January 2017 48 The Queens Hall reopened in August 2018 49 Riverside swim and health centre including an indoor pool 25m long and associated facilities located in the centre of Dunoon next to the Firth of Clyde on Alexandra Parade Facilities include a main pool teaching pool gym including a sauna and a water flume 50 Dunoon Library is situated in the rebuilt Queens Hall at the Castle Gardens 51 A small group of rocks known as the Gantocks lie off the coast at Dunoon The navigation beacon on the Gantocks in the Firth of Clyde is close to the coast at Dunoon It was built in 1886 52 The Clan Lamont Memorial also known as the Dunoon Massacre Memorial is on Tom A Mhoid Road close to Castle Hill It was dedicated in 1906 and commemorates the Dunoon massacre of 1646 when the Campbell Clan attacked the Lamont Clan killing over 200 people 53 54 Local wildlife includes seals otters dolphins basking sharks roe deer red deer red squirrels and many species of birds 55 The Castle House Museum opens during the summer season It holds historical information and displays for Dunoon and the Cowal peninsula 56 Festivals Edit Panoramic view of the 2014 Cowal Highland Gathering The Cowal Highland Gathering established in 1894 attracts contestants and spectators from all over the world 57 It is held annually over the final weekend in August at Dunoon Stadium 58 Cowal Open Studios held over a fortnight in September gives the opportunity to visit the studios of artists around Dunoon and Cowal Cowalfest celebrates the outdoors activities like rambling around Dunoon for ten days in October Since the 1930s Dunoon has hosted the Royal National Mod a number of times 1930 1950 1968 1994 2000 2006 2012 and 2018 59 In 2013 the first Dunoon Film Festival was held over three days and opened with first public screening of Your Cheatin Heart a series made by the BBC that had last been shown on television in 1990 60 Transport Edit The steamboat Caledonia departing Dunoon Pier in 1967 Argyll Flyer in the current CalMac livery approaching Dunoon Pier The paddle steamer Waverley arriving at Dunoon Pier Dunoon is accessible by direct land and sea routes and indirectly by rail at Gourock Dunoon lies towards the southern end of the A815 road At its northernmost point near Cairndow this road joins the A83 and provides access to the town by road from Loch Lomond Glasgow in the east from Inveraray Oban in the north and from Campbeltown in the west Two ferry operators provide services to Dunoon Cowal peninsula from Gourock Inverclyde The public service route provided by the Scottish Government owned Caledonian MacBrayne which is a foot passenger only service between Dunoon Breakwater and Gourock pier giving easy access to the National Rail Network 61 Local company Western Ferries Clyde LTD carries motor vehicles and foot passengers between McInroy s Point A770 Cloch Road and Hunters Quay near Dunoon 62 Modern Dunoon owes its existence to steam power as late as 1822 there were only three or four slated houses the rest of the residences being traditional Highland cottages 63 In the New Statistical Account the MP James Ewing from Glasgow is named as beginning the expansion of the village when he built Castle House close to Dunoon Castle 64 The growth of the village increased from that time paralleling the engineering led growth of the steamers 65 Other infrastructural advances also helped like the construction of a 130 yard long 120 metre jetty in 1835 66 From 1812 to the late 1960s thousands of holiday makers travelled doon the watter from Glasgow and industrial Lanarkshire to Dunoon and to numerous other town piers on the Firth of Clyde In 1868 the following summer excursions by water could be had from Dunoon going and returning the same day 67 Ardentinny Chancellor 11 A M Ardrishaig Iona 9 30 A M Arran Hero 10 30 A M Arrochar Chancellor 11 A M Ayr Vale of Clyde 9 15 A M Blairmore Chancellor 11 A M Brodick Hero 10 30 A M Campbeltown Gael 9 15 A M Carradale Gael 9 15 A M Fairlie Vale of Clyde 9 15 A M Gareloch early steamer to Greenock thence per Garelochhead steamer Innellan various during the day Kyles of Bute to Tighnabruaich or Colintraive Iona Kilchattan Bay Bute Hero Lamlash Hero 10 30 A M Largs Vale of Clyde or early steamer to Innellan thence cross by Wemyss Bay Railway Steamer to Wemyss Bay Lochgoil Chancellor and Lochlong change at Blairmore Loch Lomond Chancellor or early steamer to Bowling thence by rail to Balloch thence by steamer to Tarbert where cross to Arrochar and catch Chancellor returning Or vice versa Loch Long Chancellor Millport Vale of Clyde 9 15 A M Rothesay various during the day Tarbert Iona Troon Vale of Clyde Wemyss Bay steamer to Innellan thence cross by Wemyss Bay Railway Steamer to Wemyss BayOnly one Clyde steamer the Waverley satisfies demand for this business today It berths at the breakwater when visiting Dunoon during its summer season 68 At Gourock Pier a ScotRail train service provides access to the National Rail network via the Inverclyde Line at Glasgow Central 69 Public transport within Dunoon and the surrounding area is provided under government subsidy by bus and coach operator West Coast Motors West Coast Motors route 486 provides a regular return journey from Dunoon town centre to Inveraray where it connects with a Scottish Citylink service 926 and 976 onward to Campbeltown Oban Glasgow and points in between 70 Education EditDunoon is served by three primary schools Dunoon Primary School is on Hillfoot Street this building was the original 1641 location of Dunoon Grammar School St Muns Primary School 71 is on Pilot Street and Kirn Primary School is on Park Road 72 Dunoon Grammar School is located on Ardenslate Road in Kirn The University of the Highlands and Islands Argyll College has a campus in Dunoon located in the West Bay near to the breakwater and Castle Hill 73 Sport and recreation Edit Dunoon Stadium pictured in 2019 looking southeast towards the town The town s sporting arena is Dunoon Stadium which is located in the north of the town near Dunoon Grammar School When it hosted football matches it had the largest capacity of any amateur ground in Scotland citation needed It later became the focal point of the Cowal Highland Gathering Motorcycle dirt track racing or speedway was staged at the stadium on 18 June 1932 as part of the annual Dunoon and Cowal Agricultural Show A demonstration event had been staged in May 1932 Fishing locations surround Dunoon both fresh and sea water 74 Mountain biking trails are available 75 Dunoon Camanachd was established in 2015 the shinty team started competing in South Division 2 in 2016 Cowal Golf Club is situated on the hillside above Kirn It is an eighteen hole 6251 yard course with a par of seventy 76 77 The two bowling clubs in Dunoon are Dunoon Argyll Bowling Club on Mary Street and Bogleha Bowling Club on Argyll Street In 2006 and 2007 the town hosted a six a side swamp football tournament that attracted around 500 players and 1000 spectators 78 79 Cowal Rugby Club was formed in 1976 In 2008 it scored its first league victory in the Scottish Hydro Electric Western Regional League West Division 2 Dunoon Amateurs F C was founded in 1975 and play football at Dunoon Stadium and Dunoon Grammar School The Dunoon Youth Football League DYFL founded in 1981 is a voluntary organisation that teaches football skills to all interested children with ages between 4 and 17 The DYFL have their own clubhouse and changing facilities at Dunoon Stadium All coaches are parents who have received coaching certification through the Scottish Youth Football Association SYFA and the club has a PGA officer and coaches with Sports Injuries First Aid Certification As of January 2015 update the club had a membership of over 125 children DYFL consists of 4 main sections 2007 2008 2010 and 2012 Castle Tennis Club is situated in the town s Castle Garden The club has two concrete and two all weather courts all lighted Every year in June the town hosts the Argyll Rally a motorsport event that takes place on closed public roads around the local area The rally counts as a round of the Scottish Rally Championship and brings competitors from all over United Kingdom 80 Walks Edit Tom Odhar summit Bishop s Glen track The town and surrounding area are becoming recognised as a destination for outdoor pursuits including walking running golfing kayaking sailing fishing climbing triathlon and mountain biking Trails walks running and mountain biking thread through the hills surrounding Dunoon Corlarach Hill has waymarked routes for walkers mountain biking and horse riders 81 82 These trails are located next to the Bishop s Glen Puck s Glen is a popular short walk set in the hills close to Benmore Botanic Garden The arboretum at Benmore Botanic Garden formerly a private garden for the Younger family 83 is now open to the public It comprises 60 hectares 150 acres and features some of the tallest trees in Britain including the avenue of Giant Redwoods Sequoia some of which are over 37 metres 120 ft high 84 One of Dunoon s listed buildings is the Grade 2 Victorian fernery which was reopened in 2009 after an 18 month restoration 85 Part of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh the Garden is 7 miles 11 kilometres north of the town just before Loch Eck A tumbling burn criss crossed by bridges is enclosed by rocky walls heavily hung with mosses and overshadowed by dense trees The walk has clear waymarked paths The glen is named after Puck from A Midsummer Night s Dream 86 Morag s Fairy Glen is a short gorge walk with trails alongside the Berry Burn located on the hill behind the West Bay area of Dunoon 87 88 89 Bishops Glen trail follows the shore of the remaining one of three reservoirs in the glen that used to supply fresh water to Dunoon The reservoir is damming the Balgaidgh Burn Balgie and is now a fresh water rod fly fishing location 90 Access to the hills behind Dunoon including Corlarach Hill is available from the Bishop s Glen Reservoir trails 91 Media EditDunoon s local weekly newspaper is the Dunoon Observer and Argyllshire Standard which was founded in 1871 in Sandbank by William Inglis Sr 92 93 who was editor and proprietor The town once had three other newspapers namely the Cowal Watchman 1876 94 Dunoon Herald and Cowal Advertiser 95 and the Dunoon Telegraph 96 Dunoon Community Radio was launched in 2009 97 Broadcasting on 97 4 FM from the Dunoon Observer building Dunoon Community Radio is an independent social business entirely staffed by volunteers Often abbreviated to DCR by its presenters the station has a variety of programming to meet the needs of people living in around Dunoon The town was the inspiration behind Damon Albarn s song The Selfish Giant on his 2014 solo album Everyday Robots The song makes particular references to the town Walking down Argyll Street when the evening colours call 98 Notable people EditVirginia Bottomley politician 99 Robert Alexander Bryden architect educated in Dunoon 100 Mary Campbell love interest of Robert Burns 94 MT Carney businesswoman 101 Donald Caskie minister educated in Dunoon 102 Peter Dorschel spy tried for espionage in Dunoon 103 William Fraser architect lived in Dunoon 104 Stewart Houston footballer born in Dunoon 105 Sir Harry Lauder 1870 1950 whose Laudervale mansion stood just south of Dunoon on Bullwood Road 106 Neil MacFarlane footballer born in Dunoon 107 Mackintosh MacKay minister in Dunoon and Gaelic scholar 108 Sylvester McCoy actor 109 Alexander Robertson boatbuilder operating from boatyard near Dunoon 110 George Robertson politician educated in Dunoon 111 Arabella Scott suffragette born in Dunoon 112 Muriel Scott suffragette family home was in Dunoon 113 John Smith politician educated in Dunoon 114 Brian Wilson politician 115 Gallery Edit Dunoon Grammar School Hostel Dunoon Grammar School in 2005 since demolished and rebuilt Pipe band at the Cowal Highland Gathering Dunoon from above the Firth of Clyde looking west The eastern side of Dunoon Pier Highland Mary statue Castle House Gardens and war memorial looking northeast to East Bay The Gantocks from Dunoon with Gourock in the background to the east Castle Hill looking westGeography EditDunoon is on the west coast of the Firth of Clyde 116 and on the east coast of the claw shaped Cowal peninsula Much of the Cowal peninsula is covered with forest particularly in the northern stretches and to the west and south with small patches in the south east and east To the north and north west is the Argyll Forest Park that was established in 1935 117 Climate Edit As with the rest of the British Isles Dunoon has a maritime climate with cool summers and mild winters It is an exceptionally wet part of the country particularly so for a place near sea level with annual average rainfall totals nearing 2 400 mm 94 in Recorded temperature extremes since 1960 range from 29 6 C 85 3 F during July 1983 118 to as low as 13 9 C 7 0 F during January 1982 119 Climate data for Benmore Botanic Gardens 12m asl 1971 2000 extremes 1960 Weather station 7 mi 11 km to the North of Dunoon Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 14 4 57 9 14 5 58 1 17 2 63 0 23 6 74 5 27 0 80 6 28 9 84 0 29 6 85 3 29 0 84 2 25 1 77 2 21 7 71 1 16 5 61 7 14 2 57 6 29 6 85 3 Average high C F 6 5 43 7 6 8 44 2 8 6 47 5 11 4 52 5 14 9 58 8 16 8 62 2 18 4 65 1 18 0 64 4 15 3 59 5 12 2 54 0 8 9 48 0 7 2 45 0 12 1 53 8 Average low C F 1 0 33 8 1 3 34 3 2 2 36 0 3 4 38 1 5 8 42 4 8 5 47 3 10 7 51 3 10 4 50 7 8 6 47 5 6 1 43 0 2 9 37 2 1 7 35 1 5 2 41 4 Record low C F 13 9 7 0 11 1 12 0 11 1 12 0 4 4 24 1 2 5 27 5 0 6 30 9 2 2 36 0 2 6 36 7 0 9 30 4 4 1 24 6 6 8 19 8 11 5 11 3 13 9 7 0 Average precipitation mm inches 298 76 11 76 214 43 8 44 233 63 9 20 119 48 4 70 105 12 4 14 108 54 4 27 127 66 5 03 160 85 6 33 220 49 8 68 257 6 10 14 257 82 10 15 282 98 11 14 2 387 36 93 98 Source Royal Dutch Meteorological Institute 120 References Edit Mid 2020 Population Estimates for Settlements and Localities in Scotland National Records of Scotland 31 March 2022 Retrieved 31 March 2022 OS 25 inch map 1892 1949 with Bing opacity slider National Library of Scotland Ordnance Survey Retrieved 12 October 2017 Dunoon Community Council Home amp Latest News www community council org uk a b Dunoon Burgh Hall Chronicles issue 1 PDF Scottish phrase of the week Doon the watter www scotsman com 21 October 2014 www samteq co uk SAMTEQ Cowal Highland Gathering World s Biggest Highland Games Retrieved 21 February 2017 info reefnet co uk An Comunn Gaidhealach Royal National Mod Mod News Retrieved 21 February 2017 Dunoon Castle Canmore Retrieved 11 December 2016 Gazetteer for Scotland Dunoon Scottish places info Retrieved 14 December 2016 Kennedy A 2016 Rebellion Government and the Scottish Response to Argyll s Rising of 1685 PDF Journal of Scottish Historical Studies 36 40 59 doi 10 3366 jshs 2016 0167 a b If you rebuild it they will come Unlocking local creativity doon the watter Jay Merrick The Academy of Urbanism John COLEGATE 1868 Colegate s Guide to Dunoon Kirn and Hunter s Quay Second edition With plates John Colegate p 7 Archived from the original on 20 September 2021 Retrieved 30 December 2020 a b Colegate s Guide to Dunoon Kirn and Hunter s Quay Second edition John Colegate 1868 page 8 Colegate s Guide to Dunoon Kirn and Hunter s Quay Second edition John Colegate 1868 page 12 Clyde Defences Cloch Point To Dunoon Anti submarine Boom Canmore 3 July 2013 Retrieved 15 February 2017 Bute during World War II www bute at war org Anti Polaris Protest at Dunoon Angry Kerbside Exchanges The Glasgow Herald 15 May 1961 p 8 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Vulnerable Scottish rural towns listed BBC News 28 May 2012 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Cowling Emma 27 May 2012 Revealed our rural towns on the brink Scotsland on Sunday Retrieved 11 December 2016 Scottish Parliamentary Election 6 May 2021 Results Argyll and Bute Council 6 May 2021 Retrieved 14 June 2021 Argyll amp Bute parliamentary constituency Election 2019 Retrieved 14 December 2019 Declaration of Results Ward 7 Dunoon PDF Argyll and Bute Council 5 May 2017 Retrieved 15 June 2021 Community councils map Argyll and Bute Council Retrieved 14 June 2021 community councils Argyll and Bute Council 14 November 2012 Retrieved 14 June 2021 DUNOON CONSERVATION AREA APPRAISAL and CONSERVATION STRATEGY 2017 Argyll amp Bute Council Our Lady and St Mun s Church Dunoon stmuns Cowal Baptist Church Dunoon 24 September 2017 Dunoon Baptist Church Working Worshipping and Witnessing for God in the community dunoonbaptistchurch org Church Free Church of Scotland Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland A Graphic and Accurate Description of Every Place in Scotland Frances Hindes Groome 1901 p 444 Kingdom Hall Of Jehovah S Witnesses Church Dunoon Argyll amp Bute UK dunoon inuklocal co uk DUNOON PIER WITH WAITING ROOMS AND PIER MASTER S OFFICE SIGNAL TOWER AND ADJOINING TEAROOM TICKET LODGE PIER RAILINGS Archived 20 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine Historic Environment Scotland Dunoon National Piers Society National Piers Society 10 June 2015 Archived from the original on 21 November 2016 Retrieved 12 December 2016 Dunoon s culture and events hub Dunoon Burgh Hall Retrieved 20 February 2017 Hall reopens as contemporary arts centre BBC News 19 June 2017 Retrieved 21 May 2018 Burgh Hall Theatres Database The Theatres Trust Retrieved 20 February 2017 Argyll Street Burgh Hall Building Historic Environment Scotland Retrieved 20 February 2017 Two charged after town centre fire ArgyllBute24 co uk Robert Burns and Highland Mary Portal to the Past Retrieved 14 December 2016 Caw James Lewis 1912 Stevenson David Watson Wikisource Statue Of Highland Mary Portal historicenvironment scot Retrieved 11 January 2017 Robert Burns Country The Burns Encyclopedia Highland Harry Robertburns org Retrieved 22 November 2016 Webmaster Tim Gardner David Watson Stevenson 1842 1904 sculptor a biography Dunoon Cenotaph WW1 and WW2 War Memorials Online www warmemorialsonline org uk The Queens Hall Dunoon Argyll and Bute Council Argyll bute gov uk Retrieved 22 November 2016 Dunoon Queens Hall Meet the Buyer Supplier Development Programme Sdpscotland co uk Retrieved 11 January 2017 Pink Floyd s stormy trip to Dark Side of Dunoon Gordon 16 December 2016 Queens Hall Work to begin Dunoon Observer Retrieved 17 December 2016 Dunoon Queen s Hall handover complete Argyll and Bute Council 27 July 2018 Retrieved 15 January 2019 Riverside Leisure Centre Live Argyll Dunoon Library Secret Scotland The Gantocks Secret Scotland Historic Environment Scotland Dunoon Tom A Mhoid Road Clan Lamont Memorial 183507 Canmore Retrieved 21 February 2017 Clan Lamont Memorial Dunoon Commemorations Project The Scottish Military Research Group Retrieved 21 February 2017 Includes several photographs Where to Find wildlife visitcowal Retrieved 21 February 2017 Castle House Museum Dunoon History culture geneaology services clans and exhibitions Castlehouse Museum Retrieved 22 November 2016 COWAL HIGHLAND GATHERING 1974 Moving Image Archive National Library of Scotland Retrieved 11 July 2018 Cowal Highland Gathering World s Biggest Highland Games Cowalgathering com Retrieved 22 November 2016 List of Mod s places for each year on Sabhal Mor Ostaig website Your Cheatin Heart to open first Dunoon Film Festival BBC News 10 May 2013 Gourock to Dunoon Service CalMac Ferries Calmac Ferries Western Ferries Clyde Ltd Western Ferries Macdonald Hugh 1878 Days at the coast a series of sketches descriptive of the Firth of Clyde its watering places its scenery and its associations Glasgow Dunn p 346 Retrieved 11 July 2018 Mackay M 1845 The new statistical account of Scotland Vol 7 ed Edinburgh and London W Blackwood and Sons p 607 Retrieved 11 July 2018 OS 6 inch map 1843 1882 with Bing opacity slider National Library of Scotland Ordnance Survey Retrieved 12 October 2017 Williamson James 1904 The Clyde passenger steamers its rise and progress during the nineteenth century from the Comet of 1812 to the King Edward of 1901 Glasgow J Maclehose p 78 Retrieved 11 July 2018 John COLEGATE 1868 Colegate s Guide to Dunoon Kirn and Hunter s Quay Second edition With plates John Colegate p 13 Retrieved 30 December 2020 Taylor Marianne 9 May 2015 The Waverley Paddling doon the watter for 40 years The Herald Retrieved 11 December 2016 Train to and from Gourock ScotRail Scotrail 486 Dunoon to Inveraray West Coast Motors Council Argyll and Bute 3 November 2010 St Muns Primary School Council Argyll and Bute 31 January 2018 Kirn Primary School Kirm Primary School Argyll College UHI University of the Highlands and Islands Retrieved 7 December 2016 Cowal Feature Page on Undiscovered Scotland Undiscovered Scotland Retrieved 22 November 2016 Dunoon the best Scottish trail centre you ve never heard of MBR www samteq co uk SAMTEQ Cowal Golf Club Stunning 18 Hole in Cowal Argyll Cowal Golf Club Dunoon Golf Visit Scotland Dunoon swamped by football fans BBC News 1 July 2006 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Swamp soccer teams play dirty BBC News 16 July 2007 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Argyll Rally Homepage Argyll Rally Retrieved 9 February 2019 Explore woods Corlarach Hill The Woodland Trust Archived from the original on 24 November 2016 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Corlarach Forestry Commission Scotland Retrieved 11 December 2016 Younger Family at Benmore Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh Benmore Botanic Garden Rbge org uk 8 March 2016 Retrieved 22 November 2016 Gardens Benmore Botanic Garden Dunoon Argyll The Scotsman 17 October 2009 Retrieved 12 January 2017 Puck s Glen Government of the United Kingdom Retrieved 22 November 2016 Dunoon Visitor Guide Accommodation Things To Do amp More Visit Scotland Morag s Fairy Glen West Bay Dunoon 28 March 2015 Morag s Fairy Glen CANMORE national record of the historic environment Retrieved 31 May 2021 Dunoon Reservoir 19 March 2015 Dunoon Visitor Guide Accommodation Things To Do amp More Visit Scotland History of the Dunoon Observer Dunoon observer com Retrieved 9 April 2012 Evening Times Google News Archive Search a b Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland A Graphic and Accurate Description of Every Place in Scotland 1901 p 1330 The Dunoon Herald and Cowal Advertiser at WorldCat org The Dunoon telegraph at WorldCat org Dunoon Cowal Argyll Scotland radio station English and Gaelic programmes Dunoon Community Radio Retrieved 14 January 2012 Damon Albarn on how Dunoon inspired debut album www scotsman com Retrieved 30 May 2019 MP double act for Conservatives Abroad Majorca Daily Bulletin 22 September 2004 Retrieved 9 October 2022 Robert Alexander Bryden Dictionary of Scottish Architects Retrieved 9 October 2022 Carney Arrives At UM in N Y Ad Week 16 June 2003 The Rev Dr Donald Currie Caskie OBE DD MA OCF Clan Macpherson Association 2012 Retrieved 25 November 2016 German for sentence in secrets case The Guardian Manchester 20 June 1967 p 3 ProQuest 185247880 subscription required Dunoon regeneration Queens Hall Project Argyll and Bute Council s website 8 July 2014 Retrieved 27 August 2020 Stewart Mackie Houston MUFC Info Retrieved 9 October 2022 Phil Miller 23 April 2010 Fly me to Dunoon Scottish bid for de Niro s film festival Herald Scotland Retrieved 27 October 2011 Neil MacFarlane at Soccerbase Scott Hew 1923 Fasti ecclesiae scoticanae the succession of ministers in the Church of Scotland from the reformation Vol 4 Edinburgh Oliver and Boyd p 24 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Sylvester McCoy BFI Retrieved 9 January 2022 Hutchison David 21 May 2013 Largs to Brisbane Tragic Voyage of the Southern Cross Ayrshire History Retrieved 9 October 2022 Rt Hon Lord Robertson KT of Port Ellen KT GCMG The British Forces Foundation Retrieved 9 October 2022 Arabella Scott National Records of Scotland Retrieved 9 October 2022 Leneman Leah 1995 A Guid Cause the women s suffrage movement in Scotland Mercat Press pp 194 208 John Smith Gazetteer for Scotland Retrieved 9 October 2022 Bernard Ingham Gerry Hassan 2003 The Political Guide to Modern Scotland People Places and Power Politico s pp 104 105 ISBN 978 1 84275 048 3 Retrieved 30 December 2020 Dunoon Feature Page on Undiscovered Scotland Undiscovered Scotland Argyll Forest Park Forestry Commission Scotland Retrieved 30 December 2020 1983 Maximum Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute 1982 Minimum Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute Benmore averages KNMI Retrieved 3 November 2011 External links EditMap sources for Dunoon Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dunoon Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Dunoon Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Dunoon Visit Scotland Dunoon page Webcam looking over the East Bay towards Dunoon Portal Scotland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dunoon amp oldid 1133817717, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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