Glenuig
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Glenuig
| |
|---|---|
Glenuig Bay | |
Location within the Lochaber area | |
| OS grid reference | NM6708177432 |
| Council area | |
| Lieutenancy area | |
| Country | Scotland |
| Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
| Post town | Lochailort |
| Postcode district | PH38 |
| Dialling code | 01217 |
| Police | Scotland |
| Fire | Scottish |
| Ambulance | Scottish |
| UK Parliament | |
| Scottish Parliament | |
Glenuig (/ɡlɛˈnuːɪɡ/ glen-OO-ig, Scottish Gaelic: Ghlìnn-Ùige) is a small village in Moidart, Lochaber, Highland, on the west coast of Scotland. It is around 30 miles (50 kilometres) west of Fort William and 20 miles (30 kilometres) from Ardnamurchan Point.
Glenuig is a tiny community of just over thirty people located in the parish of Moidart in remote west Lochaber. Nowadays it is taken to include the neighbouring settlements of Samalaman and Alt Ruadh, and contains 21 houses in permanent occupation plus four holiday homes. In a wider sense it includes the nearby hamlets of Roshven and Lochailort, bringing the population over a distance of eight miles (thirteen kilometres) to just over fifty.[1]
Access to Glenuig by public road was only made possible in 1966, and mains electricity arrived in 1983.[1] A growing population of young people saw the revival of Glenuig Village Hall Committee in 1982, running the village hall situated in the old School Room. In 1993 the Hall Committee changed to become Glenuig Community Association.[citation needed]
History
The area has been inhabited for thousands of years, and traces of these earlier residents are everywhere around. The coastal regions here are wild and rocky, but because of the warmer climate within the last two thousand years the inland areas were productive and heavily populated. In the last two hundred years, the population declined through enforced clearances of the glens for sheep and voluntary emigration from the harsher coastal regions to the new colonies, particularly Cape Breton and America.[1]
From 1783 to 1803, Samalaman House, on the outskirts of Glenuig, was the location of a seminary for the underground Catholic Church in Scotland.
Prior to 1966, access was by foot or horseback (from either Lochailort or Kinlochmoidart) or by boat. Since that year, the area has been accessible by a good modern road.[citation needed]
