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Ordnance Survey - Ross and Cromarty county, OS Name Books - Ross and Cromarty county (Mainland) - Volume 8 - Parish of Cromarty, OS1/28/8

Continued entries/extra info

[Page] 76
[continued from page 75]

------- Examiners replies to each of the underlined portions.

Education. - The parish has its proper parochial school,
furnished with all the legal accommodations. A society school, ------- no such school in
in which Gaelic is taught, has been stationed in the upper part ------- existence at present.
of it for the last quarter of a century. Two other schools have
been opened in town by masters who depend solely on the fees; and ------- Parish and Free Church
a free school, taught on the system of Sheriff Wood, together ------- Schools are the only public sem=
with a female school have been established in it for the last six ------- inares in The Burgh. Vide Name Book
years, by a society of the place. There are one or two other schools
besides.
Extracts from Old Statistical Account not noticed in the New Stat. Acct [Statistical Account]
Parish of Cromarty, in Gaelic Crom Ba, or Crooked Bay.
I may mention a large rock of considerable height, which is
termed "McFarquhar's Bed". What renders this rock remarkable, is ------- Shewn
the grandeur of an arch, which forms a natural bridge under ------- no name
the rock, admitting the waves of the sea to pass out and in with a
tremendous appearance. A still more remarkable curiosity than
the former, is a cove or cavern, formed in a rock close by the sea, ------- Shewn
having an entrance sufficiently large to admit an ordinary sized
man. From the roof and sides of this cavern, there is a continual drop-
ping of water, some of which falls to the bottom of the cave, but by
far the greater quantity is quickly petrified into a white hard substance
with which the roof and sides of the cavern are covered, and make
a beautiful appearance. This cavern is quite accessible, and is
truly a curious phenomenon.
There is a considerable extent of sea coast on the North and south east ------- Cromarty Bay comprises
sides of the parish; that on the north is flat, and after passing the ------- two small bays viz:-
Sutor Bay about half a mile, there is scarce a rock to be met with on ------- Udale Bay and Nigg Bay
either side of the bay. - There is a strong tide flows in and out between ------- There is no bay known
the Sutors; and it is remarkable, that the sea has made considerable ------- here as Sutor Bay
encroachments on the E. [East] end of the town, and falls in on the West ------- There are two prom=
The Sutors of Cromarty, so generally Known, are two promontories ------- ontories on each side
jutting out into the sea, considerably elevated above its level; the one ------- of the mouth of the Crom
on the N. [North] side of the entrance of the bay, and in the county of Ross, the ------- arty Firth: that on the
other on the S. [South] side in the county and parish of Cromarty. The body ------- north called North Sutor
of water between the Sutors, is about 1 1/2 mile in breadth, and ------- and that on the south
------- South Sutor for vide see
------- Name BooK
[continued on page 77]

Ordnance Survey - Ross and Cromarty county, OS Name Books - Ross and Cromarty county (Mainland) - Volume 8 - Parish of Cromarty, OS1/28/8

This volume contains information on place names found in the parish of Cromarty.

Ordnance Survey - Ross and Cromarty county

Ordnance Survey was established in the 18th century to create maps, surveys and associated records for the entirety of Great Britain. These records are arranged by county. This entry has been created to enable searching for Ordnance Survey records for the county of Ross and Cromarty, which is in the north of Scotland. It was formed in 1891 by uniting the separate counties of Cromarty and Ross.

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