Volume contents
- 1 - Farr etc , page 1 (start)
- 20 - Farr etc , page 20
- 40 - Farr etc , page 40
- 60 - Farr etc , page 60
- 80 - Farr etc , page 80
- 100 - Farr etc , page 100
- 120 - Farr etc , page 120
- 140 - Farr etc , page 140
- 160 - Farr etc , page 160
- 180 - Farr etc , page 180
- 200 - Farr etc , page 200
- 220 - Farr etc , page 220
- 240 - Farr etc , page 240
- 260 - Farr etc , page 260
- 280 - Farr etc , page 280
- 300 - Farr etc , page 300
- 318 - Farr etc , page 318 (end)
- 319 - Farr etc , title page
- 320 - Farr etc , index
| List of names as written | Various modes of spelling | Authorities for spelling | Situation | Description remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALLT NAN CON-UISGE | Allt nan Con Uisg Stream of the Water Dogs. |
Mr. M. Ross Strathy Mr. N. Mackay Armadale Mr. Munro Strathy |
018 | Rises a Short distance east of Loch Buidhe Beag, And flows eastward to a Confluence with Armadale Burn. |
| CAOL-LOCH | Caol-loch | Mr. M. Ross Strathy Mr. N. Mackay Armadale Mr. Munro Strathy |
018 | A long narrow lake Some little distance west of Loch Buidhe Beag. The property of His Grace the Duke of Sutherland. |
| LOCH GAINEIMH | Loch Gaineamh Sand Lake |
Mr. M. Ross Strathy Mr. N. Mackay Armadale Mr. Munro Strathy |
018 | A Small lake some little distance north of Caol-loch. |
Continued entries/extra info
[Page] 123
County of Sutherland -- Parish of Farr
Allt nan Con-uisg [Note]
see Cù-uisge in the Dictionaries
[Signed] George Rose C.A. [Civilian Assistant]
Ordnance Survey - Sutherland county, OS Name Books - Sutherland county - Volume 20 - Parishes of Farr, Kildonan, Reay and Tongue, OS1/33/20
This volume contains place name information from the parishes of Farr, Kildonan, Reay, and Tongue.
Ordnance Survey - Sutherland 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 Sutherland, which is in the north of Scotland.