Hunters Quay: A Journey
Scotland...
The Love We All Share.


Looking up Victoria Road, Hunters Quay this fascinating picture from 1950's
(Picture donated by Moira McFarlane)
Hunter’s Quay was named after the age-of-steam entrepreneur James Hunter of Hafton and his name replaced the more evocative Camusreannach (‘Bay of Ferns’). The magnificent Royal Marine Hotel overlooks the quay. It had its own tiny post office ( now up at George Street since 2002) close by, originally built as a telegraph office for receiving news of the various yacht races. Also serving as the base of the Royal Clyde Yacht Club, the hotel remains a reminder of the great ‘Clyde Fortnight’ of regattas which were held until the nuclear submarine base on Holy Loch inhibited such activities.

Hunter's Quay Hotel and Old Post Office
Click here → Scottish Clans & Tartans also Meanings & Origins

The old Pier at Hunter's Quay.

James Hunter purchased Hafton Estate in 1816, and the quay was built in 1828 and repaired and reconstructed as a pier in 1858. Due to its sheltered position, the pier was used by steamers when stormy weather made Dunoon and Kirn pier landings impossible. The pier, closed in 1964, but it was re-opened in 1973, when Western Ferries bought the pier and opened a new service to McInroy’s Point, convenient to Gourock.
At the beginning of the 19th century, James Hunter also purchased other lands, they were Corrachaive, Glen Lean, Dalilongart, Orchard, Sandbank, Ardnadan and Hunter’s Quay, which formed the Hafton Estate. All these were purchased from Campbell of Ballochyle; Ardenslate and Dunloskin from Campbell of Glendarvel.
Victoria Road 1930s (Picture donated by Ian Marshall)

The last surviving Provost of Dunoon.
Gordon Trapp became a town Councillor of the Burgh of Dunoon in 1957, and was elected Dunoon’s Provost from May 1965 to May 1968, he was then re-elected as a councillor, serving until 1971.
Gordon still lives in the house in Hunter’s Quay which he, his wife and his children built some 44 years ago. A traditional Provost’s lamp-post was mounted in front of the gate of the house.

John Thompson was the last Provost for Dunoon, the position of provost disappeared in the mid 1970s after the formation of Strathclyde Regional Council and a district council).
Hunter's Quay Community Council:
Hunter’s Quay has been an established community and known by this name for over 180 years and has enjoyed world-wide renown as a sailing centre with suitable mooring for yachts.
In May 1975 the residents of Hunter’s Quay were told that their bus service to and from Hunter’s Quay would stop. This would mean that everyone relying on the bus service would be unable to attend events in the town. A group of local residents met and decided to operate social events in the Scout Hall, George Street, Hunter’s Quay.
On 25th June 1975, Minutes of Meeting held in Scout Hall with Hunter’s Quay Committee, Scout Hall Committee and Art Club Committee whereby Hall was granted to the Community for two nights per week, Wednesday and Thursday. By 1976 a group of people willing to give their services were appointed and an ambitious programme of events was laid on. All ideas were considered and events took place such as yoga, bingo, Burns Suppers, band concerts and youth clubs. All events were well attended and the young children were catered for by putting on picnics and pantomime visits and fireworks at the pier on Guy Fawkes Night.
In the early days the Hunter's Quay Community Association also acted as a council for municipal affairs until it was felt it would be better to prepare an application for Argyll and Bute to set up a community council for Hunter’s Quay. The new council would deal with local municipal affairs and the association would continue to look after the social side of Hunter’s Quay. The residents were all well known for their various tasks in developing a real sense of community life in Hunter’s Quay.
Hunter’s Quay Community Association (now Council), was established in 1974.

Duncan Anderson Robert Bond Captain Jim Wilson
1974 until 1976 1976 until 1978 1978 until present
Captain Jim Wilson (councillor for over 30 Years), skipper of the Sound of Sanda, once he travelled the world but now can think of no other job and no other place that he wants to be than Hunter's Quay and McInroys Point. He is at sea all day and still finds time to be involved in the community.
Jim joined Western Ferries in 1976, where he is still working until the present day. He made his home in Hunter’s Quay and integrated himself into the community, he commenced his position as Chairman of Hunter's Quay Community Council in 1978. His work as community councillor is greatly appreciated by the whole community.
On Thursday, 6th July 1989 Captain Wilson was invited with his wife Margaret to the Queen’s Garden Party at The Palace of Holyroodhouse.
Publisher: I am grateful to Captain Jim Wilson, Robert Bond and Margaret Wilson for the time and energy they contributed to our information. Our choice of what to write was aided by their advice and their voices of experience.

Emmanuel Church, George Street, Hunters Quay, taken just after the turn of the century, built of corrugated iron and often referred to as the "Tin Tabernacle", it was eventually destroyed by fire. For many years it was home to Kirn Scouts. The Gentleman in the foreqround is Mr. Gray, its minister.

Entrance to Holy Loch from Hunters Quay
The above picture contributed by Grace Page, whose grandfather built Mount Lebanon Villa in George Street, Hunters Quay. It appears that this vessel is at the old Hunters Quay Pier. If you can verify the name of this vessel, please send us the details here → Contact Us.

DUNIVARD HOTEL now private home.
While designing and searching for this website, I recieved a letter from John Antonelli, whose grandfather owned Apen Lodge. John was a frequent visitor to Hunter's Quay when he was a lad and now lives in Australia.

Glen Tower Hotel and Firth of Clyde, Hunters Quay

Holy Loch From Hunters Quay

Holy Loch From Hunters Quay looking across to Kilmun

Holy Loch, Hunters Quay showing Strone Point

View from the Royal Marine Hotel, Hunters Quay

Hunter's Quay 1910 (Picture donated by Captain Jim Wilson).
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The 1950's and 1960’s were a special time in history. Many changes were taking place. Rock and Roll, Clothing, Styles, Food, Beliefs, Jobs, Party ideas, Hair styles, Women, Men, Parents, Children, Prices, Perfumes, Income, Ads, and Streets and Homes.
Remember board games such as ludo, snakes and ladders, monopoly or backgammon; card games like cribbage, bezique and old maid (or Scabby Anne as it was known among the lower orders); or even parlour games like hunt the thimble, pass the parcel, musical chairs and postman’s knock. To while away the long winter evening there were charades, quizzes and jigsaws. The womenfolk had needlework, knitting and darning and they were a constant source of socks or mittens, scarves or jerseys.
Youngsters used to make up their own games, using little more than a ball and a piece of chalk. When you look at the number of toys children have, you wonder how they would fare with such limited props. I suppose they would improvise like we used to. For me, one of the most enduring memories was the thrashings I would get with my teacher’s belt after misbehaving. It’s not a happy memory but I bet it’s a common one.

Wildcats are the UK ’s only native cat species and they were once widespread throughout the British Isles. Now found only in remote areas of Scotland, there are an estimated 400 left in the wild, making it one of our most endangered mammals. (The survey is being run by Cairngormas National Park).
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The south of Scotland is one of the few areas in which red squirrels still survive. To try to stop grey squirrels getting into this red squirrel stronghold, the organization Red Squirrels in South Scotland has been creating safe havens in the area’s woodlands. The initiative has involved the monitoring of grey squirrels encroaching on the area. It’s well known that the greys push out the reds as they compete aggressively for food, and there is the more urgent threat that greys carry a pox virus which is fatal to reds. (Scottish Field June 2008).
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In 1848 Sir James Clark, Queen Victoria’s personal physician, had recommended the dry air of the Scottish mountains as a remedy for the rheumatism which already afflicted the young queen.
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Did you know that the first qualified doctors in the English-speaking world appeared in the early 16th century from Aberdeen University?
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In 1894 the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews, established the international rules of golf which are still updated and amended here in agreement with the United State Golf Association. It was at St. Andrews that the prototype of what subsequently became the conventional 18-hole course was first laid out: a 9-hole course played in reverse on the return journey. Practised in Scotland since 1457, golf steadily gained in popularity; during the reign of James II it was banned as a distraction from the noble sport of archery.
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The first King of a united Scotland is widely held to have been Kenneth MacAlpin, who united the Scots and Picts to become King of Scotland (as we know it) in 843 AD
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Brits are often labelled as a nation of dog-lovers. Yet in the past 30 years the number of domestic cats kept as pets has doubled.
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Scots played an important role in the movement for the Slave trade’s abolition. Soon after the founding of the Society of the Abolition of Slavery in London in 1787, Scottish committees were being formed and Scots were campaigning hard for the end of slavery. Part of that campaign involved inviting a freed slave, Olaudah Equiano, to come to Scotland and address public meetings during the course of several weeks in 1792.
In the ancient times, the River Tay, was an important centre of royal and ecclesiastical power.
The Royal Centre and monastery was where the kings of Scotland, including MacBeth and Robert the Bruce, were crowned.
I am for Scotland that makes her own decisions, a Sovereign state that will be a voice in Europe and around the world.
Sean Connery
If Scotland forgets Burns, then history will forget Scotland.
JS Blackie (19th Century).
Burns first attempt at romantic verse, was the love song Handsome Nell or O once I lov’d a bonnie lass, was written for Nellie Kirkpatrick, who worked with him during harvest time. In 1775 he was sent to Kirkoswald to finish his education, and met Peggy Thomson, with whom he became infatuated and to whom he dedicated the songs “ I dream’d I lay and Now westlin’ winds. Burns died in July 1796 at the age of 37.
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Scotland has a rich portfolio of poetry from the verses of Sir Richard Maitland, Robert Fergusson and Gavin Dunbar in the 16th century to the more contemporary examples of Norman McCaig, George Mackay Brown, Edwin Morgan and Alistair Reid.
Poets, by the very nature of their talent are a breed apart, yet a breed within.
In 1566, Mary Queen of Scots gave birth to James VI, who came to unite the two countries – England and Scotland -
Black was a very common wedding dress colour in the past. Jean Armour wore a black silk dress to marry national bard Robert burns in 1778.
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It is a remarkable fact that Argyll, in which Cowal lies, actually has a longer coastline than the whole of France; such are its twists and turns, its inlets and its lochs.
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Did you know that the first book to have been printed in Scotland, a work by Chaucer, went on sale on April 4, 1508?

The Scottish King James IV, who was crowned at scone in 1488, spoke eight languages fluently, namely English, Gaelic, Latin, French, German, Flemish, Italian, and Spanish. He was also the last monarch to speak Gaelic.
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The first Gaelic Translations of the Bible were instigated at Carnasserie by Bishop Carswell. The language Struggles to survive in Mid Argyll.
The firing of the one o’clock gun from the ramparts of Edinburgh Castle originated from a request by the Leith Dock Commission in 1861 to locate a time ball on top of the Nelson Monument (which was visible from the docks). Punctually every day since then (except in wartimes and on Sundays) an audible signal has boomed out across the city and simultaneously the time ball has dropped down its pole on the monument, enabling mariners of old to check their chronometers and nowadays making tourists jump visibly as they stroll along Princes Street al lunchtime.
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The Waverley, now believed to be the world’s only operating sea-going paddle steamer, was launched from the A & J Inglis shipyard on the Clyde on the 2nd of October 1946. The ship was launched by Lady Matthews, wife of the chairman of the London & North Eastern Railway, the company who had ordered the Waverley. The steamer was rebuilt in 2000 and still operates a summer passenger service around the isles of Bute and Arran.
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Here’s a bottle and an honest man!
What wad ye wish for mair, man?
Robert Burns
The ploughman poet that became
The toast of Edinburgh, Scotland and ultimately the world. He cared deeply about the lower orders in his society.)

Did you know that the first Italians to settle in Scotland were from the Crociari region in southern Lazio and they sold -Guess what - Ice Cream!

We are blessed in Scotland with an array of ingredients that are the envy of the rest of Europe. Not just for their unquestionable quality, but for their astonishing diversity, from our seas, rivers and lochs, we enjoy lobsters, langoustines, oysters, crabs and magnificent fish, most notably, of course, the wild salmon (and consequently, smoked salmon too).
When you go to the supermarket or Small stores, don’t just grab the nearest bag of potatoes or slab of cheese – look for the Scottish Provenance: there are hundreds of Scottish produced lines in our shops nowadays. Scotland has some of the best natural produce and most skilled food and drink producers in the world. Products that stand for quality, for beautiful unspoilt landscapes, clean air, pure water and all the traditions of good, honest husbandry.
Only clean oot yer ear wi'yer elbow

One of Britain’s oldest and most distinctive breeds, with long thick hair and wide sweeping horns, Highlanders are also the hardiest domestic cattle in the world, capable of surviving harsh weather and poor grazing.

The number of centenarians living in Scotland has reached a record high, according to figures released recently.
The register General estimated that there were 710 people aged 100 or over in the country last year, up from just 560 in 2002.
The overwhelming number of Centenarians were female, the figures showed, with women accounting for nearly 90 per cent of all those living into an 11th decade.

On 24 June 1314, Robert the Bruce exacts a humiliating defeat on the English army of Edward II at the Battle of Bannockburn, an act that eventually led to Scotland‘s independence from
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Did you know that the Bank of England was founded by Scotsman William Paterson who proposed a loan of 1.2 millions to the government?

Silver 17th Century Suit

The introduction of paper money:
John Law (1671-1729), was a great Scottish innovator. He is widely credited as having introduced paper money to the French economy. In 1700 (or thereabouts) he put his proposals to the Scottish parliament, but perhaps his ideas were too radical for the financial brains of the times. Law’s proposals were rejected, but before he left Scotland he published his book, Money and Trade considered, with a Proposal for Supplying the Nation with Money (1705). Law’s ideas – that the French economy would be turned around through increased credit and the introduction of paper money – were understandably appealing to the beleaguered French duke, and in 1716 the Banque Gẻnẻrale was created. Laws bank was a great success. The capital was divided into shares, with banknotes promising to pay the bearer the value specified on the date of issue. By 1717 the banknotes were accepted as a means of paying taxes, and the following year Law’s bank became the Banque Royale, the notes now guaranteed by the King.

The Scott Monument


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Hunters Quay: A Journey
Scotland...
The Love We All Share.