Descriptive Gazetteer Entry for Rosskeen

Rosskeen (Gael. ros-ceann, `promontory of the head'), a coast parish of NE Ross-shire, containing the seaport and station of Invergordon, 12 ¾ miles NE of Dingwall and 12 ¾ SSW of Tain. It also contains the Bridgend portion and the station of Alness village, 2 ¾ miles W by N of Invergordon. Washed on the SE for 5 3/8 miles by the Cromarty Firth, it is bounded by Kincardine around its north-western extremity, and along its north-eastern side by Edderton and Kilmuir-Easter, along its south-western side by Alness. Its utmost length, from NW to SE, is 17 3/8 miles; its breadth varies between 1 ½ and 6 5/8 miles; and its area is 55 ¼ square miles or 34, 384 ¾ acres, of which 501 7/8 are foreshore, 152 3/5 water, and 5 tidal water. From a point 3 3/8 miles below its efflux from Loch Morie, the river Alness flows 8 1/8 miles south-south-eastward to the Cromarty Firth along the Alness boundary; and at that point, 495 feet above sea-level, it is joined by the Black Water, which, rising at an altitude of 1700 feet, runs 9 ¼ miles south-eastward down Strath Rusdale through the north-western interior. Lochan Chairn (3 1/3 x 1 2/3 furl.; 1329 feet) and Loch Chuinneag (2 ¾ x 1 1/3 furl.; 1680 feet), in the north-western extremity of the parish, near the source of the Black Water, send off their superfluence north-north-westward to the river Carron; and the Strathrory or Balnagowan river, rising on Beinn Tharsuinn at an altitude of 1980 feet, runs 4 1/8 miles south-eastward through Rosskeen till it passes off into Kilmuir-Easter. Loch Achnadoich (2 x 1 furl.; 395 feet), 4 ½ miles N by E of Alness village, is a beautiful little lake. The shore is low; and S of the highroad the surface nowhere exceeds 72 feet above sea-level. Beyond, it rises to 700 feet at Cnoc Navie, 1301 at *Cnoc Corr Guinig, 1000 at Cnoc Strathy, 2158 at Cnoc an t-Sithein Mor, 2259 at Beinn Tharsuinn, 1978 at *Carn nan Gabhar, 1744 at *Meall Bhenneit, and 2114 at Carn an Lochan, where asterisks mark those summits that culminate on the confines of the parish. Old Red Sandstone, the prevailing rock of the lowlands of the parish, has been quarried for building purposes. The soil of the coast district is partly gravelly and light, partly loam, and partly a deep strong clay; in the middle district, or higher arable land, it was formerly light and spongy, but has been worked into a rich deep loam. Little more than oneninth of the entire area is in tillage; about one-twelfth is under wood, the middle district being finely wooded; and nearly all the remainder is pastoral or waste. A standing-stone near the church and a number of cairns are the chief antiquities. William Macintosh (17381809), the Eastern traveller, was born at Newmore, as also was George, his younger brother, who introduced Turkey-red dyeing to Scotland, and whose son, Charles, F.R.S. (1766-1843), invented `macintosh' waterproofs. Mansions, noticed separately, are Ardross Castle, Invergordon Castle, and Newmore; and of 4 proprietors, 2 hold each an annual value of more than £3350. Rosskeen is in the presbytery of Tain and the synod of Ross; the living is worth £385. The churches, Established and Free, are described under Invergordon. Five public schools - Ardross, Bridgend, Invergordon, Newmore, and Saltburn - with respective accommodation for 111, 205, 205, 107, and 90 children, had (1884) an average attendance of 60, ", 165, 58, and 42, and grants of £41, 13s. 4d., £ ', £138, £38, 10s., and £26, 14s. 2d. Valuation (1860) £10,171, (1885) £15,353, 6s. 11d. plus £1754 for railway. Pop. (1801) 2074, (1831) 2916, (1861) 3766, (1871) 3808, (1881) 3773, of whom 1119 were in Invergordon and 718 in Bridgend, whilst 1272 were Gaelic-speaking.—Ord. Sur., shs. 94, 93, 1878-81.


(F.H. Groome, Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland (1882-4); © 2004 Gazetteer for Scotland)

Linked entities:
Feature Description: "a coast parish"   (ADL Feature Type: "countries, 4th order divisions")
Administrative units: Rosskeen ScoP       Ross Shire ScoCnty
Place names: ROS CEANN     |     ROSSKEEN
Place: Rosskeen

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