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Bonar Bridge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bonar Bridge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bonar Bridge (Gaelic: Drochaid a' Bhanna, pronounced [d̪̊ɾɔxɪd̊ʲ ə van̴̪ə]) (Ordnance Survey grid reference NH610915) is a village on the north bank of the Kyle of Sutherland, in the Parish of Creich in the County of Sutherland, Highland Region, Scotland, United Kingdom.

The Kyle of Sutherland ("the Kyle" for locals) is a river estuary of the Rivers Oykel, Cassley, Shin and Carron that all enter the Kyle above the bridge at Bonar.

The estuary (downstream) and the rivers (upstream) separate Sutherland from Ross and Cromarty to the south, and the estuary opens into the Dornoch Firth to the east.

Contents

[edit] Getting there

Road by Car: The village is at the junction of the A836 road with the A949. The A836 leads north towards Lairg and Tongue and east over the Kyle to run along the south bank of the Dornoch Firth to the A9 near Tain. The A949 runs east along the north bank of the Firth to the A9 near Dornoch, at the other extreme of the Dornoch Firth bridge that takes the A9 over the Dornoch Firth from Tain here.

Bus:

Rail: The village is 1 mile (1.6Km) from Ardgay railway station which lies south of the Kyle. Ardgay is on the Far North Line, the railway line linking Inverness with Wick and Thurso. For a long time, Ardgay Station (NH600904) was called Bonar Bridge Station.

[edit] History

[edit] Bronze-age and Iron-age

Evidence of pre-historic inhabitance abounds in the area with many ancient hut circles and cairns. One recent excavation done by the Time Team UK Television program can be seen here. It excavated a small Henge and a Crannog (artificial island home) in Loch Migdale.

[edit] Viking Period

Viking invasion of Caithness and Sutherland: Sutherland was named so as it was southern for the Norse of Orkney who named it. (state my source). The Dornoch Firth was called the Oykell by the Vikings and it is mentioned in the Orkneyinga Saga (which I haven't found an on-line source for).

[edit] First Modern Settlements

The oldest records of local place names (on North side of the Kyle) found on maps are (in order from oldest) Sordel (Swordale, from Norse name) which is now a part of Bonar Bridge and has Swordale Farm, Little Swordale (Sordel Beg) which is now abandoned, Creich (sometimes with Little Creich called out), Migdale then later Tulloch . A name "Eam" occurs several times towards Invershin, past Drumliach. One such map is this manuscript Sutherland, Strath Okel & Strath Charron of Robert Gordon's from 1654 or this beautiful map from the Bleu Atlas of 1654, both found in the National Library of Scotland.

On the South side of the Kyle, MidFearn (Ferne 1573 [1]) is the oldest location shown, with Kincardine (with its church) appearing next.

[edit] Ford

Originally, the Kyle of Sutherland and the rivers feeding it were crossed where Bonar Bridge lies, and at other points downstream such as Creich (where the small "Stell" ferry ruin still stands) and at what was called "Portnacoulter" (Meikle Ferry) and upstream at what was called Portinleck (Culrain-Invershin) by small ferry boats (or Cobbles) and much further upstream by small bridges (e.g. Oykel bridge).

[edit] The Bridges

The Bonar Bridge site provided the best point to ford the water without having to travel too far west to cross a bridge. Thus it was the preferred place to cross while droving cattle from the north and north-east to market further south. The fording point lies slightly downstream from the current bridge, more or less where the "Bonar shot" salmon fishing station was, below the old ice-house below Dornoch Road.

[edit] The First Bridge

After the defeat of the Highland clans at the Battle of Culloden, and the "taming of the north" a network of highland roads was constructed by the government, with many planned by General Wade at the end of the 18th century.

Construction of the first bridge (photo) across the Kyle of Sutherland at Bonar Bridge started in September 1811 and completed in November 1812. The engineer was Thomas Telford and the builders were Simpson & Cargill. The New Statistical Account for Scotland explains that consideration was given to sites at Meikle Ferry (referred to as Portnacoulter, Port a' Choltair in Gaelic, names for its shape like a "coulter" the blade of a plough) which was considered too wide, at Creich (also considered too wide) and at Portinleck (between Culrain and Invershin) which was further up the estuary and required a longer journey around and also a second bridge across the River Carron.

A plaque on the Ross-Shire side of the bridge was engraved with the following text: "Traveller, Stop and Read with gratitude the Names of the Parliamentary Commissioners appointed in the Year 1803 to direct the Making of above Five Hundred Miles of Roads through the Highlands of Scotland and of numerouse Bridges, particularly those at Beauly, Scuddel, Bonar, Fleet, and Helmsdale, connecting those Roads!" (citation to "The Land of the Mountain and the Flood" by Alasdair Alpin MacGregor).

The cast iron arch bridge carried the Great North Road, and was the prototype for several other Telford bridges, including Craigellachie Bridge, Mythe Bridge and Holt Fleet Bridge. The bridges all employed diamond-shaped bracing in the arch spandrels. Spanning 45.7 m (150 feet), Bonar Bridge cost £9,736 to build, and lasted for 80 years. Historian Roland Paxton stated that it "combined elegance with economy and strength to an unparalleled degree".[1]

(state citation from NSaS...)

The bridge was swept away by a flood on 29th January 1892, a winter of many great floods in the North of Scotland. Apparently this event occurred as predicted by the Brahan Seer.

[edit] Second Bridge

The replacement bridge of Steel and Granite was "built by The County Councils of Ross and Cromarty and Sutherland 1893 Opened 6th, July, 1893" (taken from an engraving in a marble plaque on the Bonar end of this bridge" (citation to "The land of the mountain and the flood" by Alasdair Alpin MacGregor. Photograph

[edit] Third Bridge

{Section to bo be completed} The third bridge built at Bonar is the currently standing bridge. It was built alongside the older bridge while it was still standing (but considered weak and needing renewal) and after it was opened to traffic the second bridge was dismantled.

[edit] Dornoch Firth Bridge

Since the construction of the Dornoch Bridge (see a Photograph) further down the estuary (to the east) and other roads direct to the north-west from Dingwall, traffic and commerce through Bonar Bridge has decreased.

[edit] Toponomy

The Scottish Gaelic word for ford is “Àth” (pronounced “Ah”). The Kyle of Sutherland had a ford here and it became called “Am Ban Àth”, “Ban” meaning 'fair', which would be "Fairford" in English.

Over time “Ban Àth” became recorded as:

  • - "Banna" - on this 18th century map [2] as part of "Banna Ferry").
  • - “Bona” - on this 1730 military map [3]).
  • - “Bonar” - on this 1744 map [4]) as part of "Bonar Ferry".
  • - "Bonar" - after the 1812 construction of the first bridge at this site.

Thus the evolution of the name reflects the evolution of the water crossing at this point: FairFord -> FairFord Ferry -> FairFord Bridge

Locals refer to the village as “Bonar”, usually dropping “Bridge”.

[edit] Historical Events

[edit] Battle of Drumliadh (?)

The second Statistical Account for Scotland (page 18 of Sutherlandshire section) states: "In the 11th or 12th century a contest of the inhabitants with the Danes is recorded to have occurred at Drin-leah (Drum Leadh), near Bonar Bridge, whence the invaders were driven back with great loss to their ships at Portnacoulter, - now Meikle Ferry. The extraordinary number of tumuli (Cairns?) or graves on the scene of [the] action, while they attenst the truth of the tradition, and the greatness of the slaughter, cannot fail to excite the wonder of reflecting persons at the great numbers who must have been engaged and the consequent density of the population at that remote time". This event doesn't appear in other sources I know of or local lore, but I have found the site marked as a battle site on this map in the National Library of Scotland. Contributions welcome!

[edit] Battle of Carbisdale

The Battle of Carbisdale took place in 1650 during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms close to the village of Culrain, which lies to the West of Bonar Bridge. The battle was fought between the forces of the Scottish Covenantor Government and royalist forces loyal to the King, led by James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose. The royalists were defeated.

[edit] Jacobite Battle

In 1746 the Earl of Cromartie and his forces who were traveling to meet Charles Edward Stuart (the Young Pretender" to the throne, or "Bonnie Prince Charlie") were attacked by the Clan Sutherland near Bonar Bridge, in Munro country. The Earl of Sutherland himself had already escaped south to join the Duke of Cumberland's army after his lands had been wasted. However, many of his clan still remained in the hills, commanded by a man from Golspie who attacked the MacKenzies. Most of the Jacobite officers were captured, many of the men were killed and the rest were driven onto the shore where several were drowned trying to swim the Bonar Firth. Thus Clan MacKenzie were prevented from joining the Jacobite army at the Battle of Culloden.

[edit] Migdale Hoard discovered

In May 1900, a priceless collection of early Bronze Age jewellery was discovered by workmen blasting a granite knoll behind Bonar Bridge, near what is known as "Tulloch Hill". Dating from about 2000BC, the artifacts are in the custody of the National Museums of Scotland in Edinburgh. The Migdale Hoard includes a bronze axe head, bronze hair ornaments, sets of bronze bangles and anklets, and a series of beautifully carved jet and shale buttons that may well have adorned a Bronze Age jacket.[2][3][4]

[edit] Meikle Ferry Disaster

Until 1812 the only means of crossing the Dornoch Firth was by ferry. On the night of 16 August 1809 over 100 people boarded the ferry boat on the Dornoch side along with goods and stock for the market in Tain. The over-laden ferryboat set off and, though conditions were calm, the boat was dangerously low in the water. About halfway across the boat turned broadside to the tide and began to take in water. It sank almost immediately with the loss of some 99 lives, including the Sheriff of Dornoch, Hugh MacCulloch. Over £2,900 were raised for disaster relief, much of it coming from overseas. It resulted in the construction of Bonar Bridge in 1812.

[edit] Beached Whales

In 1926 a school of Pilot Whales ran aground in the Bay between Bonar Bridge and Ardgay.

Whales in Bay with Bonar Bridge in the background
Whales in Bay with Bonar Bridge in the background

(See photo in Tain Museum Archive)

[edit] Famous People related to Bonar Bridge

John Murray [5] The Royal Queen of Bonar Bridge: Sarah McAughtrie (1981-Present)

[edit] Book Mentions

"The Land of the Mountain and the Flood", and "The Goat-Wife", both by Alasdair Alpin MacGregor.

[edit] Economy

Crofting
Forestry
Salmon Fishing
Deer Stalking
Salmon Netting (now ceased) Strip Clubs

[edit] Amenities

- Bonar Bridge/Ardgay Golf Club [6]— a woodland style course in countryside overlooking Migdale Loch.

[edit] Tourism

Most years, the village celebrates it Gala Week or the Salmon Queen Week, in August.

Nearby places of interest for tourists visiting the area include The Falls of Shin where you may see salmon attempt to jump up the falls on the way upstream to spawn, or Carbisdale Castle (Scottish Youth Hostel) a folly castle built by the dowager duchess of Sutherland, Dornoch a picturesque Royal Burgh with famous golf course (Royal Dornoch), a great beach and camping area, and others.

Croick Church [7] is nearby (map[8]), with its evocative engravings on the church windows from sufferers of the Highland Clearances in the Amat area. Undiscovered Scotland Page[9]

[edit] Links to Photographs

[edit] Surrounding area

[edit] References

  1. ^ Paxton, R., Thomas Telford's cast-iron bridges, Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, May 2007, pp. 12-19
  2. ^ Anderson, Joseph (1901) "Notice of a hoard of bronze implements, and ornaments, and buttons of jet found at Migdale, on the estate of Skibo, Sutherland, exhibited to the society by Mr. Andrew Carnegie of Skibo". Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. Retrieved 29 April 2008.
  3. ^ "Anklets of Bronze" National Museums Scotland. Retrieved 29 April 2008.
  4. ^ Description of the hoard on www.megalithic.uk.org

[edit] External links


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