Corrie, Arran
Corrie | |
Scottish Gaelic: An Coire | |
Corrie Hotel and Beer Garden |
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Corrie |
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OS grid reference | NS024432 |
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Civil parish | Kilbride |
Council area | North Ayrshire |
Lieutenancy area | Ayrshire and Arran |
Country | Scotland |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | ISLE OF ARRAN |
Postcode district | KA27 |
Dialling code | 01770 |
Police | Scottish |
Fire | Scottish |
Ambulance | Scottish |
EU Parliament | Scotland |
UK Parliament | North Ayrshire and Arran |
Scottish Parliament | Cunninghame North |
Coordinates: 55°38′35″N 5°08′20″W / 55.643°N 5.139°W
Corrie (Scottish Gaelic: An Coire) is a village on the north east coast of the Isle of Arran in Scotland, 6 miles (9.7 km) north of Brodick. It lies 2 miles (3.2 km) due east under the island's highest mountain, Goat Fell. A path from High Corrie 3⁄4 mile (1.2 km) to the south, provides access to the hillside. Corrie, and its notrthern neighbour, Sannox, lie approximately halfway between Brodick and Lochranza.
History
The village used to be a regular stop for steamers circumnavigating the island, passengers embarking by way of a rowing boat from the "ferry rock". The ferry rock is located midway between the village's two quays. The southernmost quay is known as the "sandstone quay". This harbour and quay used to be the location where sandstone blocks from the nearby quarry were shipped to the mainland, and huge pieces of stone can still be seen. The sheep bollards on the quay walls were moved to Corrie after they were used in the 1988 Glasgow Garden Festival. The northernmost quay is "Corrie port" and was also used for shipping products to other locations on the island, the mainland and other islands. Small coastal cargo vessels of a type known as the Clyde puffer were a common sight in the port and the sandstone quay during their heyday. There was also a limestone "mine" in the village, which has a roof lined with fossils of Gigantoproductus.
Geography
Just to the north of Corrie's close neighbour, Sannox, the main A841 road leaves the shore and climbs north west over North Glen Sannox towards Lochranza. Corrie Golf Club is located here which was founded in 1892. This 9 hole, 3896 yard hillside course offers magnificent views over the Firth of Clyde and the Arran mountains.
High Corrie (Scottish Gaelic: Gàrradh Mòr ("Great Garden")), nestling above the village, has long been favoured by artists, including Joan Eardley and Margot Sandeman. The poet and writer Robert McLellan also spent time there.[1]
Community
Population has been falling: in January 2008, only 15 pupils attended the village's primary school, and the number was expected to further drop to 5 by 2012.[2]
Footnotes
- ↑ "Margot Sandeman: Scottish painter | The Times". The Times. Retrieved 2016-03-13.
- ↑ Braiden, Gerry (28 January 2008), "Parents unite to fight 'rushed' closure of school", The Herald, retrieved 10 December 2008
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Corrie, Arran. |
- Canmore - Arran, Corrie, Free Church site record
- Canmore - Arran, Corrie, Church of Scotland site record