Glenelg Inn

Coordinates: 57°12′45″N 5°37′22″W / 57.212428°N 5.622669°W / 57.212428; -5.622669
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Glenelg Inn
Public house and inn
Town or cityGlenelg, Highland
CountryScotland
Coordinates57°12′45″N 5°37′22″W / 57.212428°N 5.622669°W / 57.212428; -5.622669
Technical details
Floor count2
Website
www.glenelg-inn.com

Glenelg Inn is a

public house and inn in the village of Glenelg in the Highlands of Scotland. The current building dates to the second half of the 20th century, but remnants of the previous structure — the "imposing" Glenelg Hotel (itself a rebuild),[1] which was largely destroyed in a 1947 fire — still stand.[2][3][4]

Early

lessees of the property include George Chaffey (around 1870)[5] and Donald Macdonald Mackintosh (around 1893).[1]

Christopher Main was the owner between 1985 and 2007.[6]

It is believed that Dr. Samuel Johnson and James Boswell stayed here on their visit to the area in the 18th century.[2]

The inn was listed in the 2017 and 2018 editions of The Good Pub Guide.[7]

The rear of the property stands on an inlet of the strait of Kyle Rhea.

Gallery

  • The inn's frontage in 2014
    The inn's frontage in 2014
  • A view from the rear of the property in 2014
    A view from the rear of the property in 2014
  • An 1893 advertisement for the Glenelg Hotel inside Mackenzie's Guide to Inverness. The property's lessee at the time was Donald Macdonald Mackintosh
    An 1893 advertisement for the Glenelg Hotel inside
    lessee
    at the time was Donald Macdonald Mackintosh

References

  1. ^ a b Mackenzie's Guide to Inverness, Alexander Mackenzie (1893)
  2. ^ a b Glenelg, Glenelg InnCanmore
  3. ^ Black's Picturesque Tourist of Scotland, Adam and Charles Black (1881), p. 510
  4. ^ Miller's Royal Tourist Handbook to the Highlands and Islands, James W. Miller (1877), p. 92
  5. ^ Victoria and Its Metropolis, Past and Present..., Alexander Sutherland (1888), p. 62
  6. ^ Glenelg or Bust: 72 Hours in Paradise by Nice Tree Films.., retrieved 9 July 2022
  7. ^ The Good Pub Guide, Fiona Stapley (2017)

External links