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CROMARTY , a police burgh and seaport of the county ofSee also: Ross and Cromarty, Scotland
.
Pop
.
(1901) 1242
.
It is situated on the See also: southern See also: shore of the mouth of Cromarty Firth, 5 M
.
E. by S. of Invergordon on the opposite See also: coast, with which there is daily communication by steamer, and 9 m
.
N.E. of Fortrose, the most convenient railway station
.
Before the union of the shires of Ross and Cromarty, it was the county See also: town of Cromartyshire, and is one of the See also: Wick See also: district See also: group- of See also: parliamentary burghs
.
Its name is variously derived from the Gaelic crom, crooked, and See also: bath, See also: bay, or ard, height, meaning either the " crooked bay," or the " See also: bend between the heights " (the high rocks, or Sutors, which guard the entrance to the Firth), and gave the title to the earldom of Cromarty
.
The See also: principal buildings are the town See also: hall and the Hugh
See also: Miller Institute
.
The harbour,enclosed by two piers, accommodates the herring See also: fleet, but the See also: fisheries, the See also: staple industry, have declined
.
The town, however, is in growing repute as a midsummer resort
.
The thatched See also: house with crow-stepped gables in See also: Church Street, in which Hugh Miller the geologist was
See also: born, still stands, and a statue has been erected to his memory
.
To the See also: east of the burgh is Cromarty House, occupying the site of the old See also: castle of the earls of Ross
.
It was the birthplace of See also: Sir See also: Thomas Urquhart, the translator of
See also: Rabelais
.
Cromarty, formerly a county in the See also: north of Scotland, was incorporated with Ross-See also: shire in 1889 under the designat;on of the county of Ross and Cromarty
.
The nucleus of the county consisted of the lands of Cromarty in the north of the peninsula of the Black Isle
.
To this were added from See also: time to time the various estates scattered throughout Ross-shire—the most considerable of which were the districts around Ullapool and Little Loch See also: Broom on the See also: Atlantic coast, the See also: area in which See also: Ben Wyvis is situated, and a See also: tract to the north of Loch Fannich—which had been acquired by the ancestors of Sir See also: George See also: Mackenzie (1630-1714), afterwards Viscount Tarbat (1685) and 1st See also: earl of Cromarty (1703)
.
Desirous of combining these sporadic properties into one shire, Viscount Tarbat was enabled to procure their annexation to his sheriffdom of Cromarty in 1685 and 1698, the area of the enlarged county amounting to nearly 370 sq. m
.
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