Online Encyclopedia

FORT WILLIAM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 728 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FORT

WILLIAM  , a police burgh of
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Inverness-
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shire, Scotland . Pop . (1901) 2087 . It lies at the north-eastern end of Loch Linnhe, an arm of the sea, about 62 m . S.S.W. of Inverness by road or canal, and was, in bygone days, one of the keys of the Highlands . It is 1222 M . N.E. of
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Glasgow by the West Highland railway . The fort, at first called Kilmallie, was built by General Monk in 1655 to hold the Cameron men in subjection, and was enlarged in 1690 by General
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Hugh Mackay, who renamed it after William III., the burgh then being known as Maryburgh in honour of his queen . Here the perpetrators of the
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massacre of
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Glencoe met to share their
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plunder . The Jacobites unsuccessfully besieged it in 1715 and 1746 . The fort was dismantled in i86o, and demolished in 1890 to provide
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room for the railway and the station . Amongst the public buildings are the Belford hospital, public hall, court house and the low-level meteorological
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observatory, constructed in 1891, which was in connexion with the observatory on the top of Ben
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Nevis, until the latter was closed in 1904 .

Its

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great industry is distilling, and the distilleries, about 2 M . N.E., are a familiar feature in the landscape . Beyond the railway station stands the obelisk to the memory of Ewen Maclachlan (1775-1822), the Gaelic poet, who was born in the parish . Fort William is a popular tourist resort and place of call for the steamers passing through the Caledonian canal . The
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town is the point from which the ascent of Ben Nevis-42 m . E.S.E. as the crow flies—is commonly made . At Corpach, about 2 M . N., the Caledonian canal begins, the series of locks between here and Banavie—within little more than a mile—being known as Neptune's
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Staircase." Both the Lochy and the Nevis. enter Loch Linnhe immediately to the north of Fort William . A mile and a
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half from the town, on the Lochy, stands the
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grand old ruin of Inverlochy Castle, a massive quadrangular
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pile with a round tower at each corner, a favourite subject with landscape painters . Close by is the scene of the
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battle of the 2nd of
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February 1645, in which Montrose completely defeated the
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earl of Argyll . The
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modern castle, in the Scottish Baronial style, 12 m. to the N.E. of this stronghold and farther from the
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river, is the seat of Lord Abinger .

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