Online Encyclopedia

GOUROCK

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 288 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GOUROCK  , a

police burgh and watering-place of
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Renfrew-
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shire, Scotland, on the
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southern
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shore of the Firth of Clyde, 31, m . W. by N. of
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Greenock by the Caledonian railway . Pop . (1901) 5261 . It is partly situated on a
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fine
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bay affording good anchorage, for which it is largely resorted to by the numerous yacht clubs of the Clyde . The extension of the railway from Greenock (in 1889) to the commodious pier, with a tunnel 13 m. long, the longest in Scotland, affords
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great facilities for travel to the ports of the Firth, the sea lochs on the southern Highland coast and the Crinan Canal . The eminence called Barrhill (48o ft. high) divides the
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town into two parts, the eastern known as Kempoch, the western as
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Ashton . Near Kempoch point is a monolith of
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mica-schist, 6 ft. high, called " Granny Kempoch," which the superstitious of other days regarded as possessing influence over the winds, and which was the scene, in 1662, of certain
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rites that led to the celebrants being burned as witches . Gamble Institute (named after the founder) contains halls, recreation rooms, a public library and
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baths . It is said that Gourock was the first place on the Clyde where herrings were cured . There is
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tramway communication with Greenock and Ashton . About 3 m .

S.W. there stands on the shore the

familiar beacon of the Cloch . Gourock became a burgh of
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barony in 1694 .

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JEAN HERAULD GOURVILLE (1625–1703)

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