Online Encyclopedia

HELENSBURGH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 220 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HELENSBURGH  , a municipal and

police burgh and watering-place of Dumbartonshire, Scotland, on the N.
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shore of the Firth of Clyde, opposite
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Greenock, 24 M . N.W. of
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Glasgow by the North
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British railway . Pop . (19o1) 8J54 . There is a station at Upper Helensburgh on the West Highland railway, and from the railway pier at Craigendoran there is steamer communication with Garelochhead,
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Dunoon and other pleasure resorts on the western coast . In 1776 the site began to be built upon, and in 1802 the
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town, named after Lady
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Helen, wife of
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Sir James Colquhoun of Luss, the ground landlord, was erected into a burgh of
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barony, under a provost and council . The public buildings include the burgh hall, municipal buildings, Hermitage.
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schools and two hospitals . On the esplanade stands an obelisk to Henry Bell, the
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pioneer of steam navigation, who died at Helensburgh in 1830 .

End of Article: HELENSBURGH
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