Online Encyclopedia

KINGUSSIE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 822 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KINGUSSIE  , a

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town of
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Inverness-
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shire, Scotland . Pop . (1901), 987 . It lies at a height of 750 ft. above sea-level, on the
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left
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bank of the
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Spey, here crossed by a
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bridge, 461 m . S. by S.E. of Inverness by the Highland railway . It was founded towards the end of the 18th century by the duke of Gordon, in the hope of its becoming a centre of woollen manufactures . This expectation, however, was not realized, but in time the place grew popular as a
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health resort, the scenery in every direction being remarkably picturesque . On the right bank of the
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river is
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Ruthven, where James Macpherson was born in 1736, and on the left bank, some 21 M. from Kingussie, is the house of
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Belleville (previously known as Raitts) which he acquired from Mackintosh of Borlum and where he died in 1796 . The mansion, renamed Balavil by Macpherson's
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great-grandson, was burned down in 1903, when the
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fine library (including some
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MSS. of
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Sir David Brewster, who had married the poet's second daughter) was destroyed . Of Ruthven Castle, one of the residences of the Comyns of
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Badenoch, only the ruins of the walls remain . Here the Jacobites made an ineffectual rally under Lord George Murray after the
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battle of
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Culloden .

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