Glendaruel

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Glendaruel
Argyllshire
River at Clachan of Glendaruel - geograph.org.uk - 362759.jpg
River at Clachan of Glendaruel
Location
Grid reference: NS028845
Location: 56°-0’47"N, 5°9’51"W
Data
Postcode: PA22
Local Government
Council: Argyll and Bute
Parliamentary
constituency:
Argyll and Bute

Glendaruel is a glen in the Cowal Peninsula in the south of Argyllshire. Its main settlement is the Clachan of Glendaruel.

About the glen

The present Kilmodan Church was built in the Clachan of Glendaruel in 1783. The Clachan of Glendaruel is the current location of Kilmodan Primary School, and the ground of Col-Glen Shinty Club.

The ruined Dunans Castle also stands in Glendaruel,[1] and the Glendaruel Wood and Crags and the Ruel Estuary are listed as 'Sites of Special Scientific Interest'.

As the nearest hospital is some miles away in Dunoon a disused phone box in the village was converted to house a defibrillator. Just weeks before the instillation a tourist in Glendaruel had died from a heart attack.[2]

Decline

The community is home to around 188 people as of 2008 and has been subject to a general decline in the late 20th century continuing into the early 21st century. The closure of the Glendaruel Hotel, a 17th-century coaching inn housing the only local pub, was in particular described as "a body blow." The hotel closed not long after a widely publicized legal case was won by three Polish former employees who had been described as "Polish Slaves" by the hotel proprietors.

Over the past two decades a number of facilities within the community have been lost, notable examples include the post office, general store and tearoom and even the parish church became part-time, holding services only two Sundays in a month.[3][4][5][6]

Mythology

Glendaruel is thought to be one of the glens praised in the Irish Gaelic poem "The Lament of Deirdre",[7] in which reference is made to a Glenndaruadh. It is found in the 15th-century Glenmasan manuscript, which may go back to an original written down in 1238. Deirdre is a tragic heroine in Irish mythology, and in the poem she is lamenting the necessity of leaving Scotland to return to Ireland.

Music

Glendaruel is the inspiration for a number of bagpipe tunes, including The Glendaruel Highlanders, The Sweet Maid of Glendaruel, and The Dream Valley of Glendaruel.

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Glendaruel)

References