Portincaple

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Portincaple
Argyllshire

Portincaple
Location
Grid reference: NS235935
Location: 56°6’6"N, 4°50’17"W
Data
Postcode: G83
Local Government
Council: Argyll and Bute
Parliamentary
constituency:
Argyll and Bute

Portincaple is a hamlet on the shores of Loch Long in Argyllshire. It was once a fishing village sending its catch to market via the old railway station at Whistlefield.

For thirty years until his death in 1942, Portincaple was the home of Scottish artist James Kay.[1]

Whistlefield, later Whistlefield Halt, was a station ten miles from Craigendoran Junction[2] railway station served the hamlet of Portincaple and the surrounding area. Opened in 1896 by the West Highland Railway, it was built on a single track section without a passing loop in between Garelochhead and Glen Douglas and closed by the British Railways Board in 1964.[3]

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Portincaple)

References

  1. Fullarton, Donald (2010). "Portincaple was artist's retreat". Helensburgh Heritage. http://www.helensburgh-heritage.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=761:portincaple-was-artists-retreat&catid=81:the-arts&Itemid=458. 
  2. McGregor, John (1994). 100 years of the West Highland Railway. ScotRail. p. 71. 
  3. Butt (1995) p. 247
Loch Goil and Loch Long from Portincaple