Coulport
Coulport Gaelic: An Cùl Phort | |
Dunbartonshire | |
---|---|
Dock and crane at Coulport | |
Location | |
Grid reference: | NS209873 |
Location: | 56°2’44"N, 4°52’33"W |
Data | |
Post town: | Helensburgh |
Postcode: | G84 |
Local Government | |
Council: | Argyll and Bute |
Parliamentary constituency: |
Argyll and Bute |
Coulport is a village on the east side of Loch Long in Dunbartonshire. The name An Cùl Phort means 'the Back Port or Ferry'.
The village is five miles north of Cove on the Rosneath Peninsula. It marks the end of the B833 shore road, although the village can also be reached by a high-quality but unclassified access road (primarily designed for naval traffic) directly from Garelochhead. The village looks across to the small settlement of Ardentinny on the west shore to which, in the 18th/19th century, there was a ferry.
John Kibble, the son of a Glasgow metal merchant, was one of several wealthy Glasgow merchants who had large villas built at Coulport in the nineteenth century either as permanent residences or summer retreats. Several still survive, some now flatted, others in a dilapidated condition. Kibble's Coulport House was the original location of the giant conservatory known as the Kibble Palace (now in Glasgow's Botanic Garden).[1]
Since the 1960s Coulport has been most associated with the Trident missile storage and the nearby Royal Naval Armaments Depot (RNAD Coulport) situated there as part of HMNB Clyde.
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Coulport) |
References
- ↑ Gibby, Mary (2013). "The Benmore Fernery". http://www.buildingconservation.com/articles/benmore-fernery/benmore-fernery.htm. Retrieved 4 January 2014.