Port William
Port William | |
Wigtownshire | |
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Port William Harbour | |
Location | |
Data | |
Local Government | |
Council: | Dumfries and Galloway |
Parliamentary constituency: |
Dumfries and Galloway |
Port William is a small fishing village in Wigtownshire. Around it are gathered the hamlets of Elrig, Mochrum and Monreith.
The villageis to be found 23 miles east of Stranraer, on the coast of Luce Bay. It looks directly over to the Mull of Galloway, the most southerly point of the county and, on a clear day, both the Isle of Man, and Ireland are visible from the rugged coastline.
The village gives a warm welcome to tourists and has one of the largest carnivals in Galloway at the beginning of August.
Big Society
Port William's community has worked together to achieve many successful projects. Following the withdrawal of the RNLI lifeboat, Port William raised the necessary funds and volunteers to buy and staff an Inshore Rescue Boat in about 1982, which still operates today, covering Luce Bay, Wigtown Bay and the area between Galloway and the Isle of Man. The village formed one of the first Community First Response Teams in the north and has helped to set up other teams in the area.
The Kings Green Caravan Park is community owned and employs two wardens. Charges are kept low to encourage tourism and all profits come back into the community. In 2010, the caravan park opened its laundry and dishwashing facility (an extension built onto the newly constructed toilet block). [1]
History
In the 17th and 18th centuries Port William was known as much for the illicit activities of its smugglers as for the legitimate trade of its port.
The original settlement was known as Killantrae, meaning 'The Church on the Beach' in Gaelic, and was probably founded not long after St Ninian arrival in nearby Whithorn towards the end of the 4th century. [2]
Killantrae was swept away following the intervention of developer and landlord Sir William Maxwell, 5th Baronet, of Monreith House. [3] In the five years until 1776 he built an entirely new village, complete with a good harbour and was renamed Port William. One of the earliest buildings still standing was the corn mill, located on the side of the Killantrae burn to take advantage of the power provided by its water. Port William is an example of a planned village, lying on the eastern shore of Luce Bay in Galloway. The harbour, built for the convenience of his tenant farmers, was one of the first in western Galloway.
Monreith House, a Category A listed Georgian mansion is a mile east of the village.[4]
The Harbour
The harbour was extended in 1790 and again in 1848, and it continued to have commercial importance until the end of the First World War.
Further work was done to protect the harbour in the 1980s by building a breakwater to the western side of the harbour.
It then steadily became what you see today, a haven for small fishing and leisure craft.
A recent reflection of Port William's seafaring heritage is found in the life-size fisherman's statue overlooking the harbour. This was once made of concrete, but following a public appeal it has been remade in bronze. The statue was part-funded by the Millennium Lottery Fund. In front of the statue is a plaque with the first verse of the poem Leisure by W H Davies.
References
- ↑ Port William Community
- ↑ http://www.portwilliam.com/history.htm
- ↑ Sir William Maxwell, 4th Baronet
- ↑ "Monreith House: listed building report". Historic Scotland. http://hsewsf.sedsh.gov.uk/hslive/hsstart?P_HBNUM=19561. Retrieved 2011-03-16.