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The Ballachulish Hotel and Ballachulish House (until recently [2010] a country house hotel) are located near the narrows at (south) Ballachulish Ferry rather than in the "modern" village some 3 miles (5 km) to the east. Ballachulish House was reputed to be haunted, and the drive leading to it was ridden by a headless horseman.
The large 1960s extension (demolished) seen from the West Highland Way in 2012.In 1959, the Kings House Hotel underwent its first 20th-century modernisation. The work was done so sensitively that the architect, John Thompson ARIBA of Weddell & Thompson, Glasgow, and unusually, also the builders (at the behest of the architect), Thos. Findlay and Sons Ltd of Mauchline, Ayrshire, both received ...
Cameron House Hotel - 2009. Cameron House, located on Loch Lomond near Balloch, Scotland, was first built in the mid-1700s, and later purchased by Sir James Smollett.The modern Baronial stone castle was built by William Spence in 1830 (rebuilt after a fire in 1865), with peaked gables and decorative turrets.
Ballachulish House is a restaurant located in Ballachulish, Highland, Scotland. As of 2008 [update] , the restaurant holds one star in the Michelin Guide . [ 1 ]
Ardgour was part of Kilmallie Parish, the largest in Scotland, until 1829 when a Quoad Sacra Parish (QSP) – 'Ballachulish & Corran of Ardgour' – was formed, also including Ballachulish, in Inverness-shire across Loch Linnhe. Parliamentary churches were built at Creag Mhòr in North Ballachulish and at Corran in Ardgour with the Manse at the ...
Eilean Munde is a uninhabited [1] island in Loch Leven, close to Ballachulish. It is the site of a chapel built by St. Fintan Mundus (also known as Saint Fintan Munnu), who travelled here from Iona in the 7th century. The church was burnt in 1495 and rebuilt in the 16th century. The last service in the church was held in July, 1653. [2]
Glenachulish (Scottish Gaelic: Gleann a' Chaolais: valley of the narrows; pronounced Glen – ah – hoolish) is a hamlet and glen which lie close to the village of Ballachulish in the Scottish Highlands.
Scotland 56°42′11″N 5°13′30″W / 56.703°N 5.225°W / 56.703; Onich ( / ˈ oʊ n ɪ x / ; [ 1 ] Gaelic : Omhanaich , 'abounding in froth, frothy place'), also spelled Ounich , is a village in the historic county of Inverness-shire on the east shore of Loch Linnhe , Scotland and, together with North Ballachulish at the ...