Strone Point (Loch Striven)
Strone Point is a cape in the south of the Scottish Cowal Peninsula and is therefore administratively part of the Argyll and Bute Council Area . The headland marks the entrance to Loch Striven when coming from the south , while the Kyles of Bute continue in a north-westerly direction. Beyond Strone Point, the land rises rapidly and culminates in several hills, of which Beinn Bhreac , located five kilometers to the northwest, is the highest at 507 m.
Strone Point is located in a very sparsely populated region and there are no settlements, only a few houses nearby. However, a single-lane paved road lines the cape so that it is accessible by motor vehicle. A former nearby settlement has since been abandoned. The buildings were shot at and destroyed during target practice during World War II.
As a result of the brisk shipping traffic in the Kyles of Bute, several ship accidents have been recorded around Strone Point in the past centuries. Worth mentioning are a sloop with an unknown name that ran aground there in October 1860 and had to be abandoned, the coal transporter Annabella , which sank after a collision at Strone Point in March 1861, and the Follow Me from Girvan , which also fell after a collision in January 1928 sank.
Individual evidence
- ^ Entry in the Gazetteer for Scotland
- ↑ Entry on Glaic in Canmore, the database of Historic Environment Scotland (English)
- ↑ Entry on Thomas in Canmore, the database of Historic Environment Scotland (English)
- ↑ Entry on Annabella in Canmore, the database of Historic Environment Scotland (English)
- ↑ Entry on Follow Me in Canmore, the database of Historic Environment Scotland (English)
Coordinates: 55 ° 53 ′ 52 ″ N , 5 ° 4 ′ 41 ″ W.