Dunbeath Castle, Dunbeath, Caithness, Scotland

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Dunbeath Castle, Dunbeath, Caithness, Scotland
Dunbeath, Scotland (by UltraPanavision)
Dunbeath Castle by scottishkennyg Via Flickr: The author Neil M Gunn was born in the Caithness village of Dunbeath on November 8th 1891.
Gunn was a novelist, critic and dramatist working at the height of the Scottish Renaissance of the 1920s and 1930s. Unlike his contemporaries Lewis Grassic Gibbon and Hugh MacDiarmid, Gunn choose to write largely in English.
Gunn worked in the Civil Service in London and Edinburgh before returning to the live and work in the Highlands, his first novel, The Grey Coast, was published in 1926, but it wasn’t until 1937 and the success of Highland River, which won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, that he was able to give up his job with Customs and Excise to write full-time.
Highland River marked the end of a trilogy of novels exploring the history of the Highlands, following Sun Circle and Butcher’s Broom. The following year Gunn sold his house in Inverness and bought a twenty-seven foot motor boat, The Thistle, and took his wife and brother on a three-month sailing cruise around the islands of Scotland. His final book was the autobiography The Atom of Delight, published in 1956. He wrote a number of essays, which have been collected into anthologies.
Gunn died in 1973, and a memorial sculpture, seen in the pic called, Kenn and the Salmon, was unveiled at Dunbeath Harbour in 1991. Kenn is the central figure in Gunn's novel 'Highland River', carrying home the huge salmon he caught caught with his bare hands in the Well Pool beside the Telford Bridge over the Dunbeath River.
livesunique - DUNBEATH Castle, Dunbeath, Scotland
Dunbeath, Scotland, June 2017
Dunbeath, Scotland (by UltraPanavision)
Laidhay Croft Museum
Laidhay Croft is a 200 year old rush thatched Caithness longhouse. It is a typical example of the old style croft dwellings that were once a common feature of the Scottish landscape.
The Croft Museum consists of the longhouse, incorporating the dwelling, stable & byre at each end, a detached barn with its original cruck roof and a cart shed. Laidhay Croft comprises of 16 acres of arable, with rights over 15 acres of rough grazing. It came into the possession of the Bethune family in 1842 and stayed with them until 1968. The last person to live in it was William (Beil).
The building came up for sale in 1969 and was bought by Malcolm Cameron. Around this time, the proprietor of the Portland Arms Hotel, Lybster, suggested that the croft should be restored as a museum. The Laidhay Trust was set up in 1970 and the museum opened to the public in 1974.
Dunbeath, Scotland, June 2017