Easdale
Template:Short description Template:About Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox Scottish island Easdale (Template:Langx) is one of the Slate Islands, in the Firth of Lorn, Scotland. Once the centre of the Scottish slate industry, there has been some recent island regeneration by the owners.<ref>Eilean Eisdeal Trust - Argyll & Islands</ref> This is one of the smallest of the inhabited islands of the Inner Hebrides and is home to traditional white-washed cottagesTemplate:Sfn and disused slate quarries.<ref name=OS55/> The island supports a successful arts programme and an award-winning museum<ref name=EE>Template:Cite web</ref> and is without cars or streetlights.Template:Sfn
A ferry sails from Easdale to Ellenabeich on the nearby island of Seil (Gaelic: Saoil), which is separated from Easdale by only a narrow channel.Template:Sfn<ref name=US/> Confusingly, Ellenabeich is sometimes known as 'Easdale' as a result of its connections with the island.<ref name=US>Template:Cite web</ref>
Etymology
In 1549, Donald Monro, "Dean of the Isles" wrote, in brief reference to Easdale, of an island "namit in the Erische Leid Ellan Eisdcalfe"<ref>Monro (1549) "Eisdcalfe" No. 36. Translation from Scots: "named in the Gaelic language Eilean Eisdcalfe".</ref><ref>Gillies (1909) p. 154</ref>Template:Efn However the derivation of "Eisdcalfe" and this word's etymological relationship to "Easdale" is not clear. Haswell-Smith (2004) notes that eas is Gaelic for "waterfall" and dal is Norse for "valley".Template:Sfn Nonetheless, it is not clear why either description should apply to the island which is low lying and has no waterfalls. Similarly, Gaelic Place-Names of Scotland states that the first element is obscure, the second is the Norse dalr.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref>
The Gaelic name, Èisdeal (Template:IPA) or Eilean Èisdeal has a long vowel and local folk legend attributes this to a derivation from èist thall "listen to that yonder".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It is not clear if this Èisdeal shares its derivation with Glen Ashdale/Gleann Èisdeal (Glen of Ash trees)<ref name=MAT>Template:Gaelic Placenames</ref> on Arran.
Ellenabeich or Ellenbeich appears to be from the Gaelic Eilean nam Beathach (Template:IPA) "island of the animals" but this may be a reflex of an earlier and homophonous form Eilean nam Beitheach "island of the birch trees".<ref name=MAT/>
Geography and Geology
Easdale lies in the Firth of Lorn little more than Template:Convert west of the shores of the island of Seil. Mull is some Template:Convert to the north west. A scattering of islands, large and small, lie to the south including Luing, Belnahua and the Garvellachs.<ref name=OS55/> The highest point on Easdale is only 38 metres above sea level but offers commanding views in all directions.<ref name=OS55/>
The Easdale Slates were created in the Ordovician period about 440 million years ago. The rock is blue-black in colour, contains significant quantities of iron pyrites and features a ripple that distinguishes it from slates found in Wales and Cornwall. The slate beds are tilted at an angle of circa 45 degrees.Template:Sfn
History
In the 7th century the Cenél Loairn kindred controlled what is today known as Lorn in the kingdom of Dalriada.Template:Sfnp It has been suggested that nearby Seil may be the Template:Lang referred to in the Chronicle of the Kings of Alba, which records a victory of the Scots over a Viking force during the time of Donald II in the 9th century.Template:Sfnp However, it is likely that Easdale would have become part of the Norse Kingdom of the Isles either at this time or shortly thereafter.Template:Sfnp Following the 1266 Treaty of Perth the Hebrides were returned to Scottish control and eventually the island became part of the Netherlorn estates of the Breadalbane family (a branch of Clan Campbell).Template:Sfn
Slate mining
Easdale slate had been used in major construction projects in Scotland in the 12th and 13th centuries.Template:Sfn Another early mention of slate mining in the vicinity also appears in Dean Monro's Description in which he wrote of "Ellan Slait, quhairin their is abundance of skailzie to be wyn".Template:SfnTemplate:EfnTemplate:Efn
Production was significantly increased by John Campbell the 1st Earl of Breadalbane following the Jacobite rising of 1689.Template:Sfn By the time of the 1772 visit to the area by Thomas Pennant the island was producing 2.5 million slates per annum.Template:Sfn Easdale had thus become a centre of the British slate industry, with a community of more than 500 working as many as seven quarries, some of which extended to Template:Convert below sea level. Easdale slate helped to build major cities of the British Empire and can still be seen on rooftops as far afield as Melbourne, Nova Scotia, Dunedin and Dublin. The great storm of 1850 flooded the majority of the quarries and, as the islanders were unable to extract the floodwater, most were abandoned.<ref name=roofed>"Slate Islands - The Islands that Roofed the World" southernhebrides.com. Retrieved 21 October 2015.</ref> The last slate was cut in the 1950s and the once active quarries are now still pools which provide a safe haven for a wide variety of flora and bird life.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Nearby the former island Eilean-a-beithich once stood in the Easdale Sound between Easdale and Seil. It was quarried to a depth of Template:Convert below sea level leaving only the outer rim of the island. This was breached by the sea in 1881 and little visible sign of the island now remains.<ref name=roofed/>
Easdale Volunteers
In 1859 the British Government decided to create Artillery Volunteers around the coasts to defend the nation from the potential threat of attack by Napoleon III. In Argyll more than a dozen such companies were formed, including two on Easdale created in March 1860.Template:Sfn Ex-Royal Navy captain John MacDougall was placed in command of the volunteers and the four 32-pounder guns they were issued with. Drill halls were built at Easdale and at Ellanabeich with the guns being positioned nearby. Drills included firing cannonballs over 120 metres at small target rafts. Further floods in 1881 meant the original gun position on Easdale had to be resited.Template:Sfn
In 1899 the 32-pounders were replaced by more powerful 64-pounders that had 3 tonne barrels and which could fire 29kg shells more than twice as far as the original guns. The new guns were mounted on carriages, one of which survives on Easdale.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Eight men crewed each gun and in 1903 the Easdale Volunteers won the King's Cup at a national competition held near Dundee. In 1908, 48 years after they were formed the Volunteers stood down and were replaced by the Territorial Force (now known as the Territorial Army).Template:Sfn
Recent times
By the early 1960s, the population had dwindled to only four people and the island appeared doomed. The island now has a population of around sixty people and is one of the smallest permanently inhabited island of the Inner Hebrides.Template:Efn The Scottish plant collector Clara Winsome Muirhead surveyed the plant life of the island and published The Flora of Easdale and the Garvellachs in 1962.Template:Sfn
British indie rock band Florence and the Machine filmed their double-feature music video for their singles "Queen of Peace" and "Long & Lost" on the island, with the videos using the villagers as the cast.<ref>Munro, Alistair (28 June 2015)"Florence and the Machine film music video on Easdale" The Scotsman. Edinburgh. Retrieved 31 May 2020.</ref>
The island is owned by Jonathan Feigenbaum, who operates the Easdale Island Company;<ref>EASDALE ISLAND COMPANY LIMITED Company number SC106767</ref> he succeeded his late father Clive Feigenbaum (the former chairman of Stanley Gibbons). Clive created local issues of stamps, and Jonathan has continued doing this.Template:Sfn<ref name="catalog">Template:Cite news</ref>
In 2005 the local authority, Argyll and Bute Council, discussed plans to build a bridge between the island and Seil, linking the island to the mainland by road,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> despite there being no roads on Easdale.
Facilities and activities
The island is home to an award-winning museum<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> owned and operated by Eilean Eisdeal, a development trust,<ref name=EE/> as well as a bar/restaurant called "The Puffer".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>"Eilean Eisdeal" Template:Webarchive. Development Trusts Association Scotland. Retrieved 22 May 2011.</ref> Eilean Eisdeal spearheaded the renovation of the Easdale Island Community Hall, which provides a venue for a wide variety of events.<ref name=Hall>Template:Cite web</ref> According to Mike Scott of the Waterboys: "The Hall itself is magical. From the first sighting of its pyramid roof and arced frontispiece across the water to stepping off its stage at the end of the concert, it cast a spell on us."<ref name=Hall/>
A company who operate high speed boat trips to view wild life and other local places of interest in the area have their base at Ellenabeich opposite Easdale.<ref>"Welcome to Seafari" Seafari. Retrieved 18 November 2009.</ref>
The World Stone Skimming Championship<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> has taken place annually in September on Easdale since 1997. In 2012 the event came under threat after Jonathan Feigenbaum requested £1,000 for using the slate quarry the championship uses. The competition only went ahead after the Press and Journal newspaper offered to pay the fee.<ref>"Easdale World Stone Skimming Championships saved by £1,000 donation". (20 September 2012). BBC News. Retrieved 25 September 2012.</ref> A community buyout of the island by residents is now under consideration. Mike Russell, MSP for Argyll and Bute, said: "Not every community will achieve it and not every community should achieve it. But it is a live issue and becomes even more live in circumstances such as these."<ref>McKenzie, Steven "What motivates communities to buy land they live on?". (20 September 2012). BBC News. Retrieved 25 September 2012.</ref>
Tourist accommodation is available on the island and nearby.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The disused quarries have been described as "perfect for wild swimming".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Gallery
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The decaying pier of Easdale quarry which was used to load the slate from the nearby quarries
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Easdale ferry terminal
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A sea filled former quarry facing Ellenabeich
See also
References
- Notes
- Citations
- General references
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- Gillies, Patrick Hunter (1909) Netherlorn, Argyllshire, and its neighbourhood. Virtue.
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- Template:Monro
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- Template:Cite journal
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External links
- Eilean Eisdeal
- Easdale museum
- Archive of easdalepeople.org.uk
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