Inverlochy Castle Hotel Explained

Inverlochy Castle Hotel, formerly known as Inverlochy Castle, is a 19th-century baronial mansion near Fort William, Scotland.[1] It is located about two miles away from the 13th century Inverlochy Castle, after which it was named. This is a baronial mansion was built in 1863 by William Scarlett, 3rd Baron Abinger, soon after succeeding his father as Baron Abinger in 1861.[2] [3] Queen Victoria spent a week at Inverlochy during an 1873 visit to Balmoral, remarking "I never saw a lovelier or more romantic spot".[4] The house and estate were sold in 1944 to a Canadian entrepreneur, Joseph Hobbs, the owner of the nearby Ben Nevis distillery. Upon inheriting the estate, Hobbs' son converted the house into a hotel, which opened for the first guests in 1969.[2]

It was voted the number 17 "best hotel in Europe" by Travel + Leisure magazine in 2001.[5]

External links

56.845°N -5.0525°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Scottish Law Reporter, volume 44: 1906-07. John Baxter & Son. 1907. english. 529.
  2. Web site: Inverlochy Castle, Torlundy . rampantscotland.com . 1 November 2015.
  3. Book: 18-9863-008-9. Ben Nevis & Glen Coe (Pevensey Guides). Alan Hall. David & Charles. 2001. english. 75.
  4. Web site: About Inverlochy . Inverlochy Castle Hotel . 2008-11-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081014222819/http://inverlochycastlehotel.com/about.html . 2008-10-14 . dead .
  5. Web site: World's Best 2001 . Travel + Leisure . 1 November 2015.