Lybster Explained

Official Name:Lybster
Gaelic Name:Liabost
Static Image Name:Lybster Harbour.jpg
Static Image Caption:Lybster Harbour
Map Type:Caithness
Coordinates:58.3°N -3.28°W
Os Grid Reference:ND250360
Civil Parish:Latheron
Unitary Scotland:Highland
Lieutenancy Scotland:Caithness
Country:Scotland
Post Town:LYBSTER
Postcode Area:KW
Postcode District:KW3
Dial Code:01593
Constituency Westminster:Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross
Constituency Scottish Parliament:Caithness, Sutherland and Ross

Lybster (Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic: Liabost) is a village on the east coast of Caithness in northern Scotland.[1] It was once a big herring fishing port.

The Waterlines heritage museum is located in Lybster Harbour and provides information on the history and geology of Lybster. A small number of crab fishing boats also operate from Lybster Harbour.[2]

Lybster lies at the end of the tenth stage of the John o' Groats Trail, a long-distance walking trail from Inverness to John o' Groats.[3]

History

Lybster owes its origin to the fishing industry. A wooden pier was built in 1790 for use by the fishing boats. The village was founded in 1802 as a planned village by the local landowner, General Patrick Sinclair and his sons continued with its development. By 1859 some 357 boats operated from the harbour, making it the third busiest fishing port in Scotland, only exceeded by Wick and Fraserburgh. By this time there were some 1500 fishermen at sea, and other servicing the industry on land.[4] Lybster railway station was part of the Wick and Lybster Railway. It opened on 1 July 1903 and closed on 3 April 1944,[5] having been overtaken by events, the opening up of the road for traffic and the decline of the herring industry. A white-fish fleet operated from the port in the 1900s, but that dwindled too, and now the harbour is used by fishing boats catching lobsters and crabs, and recreational craft.[4]

Lybster was an important port in the herring industry in the nineteenth century.[6] In 1838, the population was said to be 1312, and there was a move to build a church there, because otherwise worshippers had to travel to either Latheron or Bruan, both about 50NaN0 away.[7] Lybster declined in importance as a herring fishing port before the First World War as the local industry concentrated in Wick.

It hosts the "World Championships of Knotty"; knotty or cnatag is a variant of shinty.[8]

The film, Silver Darlings, from Neil Gunn's book, was shot here. In 2019, Lybster was used as a location for shooting the Netflix drama, The Crown.[9]

The Sinclairs of Lybster have long roots running back to the Sinclair earls who ruled Caithness that was once a much larger area taking in much of Sutherland. Tracing further back the family has connections to the Norwegian earls who controlled the north of Scotland for centuries.[10]

Patrick Sinclair

Lybster's sister city is Mackinac Island, United States. One of the more famous of the clan was Patrick Sinclair. Today there is a pub on Mackinac Island that bears his name. Ironically it is an Irish pub.[11]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gittings . Bruce . Munro . David . Lybster . The Gazetteer for Scotland . School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh and The Royal Scottish Geographical Society . 7 February 2019.
  2. Web site: Undiscovered Scotland: Waterlines. 30 November 2019.
  3. Web site: Lybster to Whaligoe – The John o' Groats Trail. 2019-11-02.
  4. Web site: Undiscovered Scotland: Lybster. 30 November 2019.
  5. News: Drove First Train: Started Last . Aberdeen Press and Journal . Scotland . 3 April 1944 . 15 July 2017 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .
  6. Book: Scotland. Fishery Board. Annual Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 1920. H.M. Stationery Office. 108.
  7. Book: Two lectures, in reply to the Speeches of Dr. Chalmers, on Church Extension, delivered in Greyfriars Church, 18th and 23rd October, 1838 ... With notes and an appendix. 1839. 87.
  8. Book: Russell George. Footsteps in Summer: Diary of an epic walk of discovery across Britain. 28 November 2014. Troubador Publishing Ltd. 978-1-78462-054-7. 21.
  9. Web site: Lybster transformed for Netflix drama The Crown. 2019-09-05. JohnOGroat Journal. 2019-11-03.
  10. Book: Donn, Rob. History of the House and Clan of Mackay: Containing...a Variety of Historical Notices, More Particularly of Those Relating to the Northern Division of Scotland During the Most Critical and Interesting Periods with a Genealogical Table of the Clan . 1829 . Donn. 366.
  11. Book: Armour . David A. . Dictionary of Canadian Biography . 1983 . University of Toronto/Université Laval . 5 . 7 June 2019.