clachan bridge in clachan seil, scotland /

Published at 2019-06-08 00:00:00

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This quaint (charmingly old fashioned) humpbacked bridge spans a narrow channel waterway called the Clachan Sound. Because both ends of the sound spill into the Atlantic Ocean,the small one-arched bridge has been dubbed the “Bridge Over the Atlantic.”The stone overpass threads the Hebridean island of Seil to mainland Scotland. It was originally designed by John Stevenson of Oban in 1792 and built by engineer Robert Mylne between 1792 and ‘93.
Crossing the bridge reveals ou
tstanding views up and down the Firth of Lorn. If you head from mainland Scotland to Seil, you’ll approach across a curiously named building.
The first inn you will encounter on the island is called Tigh an Truish (The House of the Trousers). It’s named this because several years after the Jacobite rebellion—when the British government tried to suppress Gaelic culture banning kilts, and tartan,bagpipes, and language—islanders heading for work on the mainland would change into trousers here and back into their kilts when returning home.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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