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Musselburgh Harbour Scotland Mini 4 Pro 

jaybee2786
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Fisherrow, Midlothian: Fisherrow harbour stands on a wide bay three-quarters of a mile [1.2km] W of the mouth of the River Esk [NT 345 733], and serves as the port of Musselburgh (NT37SW 409). Reasons will be given below for believing that the Esk estuary, now unnavigable, provided facilities for a harbour in the Middle Ages and decreasingly later. As silting progressed in the river, however, the Burgh no doubt found it necessary to develop Fisherrow, improving whatever had existed before in the shape of a fisherman's landing-place. Notwithstanding the present appearance of the adjoining shore as an open sandy beach, the harbour has in fact been inserted in a shallow pocket among tidal rocks, the 'breakwater' mentioned in the Fisherrow Harbour Act (1840) having been a natural rock-ridge, which gave some protection from the W. No record has been found of the building of the earliest harbour, but it may have been in existence by 1592, as Fisherrow is mentioned in that year in a list of 'towns and heavynnis', although some of the places in the list, eg. Skateraw [NT77NW 69: NT 7386 7547] did not possess built harbour-works. The port must have been fairly active in 1626, when no fewer than 12 Fisherrow skippers were listed by name as available for certain duties. In 1703, a single pier was marked on Adair's map, with a westward curve, and it may be inferred that this was of timber with a stone filling, as the Burgh Council had decided, in 1682, that it was 'to be repaired with balks of timber where the same ar wanting and to be filled up with stones to the balks according to use and wont.' Adair states elsewhere that there had once been a pier of timber.
By the beginning of the 18th century, a new harbour was needed, and for this a site was chosen at the mouth of the Esk, as in earlier times. Construction and repair were in progress in 1712 and 1713, the old harbour being treated as a quarry and owners of boats in Fisherrow being required to carry stone from it to the new works. This experiment evidently failed, as in 1740 a petition for another new harbour was presented to the Burgh Council. A return was made to Fisherrow, and building was begun there in 1743 on the old harbour's foundations. The work was to be done 'in ye same manner as if ye old harbour was built'. In 1744, the harbour was described as 'now building' and in 1753 as 'lately built'; in the former year William Adam was employed for survey work on ground adjoining the harbour, but it is not stated that he had any hand in the construction. Repairs are mentioned from time to time in the ensuing thirty years, John Adam being employed in 1762 and a plan by William Milne approved in 1767. Mention of the 'west head' proves the existence of two piers in 1772, and Taylor and Skinner figure them in 1776. In 1787 yet another scheme was considered, a long report being submitted by Cuthbert Clark, an architect in Dunbar. He advised against the estuary site and recommended alternative plans for wet docks or, failing either, the enlargement and improvement of the existing harbour. This he described as well-planned, but suffering from never having been completed. It may have been as a result of Clark's report that the Burgh Council approved, in 1790, the building of a 'Key and Parapet Wall', presumably as additions to the E Pier, which on that showing would previously have been no more than a breakwater, without facilities for working ships. In 1823 an estimate of £700 was accepted from William Watson and James Forbes, of Edinburgh, for repairing the harbour, but the nature and position of the repairs are not stated. They must, however, have been fairly extensive, as in the following year Watson and Forbes were paid £130 for work additional to the contract. A map of 1824 shows the E element of the harbour as a pier, but the W one only by a single heavy line, which probably represents the rock-ridge built up and improved as a breakwater.

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1 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 8   
@jimthorleydronefootage
@jimthorleydronefootage 51 минуту назад
Fabulous flight John never went to this cracking wee harbour need to visit next time i am over that way. Beautiful sky to compliment 😍👏🎥👍
@andrefreitas63
@andrefreitas63 4 дня назад
very nice my friend. Thanks for sharing 👍👍
@jaybee2786
@jaybee2786 4 дня назад
Thanks for visiting
@redmuttly75
@redmuttly75 4 дня назад
another cracking video mate,love seeing these.
@jaybee2786
@jaybee2786 4 дня назад
And thank you
@thomaswalker8790
@thomaswalker8790 4 дня назад
Absolute paradise
@jaybee2786
@jaybee2786 4 дня назад
Thank you
@thomaswalker8790
@thomaswalker8790 3 дня назад
My pleasure ❤️
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