-- History --
A small chapel existed in front of the old homestead at Gungstie
in 1633, apparantly built by people who had been shipwrecked on
Noss. The walls were still standing in 1774 and the burial ground
beside the Sound was used until the middle of the 19th century.
There is good reason to believe that the chapel site was originally
Celtic and pre-Norse but sadly the burial ground is now being
eroded by the sea.
The
homestead was built some 400 years ago and for a time was the
only inhabited house on the island. In 1869 the Marquis of Londonderry
leased the island and turned it over to pasture for his prize
breed of Shetland stallions. These were used in his Durham coal
mine as a substitute for child labour. The mares were kept on
the neighbouring island of Bressay to allow for controlled breeding.
The
famous Cradle of Noss has not existed since Mr Walker, the factor,
ordered its removal in 1864, and had a wall built along the precipice.
The cradle, slung in July and dismantled in November, consisted
of a box on two cables, large enough to hold a man and a sheep.
It crossed from Noss to the Holm of Noss, thus allowing the 164'
Holm to be grazed, but probably doing little for the nerves of
the man who transported the sheep.
The
population reached a peak of 24 in the 19th century, but by 1939
the last permanent resident had left. The 774 acres that make
up the island of Noss, has been a National Nature Reserve since
1955. This island whose dramatic outline rises from sea level
to a height of 180 metres at the Noup, is home to puffins, gannets,
fulmars, herring gulls, kittiwakes, guillemots, razorbills and
more. Great and Arctic skuas nest in the broken ground along the
cliff edge. The horizontally bedded sandstone has eroded, forming
ledges that allow nesting sites for the seabirds. There are 150
species of flowering plants on the island.
Noss,
now owned by the Garth Estate, and jointly managed with Scottish
Natural Heritage can be visited from mid-May until mid-August
and is reached by first catching the ro-ro ferry to Bressay, then
crossing the island and catching an inflatable boat to Noss.
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-- Links --
Wildlife
Shetland - Information packed page
from the Wildlife Shetland site which contains a good history
of the island as well as details of what it's like today and how
to get there.
Shetland
Heritage - Details on both Bressay and Noss from the Shetland
Heritage series of pages.
Visit
Shetland - Not many pictures but loads of info on Noss can
be found on this page from the Visit Sheltand site.
Scotland
Photo Library - Excellent collection of images of Noss and
Bressay
Noss
And Bressay Cruises - Fancy a trip to Noss and Bressay ?...well
why not give these people a try.
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