Merkinch

Merkinch (Scottish Gaelic: Marc-Innis, meaning "Island of the Horse"[1]) is an area of the city of Inverness in the Highland council area of Scotland. One of the oldest neighbourhoods in Inverness, it's situated in the city's north-west flanked by the Caledonian Canal to its west and River Ness to its east. It is a traditionally working-class area.

Merkinch
  • Scottish Gaelic: Marc-Innis
Neighbourhood
Merkinch
Location within the Inverness area
Council area
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townInverness
Postcode districtIV3 8
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament

In Merkinch is Grant Street Park, home to Clachnacuddin Football Club,[2] and Merkinch Primary School, one of the oldest schools in the city.

In February 2020, Merkinch was ranked as the number 8th most deprived area in Scotland, in a report by the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD). Residents immediately leapt to defend their community, while local MP Drew Hendry blamed the "roll-out of Universal Credit ... under this Tory Government"[3].

Notably, Merkinch was one of the last areas in Inverness to retain the city's own dialect of Scottish Gaelic.

Local History

Merkinch first appears in writing during the reign of King Alexander II, when it was granted by royal charter to the burgh of Inverness. This occurred in 1232, with the charter written four years afterwards. As part of this, the area was required to contribute "one pound of pepper" (or risk a fine of nine shillings) to the city every Michaelmas.[4]

Prior to the area's industrialisation, Merkinch was almost entirely farmland sitting on an island in the River Ness (hence its name-meaning in Gaelic). Wher the river flowed past the neighbourhood on its west side, is now the Caledonian Canal today. In 1829 it was the subject of a land dispute between the Frasers of Torbreck and Duffs of Muirtown, as tenants on both properties were unsure to whom they answered.[5]

In the Highland Potato Famine of 1846, wide social unrest gripped the city of Inverness. In Merkinch, a march was organised through the area and neighbouring Muirtown (another working-class neighbourhood), led by a 12-year-old drummer boy named John Fraser. The January protests were a direct result of potato prices skyrocketing at the market on Academy Street, it being a staple food both for rural and urban lay-folk. Despite the famine affecting Highlands, potatoes were still being exported in vast quantities to London—causing an angry mob to overturn carts at the city's quay, and vandalise the houses of prominent potato merchants. In the end, 70 soldiers were called in to quell further unrest.

Fraser's march would inspire similar ones across the Highlands, and over a year later similar protests occurred in response to rising oatmeal prices.[6]

Before the Second World War, Merkinch became home to Inverness' shipbuilding industry; across the railway lines to the area's north, the Kessock Ferry would cross the Moray Firth from a pier in South Kessock. Distilling was another important industry, with several distilleries in the area.

Today, industrial activity still takes place on the Carse Industrial Estate and Telford Retail Park.

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References

  1. "Merkinch". www.ainmean-aite.scot. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  2. Clachnacuddin: The fire-hit football club longing to return home, BBC Scotland News, 31 January 2020
  3. "Lay off Merkinch!". Inverness Courier. 1 February 2020. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  4. Mackintosh, Charles Fraser- (1875). Invernessiana, contributions towards a history of the town and parish of Inverness from 1150 to 1699.
  5. Session, Scotland Court of (1829). Cases Decided in the Court of Session. Bell & Bradfute.
  6. Hunter, James (10 October 2019). Insurrection: Scotland's Famine Winter. Birlinn. ISBN 978-1-78885-231-9.


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