Touring the Highlands: anonymous photo album pages from the 1920s.
Some photo albums are beautifully annotated, leaving no doubt as to what one is looking at. I have recently acquired some pages taken from an album with no annotations whatsoever. So I have no idea who took the photographs, when they were taken, and in some cases, what one is looking at.
However, we can start somewhere where there is no doubt about the location:
From John o' Groats, the party headed west (at least, they do in the order that I am showing!). An interesting page of photos taken in the Thurso vicinity:
This I believe to be a very interesting shot of Scrabster Harbour, with barrels in the foreground probably connected to the Herring trade. The large vessel moored alongside the jetty is the St Ola, the first of the line of ferries that serves Orkney.
They ventured to the north of Scrabster to get this image of the Clett Rock. This is famed for its bird life - a few can be seen at the top, but this is clearly not the time of the main breeding season. They then continued on along the north coast, taking this view at Tongue, looking across to Castle Varrich, with corn stooks and washing drying to add to the detail.
One of the most interesting pages is this one, showing images of Cape Wrath:
Various photographers, including George Washington Wilson, and, as here (left), Lilywhite, have tried to capture the huge block of rock that resists the battering of the waves off the headland. My anonymous photographer manages to show the channel that separates the block from the mainland, and gives a glimpse of the natural arch (right).
....and three more of people (and dogs!) presumably connected to it:
I think some of these must be the lighthouse staff. In an account of a cycling tour that I have recorded in a page titled 'Intrepid Cyclists' I note that one party stayed at the Cape for two weeks. Some of these folk photographed might well have been concerned with the hospitality offered at the headland.
Many of the photos show the motorcycle with sidecar which seems to have been a favourite mode of transport:
Other photos of the far north include these three, presumed all in the Rhiconich district:
To finish with, three interesting photographs, whereabouts unknown.