Newspaper cutting about the quiet life on Tiree by Colin Gibson.
Article about the quiet life on Tiree with photographs illustrated by a photograph of Scarinish harbour and another of a thatched house.
Photograph of a boy in Scarinish Harbour in 1952.
Black & white photograph of a boy standing at the anchor chain of the Mary Stewart in Scarinish harbour in 1952.
Black and white aerial photograph of Hynish.
Aerial photograph of Hynish showing the pier, harbour, signalling tower and keepers` cottages.
Black and white postcard of Scarinish harbour.
Postcard of Scarinish harbour with the hotel in the background.
Black and white postcard of Scarinish harbour.
Postcard of Scarinish harbour. The building in the background was originally built as a church, was then used intermittently as a prison and latterly as a store by the owners of the Mary Stewart. It was pulled down to make roads during World War II.
Black and white postcard of Scarinish harbour ca. 1880
Postcard of Scarinish with the Mary and Effie in the harbour and the hotel in the background taken around 1880. One of the boats is Alan MacFadyen`s smack.
Black and white photograph of the Mary Stewart in Scarinish harbour.
The Mary Stewart in Scarinish harbour, photographed by Morton Boyd in the 1940s or 50s.
Black and white photograph of the Mary Stewart.
The interior of the Mary Stewart in Scarinish harbour photographed by Morton Boyd in the 1940s or 50s.
Black and white postcard of Scarinish from the air in the 1950s.
Scarinish from the air in the early 1950s.
Black and white photograph of Scarinish harbour, pre-World War II.
Scarinish harbour. The building in the background was originally built as a church, used intermittently as a prison and latterly as a store by the owners of the Mary Stewart. It was pulled down to make roads during World War II.