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Hoswick

Hoswick
Hoswick from Stove - geograph.org.uk - 1702585.jpg
Hoswick viewed from Stove
Hoswick is located in Shetland
Hoswick
Hoswick
Hoswick shown within Shetland
OS grid reference HU414238
Civil parish
Council area
Lieutenancy area
Country Scotland
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town SHETLAND
Postcode district ZE2
Dialling code 01950
Police Scottish
Fire Scottish
Ambulance Scottish
EU Parliament Scotland
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
List of places
UK
Scotland
59°59′53″N 1°15′22″W / 59.998°N 1.256°W / 59.998; -1.256Coordinates: 59°59′53″N 1°15′22″W / 59.998°N 1.256°W / 59.998; -1.256

Hoswick (pronounced Hoh-sic) is a village in the south mainland of Shetland, on the West of the ancient parish of Sandwick. It is separated from the rest of Sandwick by the Hoswick burn and from Channerwick in the south by the hill on which the village is situated.

The settlement most probably grew as a fishing island in its own right, drying and curing fish on Hoswick beach, then many residents subsequently worked from the nearby fishing station on the mainland at Broonie's Taing which was at its height in the early 1900s but had declined by the late 1930s. Hoswick isle was also home to a Shetland tweed weaving industry post WW2, but this came to an end in the 1980s and the Visitor Centre (cafe and museum) is housed in one of the former weaving sheds. The tweed industry was developed by LJ Smith, who also built up a substantial knitwear industry based on home knitters but served from premises in Hoswick. The name Hoswick, like the Old Norse Husavik, means "bay with houses".

The residents of Hoswick isle are known for a legal case following the annual whale drive when, in 1888, they drove around 340 whales ashore. They then resisted the landowner, John Bruce Jnr of Sumburgh's claim for a third share of the profits which was customary under Udal Law (the catch was traditionally split three ways, one for the 'admiral', one for those who drove the whales ashore and one for the owner of the land on which the animals were beached)

The case was heard at the Court of Session in Edinburgh (Bruce v Smith) and in July 1889 Sheriff MacKenzie found in the Hoswick residents' favour. The court refused to recognise Bruce's claim, saying it wasn't ‘sufficiently inveterate, uniform, or uninterrupted’.

Bruce appealed the decision in 1890 but lost, and no further claims were made by Shetland landowners.

Heavy rains in the early morning of 19 September 2003 caused extensive flash flood damage to the village with many buildings affected (eleven houses were flooded, two of which had to be evacuated), the Hoswick bridge destroyed, a large section of the beach swept away and fresh water supplies cut off (two kilometres of water main were destroyed, resulting in the community having to rely on bottled water for several days).

Hoswick contains many examples of the traditional two-story, two or three-bay croft houses that are particularly associated with the district.


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