Gaelic name | Innis Choinnich |
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Meaning of name | Island of Kenneth, follower of St Columba |
Location | |
Inch Kenneth shown within Argyll and Bute
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OS grid reference | NM435355 |
Coordinates | 56°26′30″N 6°09′47″W / 56.44171°N 6.16317°W |
Physical geography | |
Island group | Inner Hebrides |
Area | 55 hectares (0.21 sq mi) |
Area rank | 189= |
Highest elevation | 49 metres (161 ft) |
Administration | |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Country | Scotland |
Council area | Argyll and Bute |
Demographics | |
Population | 0 |
References |
Inch Kenneth (Scottish Gaelic: Innis Choinnich) is a small grassy island off the west coast of the Isle of Mull, in Scotland. It is at the entrance of Loch na Keal, to the south of Ulva. It is part of the Loch na Keal National Scenic Area, one of 40 in Scotland. It is within the parish of Kilfinichen and Kilvickeon, in Argyll.
The island is named after St Kenneth, a follower of Saint Columba, who is said to have founded a monastery on the island.
The island was visited in 1773 by Samuel Johnson and James Boswell during their tour of the Hebrides; they were entertained there by Sir Allan MacLean, head of the Maclean clan. Both Johnson and Boswell published accounts of their visit.
In the 1930s the island was owned by Sir Harold Boulton, 2nd Baronet, the writer of the words to the Skye Boat Song. He enlarged an earlier house to make the existing large mansion.
Its most famous owners were the eccentric Mitford family. Nazi sympathiser Unity Mitford spent her final years on the island. Following the death of their father Lord Redesdale, the island was inherited under Scots Law by the surviving Mitford sisters)and not his wife, as Lord Redesdale had willed it to his deceased son Tom. When their mother died in 1963, Nancy gave her share to Jessica, who bought the shares of Diana, Deborah and Pamela. Jessica, a former communist, teasingly suggested that it might become a Soviet submarine base.