Hunters Quay (Scottish Gaelic: Camas Rainich) is a village in Argyll and Bute, Scotland. Situated between Kirn to the south and Ardnadam to the north, Hunters Quay is the main base of Western Ferries, operating between Hunters Quay and McInroy's Point.
It is home to the Royal Marine Hotel, which is over 100 years old.[1]
The 12-metre class yacht race in the 1908 London Olympic Games took place at Hunters Quay. Most of the sailing took place on the Solent, but only two boats entered the 12-metre class: Mouchette from the Royal Liverpool Yacht Club and Hera from the Royal Glasgow Yacht Club. They were allowed to race on the Clyde for convenience. The course was twice round a 13-mile lap of the Clyde, starting and finishing at Hunters Quay. Hera won.
"Jim Crow" (originally "The Jim Crow"[2]), a pointed rock on the beach, has been painted with a face since the early 1900s.[2] The inspiration behind the name and design have been suggested to be: Thomas Rice, a white American caricaturing a black man; the owner of a nearby builders’ yard; a shark; and a jackdaw, which has a black beak, not a red mouth. Another is that it is named after the poem Jim Crow, the Jackdaw of Rheims.[3][4] In June 2009 and July 2010, the rock was painted over in an apparent act of vandalism using Drummonds International Grey paint. Those responsible for the act, Bill Child and Thomas Rebel, claim their motivation was a statement against the racist rock.[5][6]
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