Thurso
Thurso is a community and also previous burgh on the north coastline of the Highland council location of Scotland. Located in the historical area of Caithness, it is the northern most community on the British mainland. It lies at the joint of the north-south A9 road as well as the west-east A836 road, connected to Bridge of Forss in the west and also Castletown in the eastern. The 34-mile (55 kilometres) River Thurso moves with the town and also into Thurso Bay and also the Pentland Firth. The river estuary serves as a small harbour. At the 2011 Census, Thurso had a population of 7,933. The larger Thurso civil parish consisting of the town and the bordering countryside had a population of 9,112. Thurso functioned as an important Norse port, and also later traded with ports throughout northern Europe until the 19th century. A flourishing angling centre, Thurso also had an online reputation for its linen-cloth and tanning tasks. As of 2015 the Dounreay Nuclear Research Establishment, although mostly deactivated at the end of the 20th century, employs a significant variety of the neighborhood population. The Category-A detailed destroyed Old St Peter's Church (St. Peter's Kirk) is one of the earliest churches in Scotland, dating to a minimum of 1125. The existing church, St Andrew's and St Peter's, was built in 1832 to a style by William Burn in the Gothic design. The town has the primary university of North Highland College and Thurso Senior High School, the northernmost secondary school on the British mainland, which was established in 1958. Thurso Castle, built in 1872, is in ruins. Thurso is home to the football (football) group, Thurso FC, developed in 1998, which play in the North Caledonian League, as well as the rugby groups Caithness Crushers and Caithness RFC. Thurso railway station, opened in 1874, was the most north station on the Sutherland as well as Caithness Train. The nearby port of Scrabster provides ferry services to the Orkney Islands; the Northlink ferry (MV Hamnavoe) operates in between Scrabster and also Stromness.