Corra Linn Dam is a concrete hydroelectric dam on the Kootenay River between the cities of Castlegar and Nelson , in the West Kootenay region of southern British Columbia .
47-493: The Corra Linn Rapids, named after the Falls of Clyde upper falls of Cora Linn, preceded the dam at this location. The adjacent former train station and neighbourhood were named after the rapids, but the locality has been frequently misspelled as Corra Lynn. For the six-year period after the 1932 opening, the dam was not permitted to raise the level of Kootenay Lake . It operated as a run-of-the-river hydroelectricity plant allowing
94-424: A Privy Counsellor to King James IV , and helped to arrange his marriage to Margaret , daughter of King Henry VII of England . As a reward, he was created Earl of Arran on 8 August 1503. He was succeeded by his elder son from his second marriage, James, 2nd Earl of Arran . He was Regent of Scotland between 1542 and 1554, and guardian of the young Mary, Queen of Scots . He was created Duc de Châtellerault in
141-421: A Lymphad with the sails furled proper flagged Gules (for Arran); 2nd and 3rd grand quarters: Argent a Heart Gules imperially crowned Or on a Chief Azure three Mullets of the first (for Douglas) . The achievement has two crests , namely: 1st, on a Ducal Coronet an Oak Tree rutted and penetrated transversely in the main stem by a Frame Saw proper the frame Or (for Hamilton); 2nd, on a Chapeau Gules turned up Ermine
188-430: A Salamander in flames proper (for Douglas) . The supporters are: on either side an Antelope Argent armed unguled ducally gorged and chained Or . Each crest has a motto , namely " Through " (over the 1st crest) and " Jamais Arriere " (" Never Behind ") (over the 2nd crest). The heir apparent is the present Duke's eldest son Douglas Charles Douglas-Hamilton, Marquess of Douglas and Clydesdale (born 2012). The next heir
235-550: A male heir and the Dukedom passed to his fourth cousin Alfred, 13th Duke of Hamilton , who was descended from the 4th Duke of Hamilton and whose line of the family had adopted the surname "Douglas-Hamilton". His son was Douglas, 14th Duke of Hamilton , who was succeeded by his son Angus, 15th Duke of Hamilton . He died in 2010, and was succeeded by his son, the current Duke, Alexander, 16th Duke of Hamilton . The letters patent that created
282-458: Is (under provision 4 of the special remainder) the heir whatsoever of the 3rd Duchess, namely Edward Stanley, 19th Earl of Derby ( b. 1962 ) (a descendant of the 6th Duke through his only daughter, Lady Elizabeth Hamilton, who married Edward Smith-Stanley, 12th Earl of Derby ). Lord Derby is not, however, an heir to the Marquessate of Douglas and its subsidiary titles, which would pass to
329-677: Is a title in the Peerage of Scotland , created in April 1643. It is the senior dukedom in that peerage (except for the Dukedom of Rothesay held by the sovereign's eldest son), and as such its holder is the premier peer of Scotland, as well as being head of both the House of Hamilton and the House of Douglas . The title, the town of Hamilton in Lanarkshire , and many places around the world are named after members of
376-494: Is next to Corra Linn. It is now home to a good number of Daubenton's bat and of some Natterer's and whiskered bats . Corra is Gaelic for "weir", and as Corra Castle's early history is vague, some historians believe it was an early possession of the Weirs, the principal landowning family in the county after the Dukes of Hamilton from the 13th to 19th centuries. Corehouse , built in 1844,
423-449: Is recorded as witnessing a charter confirming the gift of the church at Cragyn to the Abbey of Paisley in 1271. His ancestry is uncertain but he may have been the son of William de Hamilton (third son of Robert de Beaumont, 3rd Earl of Leicester ) and Mary of Strathearn. Gilbert de Hameldun married Isabella Randolph, daughter of Thomas Randolph of Strathdon , Chamberlain of Scotland . His heir
470-634: Is situated near Stonebyres Linn, about three miles south of Corra Linn. This generates approximately six megawatts of power. Both stations are owned and operated by Scottish Power . Historical Tours in the Clyde Valley. Published by the Clyde Valley Tourist Association and the Lanark & District Archaeological Association. Printed by Robert MacLehose and Company Limited, Renfrew, Scotland. 1982. Duke of Hamilton Duke of Hamilton
517-662: Is the hereditary keeper of the Palace of Holyroodhouse , the official royal residence in Scotland, where he maintains large private quarters. He is also, as Lord Abernethy and in this respect successor to the Gaelic earls of Fife , the hereditary bearer of the Crown of Scotland , a role which the 15th duke performed at the inauguration of the Scottish Parliament in 1999, as did the 16th duke at
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#1732852847185564-504: Is well known for its resident breeding pair of peregrine falcons , which are protected during the breeding season by Operation Peregrine, providing security for the birds and a chance for the public to view the birds through scopes and CCTV. On 22 October 2011 at 1500 GMT a very rare pine marten was spotted within the reserve and was photographed. Within the reserve the Clyde River is suitable habitat for otters and kingfishers as well as
611-538: The 1948 Vanport Oregon flood , the 1961 Columbia River Treaty led to the construction of the flood control Duncan Dam in 1967, and Libby Dam in 1975, which regulated water flowing into Kootenay Lake. Most outflow is diverted 4.5 kilometres (2.8 mi) past Corra Linn along the Kootenay Canal to the more efficient generating station opened in 1976. Kootenay basin reservoirs provide nearly 7,000,000 acre-feet (8.6 km) of storage which constitutes almost half of
658-553: The Acts of Union 1707 , the 4th Duke was the leader of the anti-union party. He was created Duke of Brandon , in the County of Suffolk , and Baron Dutton , in the County of Chester , in the Peerage of Great Britain on 10 September 1711, but was wrongfully refused a summons to the Parliament of Great Britain under that title (although he continued to sit as a Scottish representative peer ). He
705-570: The Court of Lord Lyon as a hereditary assessor , sitting on the bench beside Lord Lyon . The courtesy titles used by heirs apparent are "Marquess of Douglas and Clydesdale" (the eldest son of the duke) and "Earl of Angus" (the eldest son of a marquess of Douglas and Clydesdale). No duke has had a great-grandson in direct line to the titles, but it is likely that the latter would be styled "Lord Abernethy" (the Lordship of Abernethy and Jedburgh Forest being
752-489: The Hamilton family . The ducal family's surname, originally " Hamilton ", is now " Douglas-Hamilton ". Since 1711, the dukedom has been held together with the Dukedom of Brandon in the Peerage of Great Britain , and the dukes since that time have been styled Duke of Hamilton and Brandon , along with several other subsidiary titles. The titles held by the current duke of Hamilton and Brandon are: The duke of Hamilton and Brandon
799-559: The Lothians and Cadzow (present day Hamilton in Lanarkshire ), including Cadzow Castle . The lands had previously belonged to John Comyn , who was murdered by Robert the Bruce. The 1st laird of Cadzow was succeeded as the 2nd laird by his son Sir David fitz Walter . He was a supporter of King David II and fought at the Battle of Neville's Cross (Battle of Durham) where he was captured along with
846-415: The Peerage of France in 1548 for his part in arranging the marriage of Queen Mary to Francis, Dauphin of France . This French Dukedom was forfeited when he switched allegiances in 1559. Emperor Napoleon III "confirmed" this title for the 12th Duke of Hamilton in the 19th century, but although the 12th Duke was heir male of the 2nd Earl, the legal effect of this "confirmation" is doubtful. The 2nd Earl
893-647: The Somers Isles Company , an offshoot of the Virginia Company , buying the shares of Lucy Russell, Countess of Bedford . The Parish of Hamilton in the Somers Isles (now Bermuda ) is named for him. Upon the death of his uncle in 1609 he succeeded as 4th Earl of Arran (of the 1503 creation) and 5th Lord Hamilton. He was also created Earl of Cambridge and Baron Innerdale in the Peerage of England on 16 June 1619. His son, James, 3rd Marquess of Hamilton ,
940-661: The 15,500,000 acre-feet (19.1 km) stored in Columbia River Treaty reservoirs. 49°28′N 117°28′W / 49.467°N 117.467°W / 49.467; -117.467 Falls of Clyde (waterfalls) The Falls of Clyde are a series of linns or waterfalls on the River Clyde , near Lanark , Scotland. They are renowned for their beauty and have frequently been painted by artists. There are four in total: Bonnington Linn, Corra Linn, and Dundaff Linn, all above Lanark, and Stonebyres Linn, some distance below
987-692: The 1599 Earldom of Arran and the Lordships of Hamilton, Aven and Aberbrothwick in the Peerage of Scotland, and the Earldom of Cambridge and the Barony of Innerdale in the Peerage of England) became extinct. In 1656, the 3rd Duchess married William Douglas, 1st Earl of Selkirk , third son of William Douglas, 1st Marquess of Douglas . He had been created Earl of Selkirk and Lord Daer and Shortcleuch on 4 August 1646. He changed his surname to "Hamilton", and on 20 September 1660
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#17328528471851034-401: The 1st Duke's elder daughter. Upon his death in 1651, with no further heirs in the immediate male line, the Dukedom (and the titles created with it), as well as the Earldom of Lanark (and the title created with it), passed to that daughter, Anne, 3rd Duchess of Hamilton . The 1503 Earldom of Arran and the Lordship of Hamilton became dormant, and all the other titles (the Marquessate of Hamilton,
1081-502: The Duke of Hamilton, though still using the surname "Hamilton", was patrilineally a "Douglas" (through the 3rd Duchess's husband), the 7th Duke became heir male of the House of Douglas and inherited the Duke of Douglas's subsidiary titles (although not the Dukedom), succeeding as 4th Marquess of Douglas, 14th and 4th Earl of Angus and 4th Lord Abernethy and Jedburgh Forest. He died without issue and
1128-466: The Dukedom of Douglas (and the titles created with it) became extinct, but the Marquessate of Douglas, both Earldoms of Angus and the Lordship of Abernethy and Jedburgh Forest passed to his second cousin twice removed and heir male, James Hamilton, 7th Duke of Hamilton . The arms of the current Duke of Hamilton and Brandon are: quarterly: 1st and 4th grand quarters: quarterly: 1st and 4th, Gules three Cinquefoils Ermine (for Hamilton); 2nd and 3rd, Argent
1175-433: The Dukedom of Hamilton contained a special remainder. It stipulated that the Dukedom should descend to: As the first Duke and his brother (the second Duke) both died without surviving sons, the succession has, since 1651, been governed by the third rule given, with the dukedom going to the grantee's daughter (the third Duchess) and her heirs male. George Douglas, an illegitimate son of William Douglas, 1st Earl of Douglas ,
1222-477: The Gaelic currach , a marshy place. A legend gives "Cora" as a daughter of King Malcolm II , who leapt to her death here whilst trying to escape imagined danger. Near Corra Linn is the Pavilion, built by Sir John Carmichael of Bonnington, probably in 1708. The Pavilion had mirrors on its back wall, and when the doors were opened visitors had the illusion of standing beneath the falls. The 15th-century Corra Castle
1269-581: The King. His son David Hamilton , the 3rd laird, was the first to establish Hamilton as the family name. David Hamilton's son Sir John Hamilton became the 4th laird and was, in turn, succeeded as the 5th laird by his son James Hamilton . The 5th laird was succeeded as 6th laird by his son, Sir James Hamilton , who was created a Lord of Parliament as Lord Hamilton on 3 July 1445. In early 1474, he married Princess Mary, Countess of Arran , daughter of King James II and widow of Thomas Boyd, 1st Earl of Arran . He
1316-682: The State Opening of Parliament, 30 June 2011. As Hereditary Bearer of the Crown of Scotland, the 16th Duke also placed the crown upon the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II during a service of remembrance in St Giles' Cathedral on 12 September 2022. Traditionally, the duke of Hamilton enjoys the exclusive right to remove the Scottish Crown Jewels from the City of Edinburgh . He also regularly attends sittings in
1363-513: The dukedom) was styled "Lord Polmont". The duke of Hamilton and Brandon is one of only five British peers to hold more than one dukedom, the others being: Historically, several other peers have held multiple dukedoms, including the Duke of Newcastle upon Tyne and Newcastle-under-Lyne , the Duke of Argyll and Greenwich , the Duke of Monmouth and Buccleuch and the two Dukes of Queensberry and Dover and some other mainly royal dukes. Gilbert de Hameldun
1410-432: The excavation. Between 2005 and 2010 BC Hydro considered more excavation at the narrows as a potential "Resource Smart" project. The second approval permitted the dam to be used to raise the level of Kootenay Lake by 2 metres, thus forming a reservoir for flood control and hydro power. The dam's powerplant has a generating capacity of 51 MW. In 2003, FortisBC bought the dam formerly owned by West Kootenay Power. After
1457-617: The home of the Cranstoun family, is nearby. The Falls of Clyde Site of Special Scientific Interest (formerly the Corehouse Nature Reserve), a part of the Clyde Valley Woodlands National Nature Reserve , is an area of mixed woodland, including semi-natural native oakwoods and some areas of conifer plantation. It provides suitable habitat for badgers , roe deer , and over 100 species of bird. The site
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1504-439: The most senior available title). Before the dukes succeeded to the Marquessate of Douglas and its subsidiary titles, the heirs apparent were styled initially " Earl of Arran " (which had previously been used as a courtesy title by the marquesses of Hamilton) and later "Marquess of Clydesdale" (the former style then being adopted for a grandson in direct line). The heir apparent to the Earldom of Lanark (before that title merged with
1551-535: The protected brook lamprey . The Falls of Clyde Visitor Centre, operated by the Scottish Wildlife Trust , features exhibits about the waterfalls, the woodland and the area animals, including a special bat display. The Lanark Hydro Electric Scheme is situated between Corra Linn and Dundaff Linn, with a water inlet at Bonnington Linn, and is considered the oldest of the United Kingdom . The scheme
1598-452: The river. The narrows was made deeper and wider, allowing for a greater drawdown of the lake during the winter and a greater flow during spring freshet. Even after excavation, Grohman Narrows continued to limit outflow. During the 1961 flood, the level of the lake was 3 metres (10 ft) above the maximum level of the dam, owing to water held back at the narrows. Models indicate the lake would have been almost 2 metres (7 ft) higher without
1645-488: The spring freshet to pass downstream. After devastating floods to Idaho farmlands in 1938, the International Joint Commission granted two approvals. The first allowed excavation to the outlet of the lake at Grohman Narrows. In 1939, 255,809 cubic metres (334,585 cu yd) of gravel and 13,706 cubic metres (17,927 cu yd) of rock were removed, which included rock bluffs on the south side of
1692-406: The subsequent history of those titles, which were eventually inherited by the 12th Duke of Hamilton, becoming separated again from the Dukedom on the death of the 13th Duke in 1940). On 9 July 1698, the 3rd Duchess resigned all her titles in favour of her eldest son, James, Earl of Arran , who thereby succeeded as 4th Duke in his mother's lifetime (his father had died in 1694). During the lead-up to
1739-489: The town. The highest and most impressive of the four is Corra Linn, with a fall of 84 feet (26 m). The area has long been a popular destination for visitors. The Wordsworths, Coleridge and Sir Walter Scott all visited the Falls. In 1802, William Wordsworth immortalised Corra Linn, the largest of the waterfalls, in verse. Corra Linn has also been painted by a number of artists, including J. M. W. Turner . The name comes from
1786-646: Was Walter fitz Gilbert . He was governor of Bothwell Castle for the English Crown during the First War of Scottish Independence . Following the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314, he gave refuge to the Earl of Hertford and other escapees, only to deliver them and Bothwell up to Edward Bruce . He then became a Bruce partisan. Sometime between 1315 and 1329, Robert the Bruce knighted him and granted him lands in Renfrewshire and
1833-452: Was conceived in 1925 under the chairmanship of Sir Edward MacColl and was completed in 1927 as the first hydro-electric power station in Scotland designed for public supply, rather than industry. The power station at Stonebyres was designed by Sir Robert Lorimer (who also acted as design advisor to the committee looking at the overall concept). The plant generates approximately eleven megawatts of power. Another hydro-electric power station
1880-554: Was created Duke of Hamilton , Marquess of Clydesdale , Earl of Arran and Cambridge and Lord Aven and Innerdale on 12 April 1643, with a special remainder allowing succession through the female line should his and his brother's heirs male fail. His son, Charles, Earl of Arran, died young and the 1st Duke's titles passed to his younger brother, William, 2nd Duke of Hamilton , who had already been created Earl of Lanark and Lord Machanshire and Polmont on 31 March 1639. A surrender and regrant in 1650 allowed these also to be inherited by
1927-401: Was created Duke of Hamilton , Marquess of Clydesdale , Earl of Arran, Lanark and Selkirk and Lord Aven, Machanshire, Polmont and Daer for life . In 1688, he resigned the Earldom of Selkirk and the Lordship of Daer and Shortcleuch, and those titles were regranted to his second son, with a special remainder designed to prevent them becoming merged with the Dukedom. (See Earl of Selkirk for
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1974-490: Was created Earl of Angus on 9 April 1389. His descendant, William, 11th Earl of Angus , was created Marquess of Douglas , Earl of Angus and Lord Abernethy and Jedburgh Forest on 14 June 1633. His great-grandson, Archibald, 3rd Marquess of Douglas , was created Duke of Douglas , Marquess of Angus and Abernethy , Viscount of Jedburgh Forest and Lord Douglas of Bonkill, Prestoun and Robertoun on 10 April 1703. He died, married but childless, in 1761, at which point
2021-509: Was killed in a celebrated duel with Charles Mohun, 4th Baron Mohun (who also died) in Hyde Park in London on 15 November 1712. The 4th Duke's son James, 5th Duke of Hamilton was succeeded by his son James, 6th Duke of Hamilton and he by his son James, 7th Duke of Hamilton . In 1761, the 7th Duke's second cousin twice removed, Archibald Douglas, 1st Duke of Douglas , died without an heir. As
2068-411: Was styled Lord Hamilton as is traditional for the younger sons of Earls ) was appointed to administer his brother's estates. He was created Marquess of Hamilton , Earl of Arran and Lord Aven on 17 April 1599. His son, James, 2nd Marquess of Hamilton (who had been created Lord Aberbrothwick (or Arbroath ) on 5 May 1608, before he succeeded) moved to England with King James VI , and invested into
2115-407: Was succeeded by his brother Douglas, 8th Duke of Hamilton . He left no sons and the title passed back to his uncle, the 6th Duke's brother, Archibald, 9th Duke of Hamilton . He was succeeded by his son Alexander, 10th Duke of Hamilton and then by his son William, 11th Duke of Hamilton . The 11th Duke's son William, 12th Duke of Hamilton (who changed his surname to "Hamilton Douglas") died without
2162-423: Was succeeded by his eldest son, James, 3rd Earl of Arran , who had been proposed as a husband to Queen Elizabeth I of England in 1561. In 1562 he was declared insane, and in 1581 he resigned the Earldom to James Stewart of Bothwellhaugh . However, in 1586 his resignation was ruled by the Court of Session to be the act of a madman and his honours were restored. The 3rd Earl's younger brother John Hamilton (who
2209-552: Was succeeded by his only legitimate son, James, 2nd Lord Hamilton . In 1490, then aged 15, he married the 13-year-old Elizabeth, Lady Hay, daughter of Alexander Home, 2nd Lord Home and widow of Sir Thomas Hay, Master of Yester, son and heir of John Hay, 1st Lord Hay of Yester . However, it was later discovered that Sir Thomas Hay was still alive and the marriage was annulled. The 2nd Lord married secondly Janet, Lady Livingstone, daughter of Sir David Beaton of Creich and widow of Sir Robert Livingstone of Easter Wemyss and Drumry. He became
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