Skaw (Unst)

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Shetland Settlements
Name: Skaw (Unst)
Thumb
UK Grid Reference:
Distance from Lerwick by road: 61 miles
plus 2 ferries
Community Council:
Skaw Cottage 1975
Skaw Cottage 1975
Skaw cottage as it looked like in the late 1980s
Skaw cottage as it looked like in the late 1980s

Skaw is a tiny settlement on the Shetland island of Unst. It is located north of Haroldswick on a peninsula in the northeast corner of the island, and is the most northerly settlement in the United Kingdom. The burn (stream) of Skaw flows from the uplands to the west through the constellation of small crofts that make up Skaw, and then east into the Wick of Skaw, a bay of the North Sea. A sheltered sandy beach lines the coast of the Wick of Skaw.



During World War II, the Royal Air Force built a Chain Home radar station at Skaw. A combined Coastal Defence U-Boat and Chain Home Low station was also built at Saxa Vord; after the war this became a ROTOR radar station. RAF Saxa Vord continued as a radar station after the end of the ROTOR programme.

The unclassified road from the B9087 to Skaw is furthest North road in the UK road network.

Walter Sutherland, a former inhabitant of the northernmost cottage in the UK, was reportedly the last native speaker of the Norn language.

The SRT4240 wrecked on the Point of Skaw on March 4th 1967.

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