:''There is also a Seaforth Island in the
Whitsunday Islands of Queensland, Australia''
'Seaforth Island' (
gaelic: ''Eilean Shìphiort or Shìophort'') is an uninhabited island in the
Outer Hebrides of
Scotland. Unlike other islands of the Outer Hebrides which are mainly surrounded by open sea, Seaforth Island lies in a narrow fjord-like
sea loch named
Loch Seaforth, 8 km from the open waters of the
Minch.
The island has poor soil which only supports rough grazing.
Although the island is not thought to have been inhabited in the past, the loch area was the subject of border disputes in the 19th century. In 1851, these were resolved by the unusual decision to allocate the whole of Seaforth Island to both counties,
Ross and Cromarty and
Inverness-shire, which at the time controlled
Lewis and
Harris respectively. This situation continued until the 1975 county reorganisation.
Reference
★
The Scottish Islands, Haswell-Smith, Hamish, , , , 2004,