The island became part of the
Kingdom of the Isles, during the Norse era. Whereas nearby Ulva and
Staffa belonged to the
MacQuarries from the 10th century, Gometra became a possession of the Iona monastery prior to passing into the hands of the
Duke of Argyll.
Dean Monro makes no mention of Gometra or Ulva in his 1549 work
A Description of the Western Isles of Scotland but both are referred to briefly by John Monipennie c. 1612, stating of the latter that "about 300 paces from this island, lyeth Gomatra, two miles long and one mile broad". In 1821 Ulva was sold by the trustees of the MacDonalds of Staffa to Lt-General Charles MacQuarrie, brother of General
Lachlan Macquarie, the so-called father of Australia. After his death it was bought in 1835 by Francis William Clark of Ulva, a lawyer from Stirling, of Morayshire origin who began a brutal
clearance of a substantial proportion of the inhabitants of Ulva within a few years. However the MacDonalds of Staffa retained Gometra until 1858 when it was sold to Donald MacLean, who built Gometra House. ==Current ownership==