Thurso's history stretches back to at least the era of
Norse Orcadian rule in
Caithness, which ended conclusively in 1266. Neolithic horned cairns found on nearby Shebster Hill, which were used for burials and rituals, date back about 5,000 years. The town was an important Norse port, and has a later history of trade with ports throughout northern Europe until the 19th century. In 1330 Scotland's standard unit of weight was brought in line with that of Thurso at the decree of
King David II of Scotland, a measure of the town's economic importance. Old St Peter's Kirk is said to date from circa 1220 and the time of Caithness Bishop Gilbert Murray, who died in 1245. In 1649, Gaels from Ireland, led by Donald Macalister Mullach, attacked Thurso and were chased off by the residents, headed by Sir James Sinclair. One of the locals, a servant of Sinclair was said to have killed Mullach by "cutting a button from his master's coat and firing it from a musket". Following the passage into law of the 1845
Poor Law Act, a combination
poorhouse was constructed; work commenced in 1854 and was completed by 1856. The building, which had a capacity to house 149 inmates, was on a site to the west of Thurso Road and provided
poor relief for Thurso and the parishes of
Bower,
Canisbay,
Dunnet,
Halkirk,
Olrig,
Reay and
Watten. Many of the poorhouses in Scotland were under used, and by 1924 the building had been unoccupied for several years so was sold; it was later utilised as housing but by 2001 was again abandoned. to the west of the town. The arrival of workers related to the power station caused a three-fold increase in the population of Thurso; the 1951 census gave a figure of 3,000 but this had swelled to 9,000 by 1971. This led to around 1,700 new houses being built in Thurso and nearby
Castletown, a mixture of local authority housing blended with private houses and flats built by the
United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority. Thurso is also the name of the
viscountcy held by the Sinclair family in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. Thurso hosted the
National Mòd in 2010, which was the first time this festival of Gaelic language and culture had been held so far north.
Governance Thurso has history as a
burgh of barony dating from 1633 when it was established by Charles I. From 1870, the burgh council was based at
Thurso Town Hall. In 1975, under the
Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973, the
local government burgh was merged into the
Caithness district of the two-tier
Highland region. In 1996, under the
Local Government etc. (Scotland) Act 1994, the district was abolished and the region became a
unitary council area. From 1996 until 2007, the town of Thurso was covered by two or three
wards, each electing one councillor by the
first-past-the-post system of election. In 2007, a single
Thurso ward was created to elect three councillors by the
single transferable vote system. In 2017 the Thurso ward was absorbed into a new multi member ward along with the Western portion of Landward Caithness, the new ward, named
Thurso and Northwest Caithness, was contested for the first time in the
Highland Council election of 2017. The incumbent councillors are Cllr Matthew Reiss (Independent), Provost Struan Mackie (
Scottish Conservative), Cllr Ron Gunn (
Scottish Liberal Democrats) and Cllr Karl Rosie (
Scottish National Party). Electing four members to the new ward, it is one of two within the
Highland Council's
Caithness ward management area and one of seven within the council's
Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross corporate management area. Thurso Community Council was created in 1975 when the burgh was abolished. The
community council is not a tier of local government, but it is recognised as a level of
statutory representation. The community council represents an area which is somewhat smaller than that represented by ward councillors. The ward area also includes parts of other community council areas. ==Geography==