Bunessan is a small village on the Ross of Mull, a peninsula in the south-west of the Isle of Mull, off the west coast of Scotland. The settlement is at OS grid reference NM382217, within the parish of Kilfinichen and Kilvickeon, and is situated on the A849, at the head of a cove at the southern end of Loch na Làthaich.

History

The village was established by John Campbell, 5th Duke of Argyll in the late 1700s as a fishing station with a mixed crofting-fishing economy. In 1782, the corn and potato crops in the area were devastated by severe frost and early snow, causing many people to go to the Lowlands to seek work. By 1845, Bunessan had reached a population of 250.

Bunessan Church, a C listed building today, was built in 1804.

Construction of the pier, dubbed the "Maize Pier", began and was completed in 1846 by local workers using granite quarried at the north side of the bay. This new pier allowed for larger boats to use the port. The name "Maize Pier" originates from the fact that the Highland Potato Famine had already begun by the time the pier was being built, so workers were paid using Indian corn, also known as maize, which became a staple food of the workers. With the construction of the pier, Bunessan became the main port of the local area, with vessels linking it to larger ports such as Tobermory and Oban. This became the main port of access to the Ross of Mull for a long time, however as modern roads were built, commercial sailings to the village became less and less often. Today, no commercial sailings serve Bunessan, however it is still used by local fishermen and by pleasure craft.

Bunessan village has one grocery shop and a craft shop.

It also has one hotel, The Bunessan Inn (previously named Argyll Arms) (the only pub in the area). It claims to have been established over three centuries ago (the exact date is unknown). The earliest record of the inn was in 1773 when Dr Samuel Johnson and James Boswell, on their way to the isle of Iona, stopped at the inn in search of rum or brandy; but upon asking the innkeeper they found that the supplies were empty due to a funeral a few days before. The building, which is Category C listed, is described by Historic Environment Scotland as dating from with mid-1960s extensions.