|
Ogur was an estate and a parsonage on the utmost
end of the promontory between Skotufiord and Mjoifiord. It was the
seat of powerful farmers, especially from the latter part of the 15th
century until the 17th. In 1884-1885, the largest dwelling
house outside towns and villages was built there. It has been
abandoned. In 1928, the first small hydroelectric power station for a
farm was built there.
The court of the Ogur County always assembled
there. The telephone- and telegraph station was situated there as well
as the county’s post office. It was one of the destinations of the
scheduled ferry, which transported people and cars between Ogur and
the village Isafiord, because there was no road between the two in the
past. There were quite a few fishing outfits along the coastline of
Ogur well into the 20th century. During the period between 1932 and 1951, Ogur was the
seat of a doctor of medicine. The farmer
now occupies his former dwelling house. The church at Ogur is a big
and elaborate house, built in 1859. It possesses many precious things
of which many are in the posession of The National Museum in the capital. The
parish was abolished by law in 1970. |