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Wednesday, 9th December 2009

When less is moor: New Culloden visitor centre opens

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Video from National Trust Scotland on the new Culloden
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Published Date: 10 April 2008
THE dogwalkers have Culloden Battlefield to themselves this afternoon, almost 262 years after the claymore-wielding Scottish clansmen were shredded by the Duke of Cumberland's cannon and shot.
A strong breeze is blowing a spray of rain across Drumossie Moor. Sheltered in the lee of the brand-new £9 million visitor centre, a couple walking a well-brushed sheepdog say brusquely they are "not very favourable", and "disappointed by all the time spent on it".

On the far side of the field, near the bold blue flagpoles that mark the Jacobite lines, the owner of a black Labrador takes a more sanguine view. "Very stripped down, very simple," he says, looking across to the low walls of grey stone and green-grey local larch. "Very Bauhaus."

Battlefields may be best enjoyed simply, to let the imagination roam, but a little guidance is helpful. The burial cairns remain, but the cement markers dotted around Culloden, ugly though they are, have been stripped of all markings in the battlefield's ongoing revamp.

Visitors are now expected to tour the site with handheld PDAs to tell them where they are and what they're looking at, but at this hour of an off-season afternoon, the counter is closed.

Culloden, as great battles go, was short – about an hour – and with an immediate death toll of only 1,300. But the shattering defeat of the Scottish clansmen and the rout of their Jacobite leaders, including Bonnie Prince Charlie, is an event still shrouded in gloom.

The new visitor centre, which has its official opening on the battle's anniversary on 16 April, aims to revive awareness of the battle. It is vastly more than a ticket office and shop.

In the walk-through museum inside, hi-tech gizmos abound. Stand beneath one of the "hypersonic" sound stations, and the words of a battlefield character, using technology developed for the US military, are whispered into your ears alone.

Outside, however, the side of the building is a simple memorial, with echoes of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington DC.

Individual but unmarked stones show the Jacobite dead, about 1,250, overwhelming the 50 on the government side. An archway leads directly to the battlefield for those who want to skip the razzmatazz.

"The idea was always to create quite a simple abstract portal on to the battlefield," says architect Gareth Hoskins on a personal tour of the site. "If you don't want to go through all of that, you can go and have a poignant visit. In a sense you don't actually need anything here.

"The beauty is quite immediate. It's a desolate place where you get that feeling."

It was a daunting task to put a building of this size in the landscape and keep it low-profile, he says. One goal was "to keep the palette simple".

The centre's 21st-century take on Culloden brings an interpretation that is a good deal more inclusive than the old version of clans pulverised by English Redcoats.

Alexander Bennett, the National Trust of Scotland's project director, is proud that the very first item on show is a set of bagpipes – used by the McLeods, on the British side. The biggest misconception about the battle, he says, was that it was fought between the English and Scottish – rather than the British government forces, including Scottish soldiers, against Jacobites fighting for a Stuart claimant to the throne.

Bonnie Prince Charlie is also de-romanticised, titled simply "The Prince" in exhibits. "We have tried to go back to his proper title. We have tried to take a little bit of romance out of the story."

The centre is the work of Glasgow-based Gareth Hoskins Architects, who won the commission in a competition in 2004, with the international exhibition designers Ralph Applebaum Associates, who also designed the Washington DC Holocaust Museum.

It's an important dry run for the huge £44 million overhaul in Edinburgh of the Royal Museum, flagship of the National Museums of Scotland, overseen by the same team.

Underlining his firm's role in Scottish cultural architecture, Hoskins also recently completed the strikingly new ticket office at Edinburgh Castle, a sharp-edged, metal-faced triangular building that makes no concessions to faux-medieval stonework.

The first sight of Hoskins's centre, on the short drive from Inverness to the battlefield, is a wooden fence more than 100 metres long. On a gently rising mound of grassy earth, it reaches to the roof of the main building over the arched entrance to the battlefield.

Made from the same pale local larch wood as the centre, it resembles the groynes used on beaches to stop sand erosion. It marks the rear of the British government lines in the battle, but also shelters the sight of the car park, and its tour buses, from the battlefield – and the remains of the old visitor centre, a still-gaping hole in the earth.

The building's carbon footprint has been reduced by a clean-burning biomass heating plant fed by woodchips from the nearby School of Scottish Forestry.

"This is one of the most popular places in Scotland after Culzean," Hoskins says. "The tendency is for the shop to take over."

Coach parties were said on average to make around a 20-minute stop at Culloden. The NTS's new goal is for a visitor stay of around two hours.

The 105-seat restaurant, with views to Glen Strathnairn, is faced with untreated larch, and has skylights curving in waves through the steel-framed roof.

The walk-through exhibition weaves back and forth through the building. One corridor recalls the exhausting night march by the Jacobites before the battle, in their failed attempt to take the Duke of Cumberland's soldiers by surprise. Whispered voices come from behind jagged black wall panels – though Hoskins says some visitors don't quite get it.

Other pieces of technology include a filmed reconstruction of the fighting, projected on all four walls of a room. It puts visitors in the heart of the battle – though the film itself is a little clunky. More prosaically, artefacts run from mortar balls to reproduction Brown Bess muskets. Elsewhere formations of blue and red dots move, charge, mingle and withdraw across a billiard-table sized plan of the battle – giving an aerial view of Culloden that its generals never saw.

The historian John Prebble wrote in 1961 that Culloden "began a sickness from which Scotland, and the Highlands in particular, never recovered", one that "emptied the Highlands of people". In his view the battle not only ended the last Jacobite uprising, but ushered in the Highland clearances.

But the exhibit takes a slightly different tack. "The Highland military tradition survived Culloden and became part of the new British army," notes the text in the museum's "aftermath" section.

Jacobite prisoners were indeed deported to plantations in the Americas. "However, the mass emigration from the Highlands later were not directedly the result of the 45 or Culloden." Indeed, with the 19th-century rediscovery of tartan, "Highland symbols conquered Scotland".

'46 and all that

AT ABOUT noon on 16 April 1746 a British government army of over 7,500 men under the Duke of Cumberland faced a force of about 5,500 clansmen, with some French and Irish soldiers, under Prince Charles Edward Stuart.

The Highlanders were exhausted after a failed night march intended to surprise the enemy in their camp. Short of provisions, many men had barely eaten in three days and others had left to forage for food, with rations down to a biscuit a day.

After the two armies took up battle positions, British cannon tore holes in the Highlanders' ranks with round shot and grapeshot.

The Highlanders finally launched their charge. But those on the left faced a long, boggy run to the British lines, under volleys of musket fire. The Jacobites who broke through on the right flank were halted by Cumberland's second line of defence. Bloody hand-to-hand fighting, with the Highlanders outflanked, ended in retreat and total disarray.

Prince Charles ordered his remaining troops to disperse, and spent five months on the run before fleeing to France. Cumberland tacitly approved the brutal killing of Jacobite wounded and fugitives from the battle; nearly 1,000 prisoners were transported.


Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 10 April 2008 8:34 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Sierra Foothills Scot,

Diamond Springs 10/04/2008 02:30:43
I hope Tim Cornwell wasn't the jerk responsible for that cutesy-poo headline, which cheapens the significance of the battlefield.

I attended the 200th anniversary of the battle at age 10 in 1946 and I will never forget the solemn ceremonies that day.
2

Guga II,

Rockall 10/04/2008 04:09:50
This sounds like a peurile attempt to degrade Scottish history and make it a "better fit" with Unionist propaganda. The NTS has largely been taken over by foreigners, and ones with a Unionist agenda.
3

Graeme,

Guangzhou 10/04/2008 05:04:31
Gaga #2,

I had to laugh at your comment as for once you may just be correct, but only because the Unionists are in the majority. The 23% or so that make up the ‘Scottish Shortbread Biscuit Tin Dreamers Brigade’ (mirror image of yourself with beard and small kilt) are not in great shape. Being that the majority of you are unemployable for one reason or another.


4

Diasporan,

Sydney Australia 10/04/2008 06:11:00
I last saw Drumossie moor in Jan 2007 with more than a touch of mud distributed over the area which was being scraped by (but never disturbing the blood that once flowed there) heavy earth-moving equipment. The low wall that led from the 'well of the dead' had been dozed to allow a concrete path to travel in a straight line, which when followed by any member of Clan Donald wishing to travel from the Cairn to the Clan Donald stone for a moment of silent remembrance, required them to pass back through the Hanoverian lines as their only option. Such sensitivity by the NTS

However the quote from the article that "The Highland military tradition survived Culloden and became part of the new British army" brings great comfort to those of us out in the Diaspora who for many generations, have known and remembered just how many of our ancestors never left the field on that day.

What the beach at ANZAC Cove is to the Australian, Culloden should have been to the Scot.
5

Guga II,

Rockall 10/04/2008 06:31:25
#3 Mouthpiece.

Is that the best you can do, i.e. open your mouth and let your belly rumble. Then again, you being a mental and physical midget, I don't suppose we should expect much more.

Why don't you go and hold up some Free Tibet banners, or ones calling for a boycott of the Gangster Olympics.
6

Louis Catorze,

10/04/2008 07:57:55
"The biggest misconception about the battle, he says, was that it was fought between the English and Scottish..."

Only amongst the terminally uneducated or deluded nationalists.

And as for #2...dear oh dear....what size is the chip on your shoulder that you think NTS is run on a unionist agenda? I mean, there's conspiracy theories and then there's just nonsense. It's people like you that make me realise we're just not mature enough for independence.
7

Beth Boyle,

NY 10/04/2008 08:19:44
Gee Wiz lighten up everybody. This really gets depressing at times. I liked the way the battle field was before but I'll have to see it again with the new fangled add ons.
8

Lianachan,

Highlands 10/04/2008 08:28:01
#2 For years (especially after visiting the farcical Glencoe vistor centre) I've been convinced that the Nation referred to in the NTS is Britain.
9

donald,

glasgow 10/04/2008 09:21:29
The anti Scottish National Trust have lost it and are the equivalent of the Native Americans who fought for the white settlers and who would invite the US Cavalry to trample on their graves. Inviting the redcoats to the anniversary is a reminder of their jackboots in the Highlands.

First they deliberately built a road through the Jacobite graves, then built a forest over them and only removed them recently after years of complaints. The GB graves were always well kept with a white picket fence.

Scotland does not deserve this NTS ruing our heritage.
10

Thistledhu,

Fife 10/04/2008 09:39:36
as many scots fought on the goverment side that day as on the jacobite side.

We often forget the 45 rebelion wasent about independance for scotland it was about who sat on the throne in london.

#9 not true the highanders graves have allways been looked after and dealt with revrence further to that for years the only place you could let your dog off the lead on the battlefield was the feild of the english where the locals would encourage there pets to let nature take its course
11

Thistledhu,

Fife 10/04/2008 09:50:20
Louis Catorze cant agree with your 'we are not mature enough statement' so gordon brown and alsidair darling arent mature enough to run the country?
do you feel enferior to our English neighbors? i dont.
12

Aesop,

Edinburgh 10/04/2008 09:56:58
"However, the mass emigration from the Highlands later were not directedly the result of the 45 or Culloden."

And so the British conquistadors continue to rewrite Scottish history to suit themselves. Same as it ever was.
13

Mr Pink,

10/04/2008 10:04:32
Culloden: To mix metaphors - the last throw of the feudal dice against the tide of capitalism.

And thank God constitutional monarchy won over divine right or we would have be set back 100 years.
14

Thistledhu,

10/04/2008 10:16:37
Aesop many of the clan chiefs or (heirs of) who led there clans at culloden were the same chiefs who orderd the clearences some even sold clansmen to landowners in the new colonys by the boatfull
15

Rob - Honest Toun,

10/04/2008 10:43:07
When less is moor:?

Daes he no ken that kinna heidline disnae work in Scotland whaur 'moor' rhymes wi 'stoor'?

It's the same wi the Weightwatchers advert -"Goes out moor". It juist disnae work!
16

Dannyranald,

Boston 10/04/2008 11:14:35
Until Mr. Bennett writes his book with documentation, I'll go with John Prebble's scholarly work. This revisionist sop to the tourist trade by NTS should outrage Scotland. The Battle of Culloden, the aftermath and the Highland clearances were the last acts of "ethnic cleansing" of Scottish Gaeldom. Just live with it.
17

celticsnowdrop,

greenock 10/04/2008 11:40:55
I for one wont be going to see the NEW CULLODEN as I object to paying into a local cemetary to see where my ancesters died and were buried.....but true to form the scots gave their life in battle and their families pay for the privledge of visiting them
18

Memyself&I,

10/04/2008 11:57:33
#17 I'm sure you'll be missed ;p
19

Robert Mason,

Larkhall 10/04/2008 12:46:13
I wonder if the Black Watch are still denying that they were some of Cumberland's most enthusuastic troops?
20

Thistledhu,

19 10/04/2008 13:02:44
Robert Mason there is hardly a scotish regiment that dident fight at culloden
21

Roger Tichborne,

10/04/2008 13:20:41
No.20 - but the Black Watch were not at Culloden - they were in reserve, perhaps because their loyalty couldnt be trusted ? Culloden shamefully used to be a battle honour on some of the Scots Regiments...
10. Actually the Stuart's were interested in the independance argument, and many fought on the Jacobite side with Independance in mind.
No.13 - if you truly believe that - then your history books were certainly written by the winners...


22

Ard Righ,

The Rock Of Edinburgh 10/04/2008 13:21:58
Reverse this "Anglo-pseudo culture of conservation" and any intelligent Scot would see that 9 million Pounds Sterling could have been better spent dismantling the pathetic unionist institutions in Scotland and putting grave stones in their place.

In the true sense of opposites, another better use of such funds would be commanding our regiments back and having strong a independent army.
23

Mac Mhic Raonuill,

Edinburgh 10/04/2008 13:35:34
No16
Dannyranald has it right!

All the window dressing in the world by Mr Bennett & Co for tourist exploitation will not detract from the truth.
Gael-genocide was the intent but it has failed miserably in spite of the Norman/Saxon attempt to at last conquer the Gael, read Scot, by any means fair or foul, with the aid of an army of some 8,500 German/English and a smaller band of Scottish soliders, who were forced under army regulations to comply with their superiors."Orders must be obeyed"

Keeping it simple, calling Bonnie Prince Charlie "The Prince" may be correct. Have they renamed King George 11's son "The Butcher". A King who spoke German but could not speak a word of English. But that is by the way isn't it ?

If anyone has any doubt about what the "45" was all about, let them read the Dying Speech of Major Donald MacDonald of Tir na dris, 1st cousin germaine to my ancestor Alasdair MacColla Chief of the Honourable Clan Ranald of Lochaber Mac Mhic Raonuill,( "That Mirror of Martial Men"), who was killed leading the MacDonalds on the left wing at Culloden:reprinted in the Lyon in Mourning by The Rev. Robert Forbes,A.M. Bishop of Ross and Caithness 1745 - 1775,Edinburgh Academic Press in 3 vols.The right of a condemned man, an officer and a brave one, to be allowed to make his views known before he was hanged,drawn and quartered, not in Scotland, but England on 18 October 1745 was denied him, for fear of reprisals. Such was the justice handed out to Gaels/Scots as usual.

An Ceapaich

24

W U Merchant,

Aberdeen 10/04/2008 13:45:44
20

A very fair point Thistledhu but the crucial thing is that the Black Watch deny vehemently that they were there when many historical sources confirm otherwise. In fact, it is been suggested that "Culloden" should feature in the former regiment's battle honours.
25

PeterA,

London 10/04/2008 13:52:29
Let me see. Government forces representing a protestant monarch and including a very large number of Scots defeat a rebel catholic army backed by the French. And my God what happened next?? Great Britain goes on to lead the world into the industrial revolution, defeats Napoleon, establishes the Empire, becomes the richest nation on earth, pioneers parliamentary democracy, ends slavery in large swaths of the world, leads the world in science and engineering, defeats the Kaiser, defeats Hitler, defeats the Soviet Union, is still one of the richest nations on earth, has the the longest unbroken democratic history of any country in the world. Bloody shame that those government forces won ehh.
26

Laird Turner,

Vermont-USA 10/04/2008 14:09:48
Have visited the old so now in with the new! Look forward to seeing it in August! Very awesome presentation the last time we were there!
27

Janis *,

london 10/04/2008 14:10:00

Excellent Post PeterA (250)

I always feel not enough comment is given to the Englishmen who joined the Jacobite uprising at Manchester. Charles Edward Stuart left them to their fate at Carlisle, those who survived were either transported or hung, drawn etc.

Anyway Charles was really interested in getting to London, & threw a hissy @ Derby when thwarted. He used the clan Chiefs in the same way as the chiefs used their clansmen, persuaded into batlle with threats of croft burning, murder etc.

Dannyranald (16) "Live with it". I think get over it would be more appropiate, Great Britain has fought more important battles in the last 260 years.

28

gaelicmichael,

North Carolina 10/04/2008 14:22:24
Certainly sounds like the unusual disfavour done to the people actually involved in history. Forcing a single "truth" onto contemporary events -- like "the 1745 Rising was *not really* the Scots against the English" -- ignores the perspectives and feelings involved in the event, the very people that such monuments are supposed to honour. Simply pick up a collection of contemporary Gaelic poetry or first-hand accounts and find out what *their* opinions were, not what some cynical, clinical, comfortable 20th century author thinks it *really* meant. Likewise, there's plenty of reason to think that this was a watershed event that allowed for the forced and unwelcomed destruction of Gaelic society.
29

Scottie,

South Africa 10/04/2008 14:24:38
May all their souls rest in peace.
May the descendants of all those who fought, not just those who died, remember "Man's inhumanity to man".
And may Scotland see its Independence sooner rather than later!
30

Sylvia in Regina,

Regina 10/04/2008 14:48:48
Well said #29 Scottie:
Saw Culloden in 1973 when my then 12 year old son was playing drums in the Fraser Pipe Band and we went over on a 'Playing Tour' of Scotland. My husband and I have been over 10 times since, but never back to Culloden - so with our 2009 trip, we hope to 'inspect' this new site.
31

Louis Catorze,

10/04/2008 15:46:09
#11....Fair enough you can't agree. I do mean however that we are not mature in the sense of mind, not body.

And given the posts since I commented this morning, nothing much has been written to make me change my mind.


32

transitory,

10/04/2008 16:22:28
hoping to broaden the discussion a tad: does anyone know where I can get a copy of the Peter Watkins ('the war game')documentary of Culloden?
thanks
33

Exasperated,

Guildford 10/04/2008 16:53:09
#6 Louis Catorze - what an immature statement! To condemn a nation as immature because of a few posts, most/many of which appear to be unionist, is quite frankly ludicrous. Grow up.
34

Russell M,

Stirling 10/04/2008 22:05:41
Iain Gale, Editor of the National Trust for Scotland magazine and Art critic for Scotland on Sunday, said this about the new visitor centre, "...this last battle on British soil was not a military victory, but a massacre." And if you read Scotland's history from that day to this sometimes the term 'ethnic cleansing' seems to describe the events quite well.

No battle is ever as cut and dried as we would like. Each person involved on either side fights for their own individual reasons. Sure you can generalise, but this should be done with extreme caution. Some battles are about issues that are clearly good versus evil at the time, while others can only be judged much later.

As a re-enactor of 18th Century Scotland I look forward to visiting the new centre in approximately a week's time with several members of our group. We have studied the Jacobite Rebellion for many years and will not be distracted by the architecture of the centre whether good or bad.
35

The Canadian,

10/04/2008 22:07:56
Why do the Lowlanders have any interest in what happened at the Battle of Culloden. Surely, they should hang their heads in shame, in the way they cut up Scotland and allowed both the butchery on the day and the events that followed.

I often hear songs that make a mockery of the whole day and the descendants who suffered afterwards as if they were on the losing side. No great honour being on the losing side but why on earth play it up as if you were the victim.

36

indune1,

10/04/2008 22:23:09
23 - "Leading the MacDonalds" - those who stood in petulance? Who had to be shamed into action by Keppoch ( Have the Children of my name deserted me?)

If the Black Watch couldn't be "trusted" - many of their kin and fellow Campbell clansmen were indeed very much trusted on the Hanoverian left flank.

A full-blown alcoholic, Polish-French prince, surrounded by equally incompetent Irish fa*t-catchers leading brave but misguided men to their deaths against a professional English army (with large Scottish contingent) led by a fat, murderous German.

Plus ca change!
37

indune1,

Canada 10/04/2008 22:41:52

Hmmm. In my posting #37, I think I defined the EU.
38

donald,

glasgow 11/04/2008 02:02:20
A Low;land Jacobite force defeated a Highland Hanopverian force at Inverurie.

The Black Watch were sent abroad and nor trusted to be at Culloden after being accused of dummy fighting with their relatives at the battle of Falkirk. It is no accident hat Aberfeldy, where the Black Watch first mutined, was among the first of the Clearances.

Charlie declared against the Parliamentary Union at Glenfinnon, 1745, as did James at Peterhead in 1715. If you want o know whu the Jacobite swords enscribed "Prosperity to Scotland and NO Union" were removed from Kelvingrove Museum, write to Mrs McConnell.
39

Fraochale,

USA 11/04/2008 05:37:16
If the Black Watch was there as a unit then why don't they show up on this map from the National Library of Scotland. http://www.nls.uk/maps/military/record.cfm?id=402 ?
40

Thistledhu,

Fife 11/04/2008 09:36:06
The black watch at that stage in their history acted in company groups dealing with errant highlanders i dont recall seeing them in the order of battle but they enthusiasticly took part in the following actions against higlanders after the battle.
Also were at the fore of the enforcement of the clearences
however the Royal Scots, the Kings own Scotish borders the ROyal highland Fusileers, and the scots greys were all present in battailion strenth (around a thousand troops at that time) as were the forerunners of the Arglye Sutherland highlanders (the arglye Militia)
41

Steve Evans,

Malta 16/04/2008 10:31:11
32 Try the Culloden shop, it not keep an eye on E-Bay!
42

Jacaranda,

Misplaced Edinburger 01/07/2008 20:12:07
I was there in 2006, before the new center was made. I liked its simplicity and lack of commercialism. It is a very hallowed ground.

It reminded me a bit of the memorial at Gettysburg, PA. Where they coincidentally just opened a new visitor's center. I found it to be very informative and not too invasive on the grounds.

I'm looking forward to visiting Culloden again to pay my personal tributes to my ancestors and for what they so bravely gave.
43

Always a McAlister,

Virginia, USA 25/08/2008 08:27:58
Namaste, all. In this life I am a dream psychic, and have past life recall. Although many of you won't care to believe it, I remember finding my own dead husband on that field after the battle. I found him at the right side of the line with burns on his face and though I risked my life to do it, I buried him properly. I remember it keenly, it is carved into my soul like an eternal scar.
War is, and was, and will always be an abomination to God.
And when I have made my way back there I will pray where his grave once lay, that someday humanity will learn Peace.

 

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