Tour Scotland travel video clip, with Scottish music, of the Duke of Sutherland statue on Ben Bhraggie, Scottish Gaelic: Beinn a' Bhragaidh, a hill 1,302 feet above sea level, on visit to Sutherland in the North Highlands. The 100 foot tall statue which is perched on top is that of George Leveson Gower, Marquess of Stafford and first Duke of Sutherland who became notorious through the part he played in the Highland clearances. Leveson Gower was born in 1758, the son of the Marquess of Stafford. In 1785 he married Elizabeth, daughter of the Earl of Sutherland. She had inherited the Earldom and its associated estates following a well known legal case which established the unusual principle that the Earldom could pass through the female as well as the male line. In the early nineteenth century the couple initiated sweeping reforms to their estate in Sutherland. This is where the Duke's reputation will vary, depending upon whom you are talking to. Some would say that he was shocked by the conditions his tenants were living in and he became convinced that the interior of Sutherland could not support these subsistence farmers long term. Advised to follow the latest economic and social theories he decided to resettle the population in new villages along the coast to make way for large sheep farms inland. The other, and probably more common view, is that he decided it would be more profitable for the estate to turn the land over to large scale sheep farming, and so the tenants would have to go, whether they wanted to or not. These reforms led to thousands of Scottish people being evicted from their homes and farms. Across the Highlands, it was common for the roof timbers of cleared houses to be burnt, to prevent re-occupation after the eviction parties had left. In 1819 the coincidence of this practice with a spell of dry weather and the eviction of 425 families led to the Devastation of Sutherland. 1819 became known as " the year of the burnings " in Gaelic, bliadhna na losgaidh. The Sutherland clearances were not by any means the only clearances, this period saw similar occurrences throughout Scotland, not just in the Highlands but in many rural lowland areas as well. However, the Sutherland clearances were probably the largest clearance in the Highlands, measured in terms of the probable number of people evicted. There have been calls for the statue to be removed or demolished.
The Countess of Sutherland, Leveson Gower's wife, had a substantial role in oversight of the management of the Sutherland Estate. This was unusual for the time, but Leveson Gower delegated most of this activity to her. She visited the estate every year and was in extensive correspondence with both the estate factor and the commissioner. Her husband's main activity was to provide the substantial amounts of money needed for the reorganisation of the estate. Leveson Gower was created first Duke of Sutherland for his services to politics in 1833, just a few months before his death. He died in July of that year at Dunrobin Castle and was buried at Dornoch Cathedral. In 1834 a subscription was started in order to pay for a monument in his memory. Subscriptions came in from far and wide, which is surprising given his reputation today. Work soon began and the stone for the massive base and plinth was quarried from the north east side of Ben Bhraggie, about 50 yards from the monument's location. The statue itself was sculpted by Sir Francis Chantrey and it was taken up to the top of the Ben in pieces by horse and cart. The monument was completed in 1837 and it has dominated the views of east Sutherland ever since; it is known locally as the Mannie.
All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.
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