Please help us Protect
Killiecrankie Battlefield.
By Killiecrankie1689
The
story of widening the road at Killiecrankie is long and twisted. But for lovers of historical fiction it will
disappoint because there is no romance, no understanding of historical
environment and now no appreciation of stunning landscapes. What it does offer is cause for outrage.
Killiecrankie
is a stunningly beautiful area in Highland Perthshire. At the northern end of the deep gorge is the
celebrated Pass of Killiecrankie where the National Trust for Scotland has a
little visitor centre that acts as a tourist magnet. No wonder, the place is oozing with
historical associations and natural assets.
Pass of Killiecrankie |
Killiecrankie
has collected an impressive number of designations, aimed at protecting its
undoubted attractions. Thus, it is a
Special Area of Conservation, has Sites of Special Scientific Interest, is part
of the Loch Tummel National Scenic Area, holds a prestigious position at the
gateway to the Cairngorms National Park and most importantly of all, was
included in the first edition of the Inventory of Historic Battlefields.
Given
these credentials, plans for widening the road that runs through it, would be done
with sensitivity. Correct? Not so.
Transport Scotland produced a scheme last November that was rightly savaged
by Historic Environment Scotland (HES), the public body responsible for caring
for and promoting the historic environment.
HES had been consulted throughout a number of planning stages but its
advice had been ignored. So when the
final plan was presented, HES along with other statutory and non-statutory
groups in the fields of history, heritage and archaeology objected. The criticism focused on a slavish devotion
to a process that took scant account of anything other than cost and
engineering.
It was
foolish to snub the battlefield. The
Battle of Killiecrankie on 27 July 1689 marks the start of the Jacobite
era. This was the place where Jacobites
first fought in Scotland at the start of what became known as the Glorious
Revolution. Their victory was
surprising and costly as they lost their charismatic rebel leader, John Graham
of Claverhouse, Viscount Dundee, in a dramatic hour of brutal slaughter. Over 2,000 men were killed in the battle. That is more than the toll at Culloden which
marked the end of the Jacobite era in 1746.
John Graham of Claverhouse, Viscount Dundee |
For ease
of construction and in order to re-use infill material excavated elsewhere,
Transport Scotland chose to build up the new carriageways and related
infrastructure on the northbound carriageway of the existing road. Looking at the map with the red line on the
road, that means on the River Garry side. Looking at the map showing how the two sides
lined up at the start of the battle, it is clear that the construction is to
take place close to where the government line was positioned at the start of
the battle.
The area
between the government line and the existing road is where HES and everyone
apart from Transport Scotland’s historians believe is the core of the
battlefield. This is where most of the
fighting occurred and where the action that decided the outcome of the battle
took place. Transport Scotland decided
not only to construct there but in an effort to soften the impact on the
landscape, to engineer wide, sloping embankments that would allow the new road
to be hidden better in the landform.
This was planned in the name of landscape mitigation. It meant that they could dump more earthworks
and thus economise a little more.
Since
receiving 183 objections, Transport Scotland has been trying to figure out how
to redeem the plan. At the beginning of
November 2018, it revealed how it could tweak things in the hope that the main
players would withdraw their objections.
However, the refined plan has succeeded in making matters much
worse. Not only does this version damage
the historic environment irrevocably but it will also ruin the landscape.
They
adopted a two-prong attack on the objectors.
First, they planned a reduction of the size of the imprint of the new
construction and second, they conducted more archaeological investigations
which they thought would vindicate their choice of route and design.
The
enormous size of the imprint had been a concern. In order to shrink it, all the wide
embankments which were there to mollify those concerned with landscape and
aesthetics, chiefly Cairngorms National Park, were removed. At the same time, a replacement acoustic bund
– a mound of earth protecting residents from road noise – was removed. At a stroke, the total earthworks requirement
fell by 50,000m3. However, a chain of
undesirable consequences was triggered.
The new
infrastructure still has to be built up to the level of the existing road. It will now emerge steeply from the core area
of the battlefield in an unnaturally dramatic way making it more prominent than
necessary. The road designers recognised
previously that the new road would reinforce the sense of severance of the
battlefield in relation to key landscape characteristics. Now that the construction will be fully
exposed, the severance will be all but complete.
All the
historic features that lie in its path will still be damaged, if not
destroyed. The stepped terraces and
terrain alongside the existing northbound carriageway is a pivotal area where
the Highland Charge played out its deadly part. This is where the two sides
clashed as the Highlanders rushed down the hillside and thundered into the
waiting Redcoats. The design refinements
will change the topography by obliterating the last remains of the terraced
ground. It will aggravate an already
adverse impact on a key landscape characteristic, affecting the integrity and
legibility of the feature.
Sharply
steepened embankments coupled with the loss of trees and the acoustic barrier will
alter the character of the area around the Memorial Cairn, sometimes called
Tomb Clavers, where an annual service of remembrance takes place. All through the year people visit the
Memorial Cairn to contemplate or commemorate in private. Places for remembrance, especially on a
battlefield, are extremely sensitive and cannot afford adverse impacts.
On top
of that, the road will be an eyesore.
All previous assessments, calculations and evaluations of the landscape
had been made on the basis that huge embankments would help mitigate the worst
visual impact. Now the view from the
road and the view of the road will be stark: several lanes of asphalt running
over an important part of Scottish history where landscape and topography
played a critical role.
Transport
Scotland was promoting an idea that archaeological studies done in the summer
of 2018 would settle the nerves of some objectors. The truth is that HES stated in its objection
that these investigations were essential and should have been done at a far
earlier stage. Privately historians and
archaeologists who are following events at Killiecrankie deplore the way that
Transport Scotland sequence events, saying that all these studies should have
been done at the very start of the planning so that they could have informed
choices.
Due to
these failures, Transport Scotland was unable to demonstrate how the road
infrastructure has been kept to a minimum within the battlefield; nor could it show
that the overall alignment within the Inventory boundary is the most
appropriate. Finally it failed to provide
unequivocal comparisons of the impact of widening the northbound and the
southbound carriageways. All this should have been done if Transport Scotland
had been trying to respect official policy on how to manage change in the
historic environment.
What we
have learned from the thorough geophysical surveys, metal detecting and trial
trenching is that our interpretation of battle events is still valid. Nothing has been found to discredit the
understanding of the battle as documented in the Inventory of Historic
Battlefields. The archaeological results indicate that the road is being built
in the wrong place.
The
mysterious pits that were discovered a couple of years ago have now been fully
investigated and turn out not to be burial pits. However, a new and large pit-like
anomaly was discovered but not investigated or evaluated because it is located
just beyond the area for compulsory purchase, 230m east of Urrard House, in the
core of the fighting area. It is close
to where a cluster of lead munitions from a metal detecting survey was found in
2003 and where James Mackay’s men were positioned at the start of the battle in
1689.
The fundamental flaw in Transport Scotland’s scheme
is now exposed. It committed to a plan
to widen the road in the fastest and cheapest way possible. Belatedly it was forced to recognise that the
new road is compounding damage that was done in the 1970s. Nevertheless, it pressed on, discarding other
possible routes and alignments. The
route it has chosen is unsuitable for the battlefield. Tinkering with it will not make it
suitable. Indeed the refinements have
made it worse and would inflict unforeseen damage on the landscape.
This is a national project which does not
follow normal planning rules. The public
can challenge the refined design. *Friday, 30 November. Please email A9dualling@jacobs.com before then with ‘FEEDBACK Killiecrankie’ in the subject line.
•The
deadline for feedback has now ended. But you can still get involved by signing the Petition:
Thank you!
Sadly this lack of care seems to be more and more common these days.
ReplyDeleteIt is all about the money. Such a sad state of affairs.
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