The Herald on Sunday

The Battle of Bowling Green: Duke clashes with villagers

- BY ROB EDWARDS

SCOTLAND’S highest village is battling with Britain’s biggest private landowner – over a bowling green.

Villagers in Wanlockhea­d in southwest Scotland are accusing the Duke of Buccleuch of a “land grab” after he sold off a bowling green and clubhouse that they thought belonged to them. Their assets have been stripped by an absentee landowner, they say.

Buccleuch estate insists the green was its to sell after a lease to a local bowling club expired. The site will still benefit the community, it claims. Wanlockhea­d is 1,500 feet above sea level in the Lowther Hills in Dumfries and Galloway. An old mining village, it sits amidst Buccleuch’s 90,000-acre Queensberr­y Estate.

Villagers were shocked to learn from a news release on March 15 that Buccleuch had sold the bowling green and clubhouse to the Wanlockhea­d mining museum trust. The trust, whose patron is the Duke of Buccleuch, paid just £1 for the property.

The sale followed a dispute over keys for the clubhouse, which had been built by villagers in 1990 but ceased being used in 2011.

Villagers have long regarded the property as common land. The Wanlockhea­d village council called an emergency meeting last Monday, when the sale was angrily denounced. “Buccleuch is stripping Wanlockhea­d of another asset,” said Alanna Rogerson, a village council member.

“He is stripping us of our options and choices. Now, just like during the land grabs of old, we have had it taken away by Buccleuch, with very little warning, with very little considerat­ion.”

Harry Pickburn, a local resident and historian, pointed out that hundreds of plots in the village had passed through generation­s of mining families without paperwork. “It seems that Buccleuch is now rushing to register ownership of that land around Wanlockhea­d without having told or checked first with the village,” he told the Sunday Herald. “The village should have been consulted, plot by plot, and where there is any dispute or lack of clarity over ownership, the presumptio­n should be that the land stays under village ownership and is not taken away by an absentee landowner.” The sale of the bowling green is particular­ly sensitive because Wanlockhea­d has set up a community trust to buy land from Buccleuch under land reform legislatio­n. The trust says it was not consulted about the sale. Chairman Lincoln Richford said: “The Wanlockhea­d Community Trust is disappoint­ed that we were not contacted by Queensberr­y Estate as we are in the middle of discussion­s with them on land which includes this area.” Villagers were backed by the Green MSP and land reform campaigner Andy Wightman who pointed out that “land grabs” were due to be investigat­ed by the forthcomin­g Scottish Land Commission. “Across Scotland there are many areas of land that have historical­ly been common land and which have no title,” he said. “All too often, this land is the subject of land-grabbing by what are called ‘a non domino’ dispositio­ns – effectivel­y grabbing land, saying this is mine and recording a title to it.”

According to Buccleuch estate, a 21year lease on the bowling green site ended in 2010, and the land reverted to the estate. “There was provision for the village council to have the lease assigned to it but that was not requested,” said a Buccleuch spokesman.

“The clubhouse has been in significan­t disrepair for a long time. We were therefore very pleased that the Wanlockhea­d Museum Trust engaged with the estate and has now purchased the site and the clubhouse for £1.”

The museum trust was planning to restore the clubhouse for use by visiting schoolchil­dren. “We are delighted that the bowling club site remains very much in the community’s hands and will be put to community use,” Buccleuch’s spokesman added.

“It is sad that some people may not feel the same way but it would have been wrong for us to deny a worthy cause the use of the site. Buccleuch has been facilitati­ng this site for community use since 1932 and we have a longstandi­ng commitment to engaging with the local community.”

The trust has said it needed space to store artefacts, and for researcher­s to study archive material. It said it was looking forward to working with the village council when the sale was announced.

 ??  ?? The Duke, the village and the bowling green
The Duke, the village and the bowling green
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