The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Lairds had own private station waiting rooms

- SCOTT BEGBIE

Having your personal VIP lounge at a major airport would purely be the preserve of the super rich or powerful today – but in the 19th Century, Highland lairds had their own equivalent.

These were the private waiting rooms – in some cases entire stations – on the Highland Railway, given as favours to the local landed gentry for allowing the line to pass through their land.

Not that the landowners were reluctant to see the arrival of the Highland Railway, which saw lines snaking out from Perth to reach Caithness in the north, Fochabers in the east and Kyle of Lochalsh in the west, bringing the

Highlands into the existing network.

The lairds were businessme­n as much as landowners and saw and wanted the benefits the railway would bring from the 1850s on, said Annemary Paterson, author of a new book, Laird In Waiting, which tells the stories of these private waiting rooms and the families who used them.

“The railways were so late in coming to the Highlands because of all the engineerin­g problems, and the Highlands were really a bit backwards in comparison to other places and had terrible roads and so on,” she said.

“So most of the landlords were very keen on the railways coming, because they saw it as catching up with the rest of the country.”

Not all the landlords, many of them becoming directors of the Highland Railway, asked for private stations, but quite a few did, to be used by themselves and their families and guests, as they were linked to the rest of the country.

“Of course, Queen Victoria had her private waiting room at Ballater Station, so maybe it was a kind of fashion,” said Anne-mary.

“They were used by the directors and the people who visited them and any grand people who came. The Emperor of Japan visited the Duke of Atholl and he would have used the private waiting room, at Blair Atholl. It was a bit like the VIP lounges you have at an airport nowadays.”

The Blair Atholl station saw other prestigiou­s guests, such as Queen Victoria in 1863, when she visited Blair Castle. In the early days of the station, if the duke wanted to travel on a particular service it would have to make an extra stop at Blair Atholl.

Anne-mary recalls that when she was working in Edinburgh, she would go home to Beauly at the weekend.

“When the train stopped at Blair Atholl, the duke was often on the platform bidding farewell to his weekend guests,” she said.

Anne-mary said each of these waiting rooms would have been equipped with comfort, such as a fireplace to keep guests warm as they waited for the arrival of their train.

Her book, published recently by the Highland Railway Society, looks at each of the private facilities, the families who owned them and the impact the arrival of rail had on the communitie­s around them.

Probably the best-known private station, which celebrated its 150th anniversar­y in 2020, is Dunrobin Castle on the Far North Line, built for the 3rd Duke of Sutherland. It is still open when the castle is open to the public.

“They all have very interestin­g stories attached to them, but I suppose

Dunrobin is one of the most interestin­g,” said Anne-mary.

“There was a coal mine at Brora and it closed in the earlier part of the 19th Century because it wasn’t profitable and the 1st Duke of Sutherland closed it. When the railway arrived, the 3rd duke reopened the mine. He was very interested in railways and had some training in railway engineerin­g.

“He had a workshop, where the tweed mill eventually was, and he did all sorts of things in there, including building engines. He reopened the mine, and there was also a brickworks next to them. He built a track so he could export the coal and everyone in Brora could have some.”

 ??  ?? TRAIN NOW STANDING: Fochabers Station on the Highland line, pictured around the turn of the 20th Century. Copies of the book are available at hrsoc.org.uk
TRAIN NOW STANDING: Fochabers Station on the Highland line, pictured around the turn of the 20th Century. Copies of the book are available at hrsoc.org.uk

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