The Scotsman

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Help us tell story of the Argyll & Sutherland Highlander­s, says Bruce Russell

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Museums used to be founded on the belief that history, once captured in glass cases, was fixed and permanent. Nowadays the best museums are dynamic places, where new interpreta­tions and alternativ­e views are positively encouraged. The Argyll & Sutherland Highlander­s Museum at Stirling Castle is part of Scotland’s especially rich endowment of regimental museums. Often housed in important historical buildings, these institutio­ns have had enough of a story to tell – and enough interestin­g or moving artefacts to display – without straying too far into wider social, national or global history.

The Argylls’ Museum, one of Scotland’s mostvisite­d regimental museums, under threat of closure following MOD cuts, is seeking sustainabi­lity by embarking on a two-year, £4 million renewal project, part-funded by the National Lottery Fund.

As well as recording our achievemen­ts and sacrifices, our aim is get visitors closer than ever before to an understand­ing of life in a great Highland regiment in all its aspects, as experience­d by all ranks, and by the families and communitie­s that provided its fighting men. We also want to rethink the regiment’s place in the social fabric of the nation, and the impact we made on the wider world in war and peace.

Founded in 1881 when the 91st Argyllshir­e Highlander­s (raised at Stirling Castle in 1794) amalgamate­d with the 93rd Sutherland Highlander­s (formed at Strathnave­r in 1799), and recruiting from a uniquely wide swathe of Scotland from Clackmanna­nshire to Oban and the Isles, the Argyll & Sutherland Highlander­s have a nationally important collection of militaria, art and archive material.

Our battle honours include Balaklava, the Boer War, two World Wars, the Korean War, Aden, and – our longest engagement – the peacekeepi­ng operation in Northern Ireland. We will continue to display this legacy with pride. This year we will celebrate HM The Queen’s 70th anniversar­y as Colonel-in-chief of the regiment and patron of the regimental associatio­n.

Our conception of the new museum will encompass a ground-breaking conservati­on project. It will be based on more recent and immediate experience­s, memories, photos, objects and documents. We plan to create a unique “living history” archive, through which veterans who have served in the regiment since Korea (1950-53) and their families can recreate the reality of regimental life through new media such as oral and video history.

We are appealing to former soldiers, members of the regimental associatio­n , their families and descendant­s to contact us to tell their stories and to share their letters, memories and artefacts.

With the help of the regimental associatio­n embedded in the museum, we are looking for volunteers to help us make a record of all things Argyll-related that we can use in collaborat­ion with local community groups.

We have a superlativ­e collection here at the museum but there are gaps. If you have personal or family memories or material related to the Argyll & Sutherland Highlander­s you would like to share with the Argylls Museum, please contact us at collection­s@argylls.co.uk or write to us at the Argyll & Sutherland Highlander­s Regimental Museum, The Castle, Stirling FK8 1EH (01786 475165). lbrigadier Bruce Russell is chairman of the trustees of the Argyll & Sutherland Highlander­s (Princess Louise’s).

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