The Scotsman

A fitting epitaph for the Eigg Man

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Keith Schellenbe­rg’s death at the age of 91 revived a few memories. We first met in 1975 when he had just bought the island of Eigg.

Its history of ownership was so capricious that the Highlands and Islands Developmen­t Board was preparing to buy Eigg. Schellenbe­rg told me he had intervened to prevent it falling into public ownership – an odd motivation for a former Liberal candidate.

His 20-year stewardshi­p was predictabl­y disastrous and was laid bare through an unsuccessf­ul libel action against the Guardian newspaper.

By then, in a final act of spite, he had sold Eigg to an equally unsuitable odd-ball, an artist called Maruma.

All this led to Eigg acquiring symbolic significan­ce far out of proportion to its size. When moves began for a community buy-out, there was widespread support to draw on and the money was raised, mainly from one anonymous source.

The handover took place in June 1997, days after the election. I had been invited as a

supporter but turned up as a minister, able to announce a new land unit at Highland and Islands Enterprise, backed with funds to facilitate future buy-outs.

The marquee for this great event was on ground Schellenbe­rg had used as a tennis

court, prompting me to declare the outcome as “game, set and match to the population of Eigg”.

There followed a steady flow of community buyouts, mainly in the Western Isles, before land reform was returned to the back-burner

of Scottish politics while we drone endlessly on about the constituti­on instead.

However, the best epitaph for Keith Schellenbe­rg is that, for a time, he personifie­d the case for Scottish land reform, even if it was the diametric opposite of his intentions.

 ?? PICTURE: JANE BARLOW ?? 0
Residents of Eigg celebrate the tenth anniversar­y of its community buyout
PICTURE: JANE BARLOW 0 Residents of Eigg celebrate the tenth anniversar­y of its community buyout

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