Braemar – Geography
and History
The modern
village of Braemar, located in the upper valley of the River Dee, lies at its
confluence with the River Clunie, about 60 miles west of Aberdeen,
Scotland. The name is Gaelic for Upper
Marr and originally referred not to the village but to the area which lies west
of Aboyne. Two significant settlements bordered
the Clunie, Castleton lying on the east bank and Auchindryne, located west of
that tributary, close to the Dee. They
now form separate parts of the modern village.
Braemar had an historically important, strategic position at the
intersection of long-distance routes through the Grampian Mountains linking
Aberdeenshire with Perthshire to the south and west, and Inverness-shire and
Banffshire to the north. The village
lies at about 1,100ft above sea level and enjoys dramatic views of the high Cairngorms. In this study the name “Braemar” will take
its modern meaning.
Castleton, Braemar
Castleton, Braemar
Because of its
strategic location, Braemar has, over the centuries, seen its share of
significant historical events. King
Kenneth II of Scotland (died 1005) is said to have come to the area on a
hunting trip and the hill Craig Choinnich (Kenneth’s Hill), just east of the
modern settlement, commemorates that association. King Malcolm III of Scotland (Malcolm
Canmore) reigned from 1058 to 1093 and visited the area about 1060, also on a
hunting expedition. While there he is
reputed to have held a great gathering of the clans at which competitions were
held for feats of strength, courage and skill.
Malcolm Canmore is also credited with having bridged the Clunie and with
building Kindrochit Castle close by. Its
ruins are still in evidence.
Throughout the
Reformation of the mid-16th century and despite turbulent times in
Scotland, Braemar stuck largely to the Roman Catholic religion and even today a
significant proportion of the population cleaves to this traditional Highland
faith. In 1715, following the 1707 Act
of Union, which excluded Catholics from the throne of Great Britain, the Earl
of Mar, the major landowner in the area, initiated the Jacobite rising in
Braemar. This was an attempt to return
the Catholic James Francis Edward Stuart to the throne and was carried out
under the pretext of a clan gathering. The
1715 rising and the subsequent 1745 rebellion were put down.
Suppression
and revival of Highland culture
The Jacobite
rebellions led, in 1746 to the passing of the Act of Proscription which sought,
by a series of measures, to assimilate the Highlands into the life of both
Scotland and the rest of Great Britain through the suppression of Highland
culture and the ending of the clan system.
The wearing of traditional Highland dress, such as kilts, plaids and
hose, the carrying of arms and cultural symbols, such as playing the bagpipes,
were forbidden. Bagpipes had originally
been used to summon clansmen to arms.
This proscription ended with the repeal of the legislation in 1782, by
which time ordinary, poor Highlanders had abandoned many of their traditions,
for example they were now wearing breeches of hodden grey (undyed, hard-wearing
woollens), rather than kilts.
But telling
people that they cannot have access to something makes it more desirable. Thomas Macaulay (1800 – 1859), a historian
and Whig politician said of Highland attire, “As long as the Gaelic dress was worn, the Saxons had
pronounced it hideous, ridiculous, nay grossly indecent. Soon after it had been prohibited, they discovered
that it was the most graceful drapery in Europe.” There was a revival of interest in Highland
dress, traditions and symbolism but it was led, not by the working people of
the Highlands but by the middle and upper classes, many of them based in London. The Highland Society of London was
established in 1778 by 25 Highland gentlemen to enhance the interests of the northern
parts of Scotland and still exists today to promote the traditions and culture
of the Highlands and Islands.
Sir Walter Scott (1771 – 1832), the Scottish poet and historical
novelist, became very popular with a series of historical novels, perhaps the
most famous of which, Waverley, published in 1814, dealt with the Jacobite
rising of 1745. Scott was influential in
promoting the revival of Highland culture and this brought him into contact with
the Prince Regent, later George IV. Two
years after the latter’s succession to the throne in 1820 he visited
Edinburgh. Scott was engaged to
stage-manage a series of spectacular cultural events, of dubious authenticity,
for the monarch. The occasion was marked
by a wild show of tartan, worn both by the king and by many of his northern
subjects. The design of the tartan worn
by the King approximated to today’s Royal Stuart pattern. This exercise was very successful and put a
royal seal of approval on the revival of Highland culture. Thereafter everyone wanted to wear the tartan
and this led to each clan resurrecting traditional designs, though there were few
in existence and a proliferation new designs resulted. There was also a boom in
the manufacture of tartan cloth.
The Braemar Wrights Society
The Braemar wrights (vrichts), from about 1800, assembled
annually in their white aprons to march through Auchindryne and Castleton. It was a jolly occasion, with pipes playing
and ended with competitions of skill and strength, the whole probably
lubricated by whisky. In 1815 the wrights
formally established the Braemar Wrights Society, which derived an income from
member subscriptions and disbursed benefits to members and their dependants who
had retired or fallen on hard times. In
1828 the Society invested in two girnals, large wooden boxes, each holding
about 100 bolls of oatmeal (about 14,500 litres). This was for the purpose of speculation in
the price of oatmeal to gain additional funds.
The purchase of oatmeal stopped in 1847 on the repeal of the Corn Laws. From 1824 the Wrights held an annual dinner
at the Invercauld Arms Hotel (one of two major hotels in the village, the other
being the Fife Arms) at a cost of 1/6 a head and in 1826 the Society evolved
into the Braemar Highland Society, without losing its charitable functions. The year 1831 saw it became a registered
Friendly Society, on the passing of legislation.
During the Middle Ages, Kindrochit Castle was replaced by a
new structure, located on the south bank of the River Dee, east of its
confluence with the Clunie. In turn the
second castle was substituted, in 1628, by the rather austere Mar Castle, or Braemar
Castle, as it is called today. Following
the 1745 rebellion, the castle was a garrison for Hanoverian troops, whose job
it was to suppress any signs of further insurrection in the neighbourhood. After 1822, the garrison became unnecessary
and was run down. In 1831 the castle was
returned to the landowner, the Laird of Invercauld, at that time Catherine
Farquharson. The other major,
contemporary landowner in Braemar was the Earl of Fife, whose seat was at Mar
Lodge, located about 4 miles west of the village. Also, in 1832, the Marquis of Carmarthen
(later the Duke of Leeds) took a 19-year lease to Mar Forest and other lands
from the Farquharsons of Invercauld. All
three landed proprietors were supporters of the Braemar Highland Society and,
more generally, promoters of Highlandism.
The evolution of the Braemar Gathering and the landed
proprietors
Prior to 1831, the annual Braemar Highland Society meeting
had been held on the market stance in Castleton but, in that year, it was moved
to the grass park south of Braemar Castle and this location became its usual
home for many years. The first year of
sponsored games, approximating to the modern format, was held on Thursday 23
September 1832, with total prize money of £5 (about £500 in 2018 money)
offered for four events, putting the stone, throwing the hammer, tossing the
caber (or bar as it was then often called) and a running race. There was also a prize for the longest service
by a member. This last competition was a
device frequently used by landowners, for example at agricultural shows and
ploughing matches, to encourage the notoriously foot-loose labourers to stay
with one employer. The 1832 event
started with a procession of the Farquharson and Duff clans (Duff was the clan
name of the Earl of Fife), headed by the clan chiefs, before the commencement
of the games. A ball was held in the
evening. Thus, the Braemar event was
usually referred to as the Braemar “Gathering”, rather than “Highland Games”, the
Highlanders’ march echoing the historical gatherings of the clans in the area. From 1865 the organisers were granted permission
to add “Royal” to the title.
The report of the 1832 Gathering in the Perthshire Courier
gave a detailed list of the Important personages present but no mention of the
games. At this stage in the evolution of
such events, they were occasions when important people attended to be seen and attendees
were only sporadically entertained by the competitions of an athletic or
cultural nature. A similarly slanted
report followed the 1833 event, too.
This was the norm for decades to come and it was 1841 before the
Perthshire Courier made even a brief mention of the winners of athletic events.
Francis George Godolphin D’Arcy D’Arcy-Osborne (1798 – 1859),
was Marquess of Carmarthen from 1799 to 1838 and Duke of Leeds from 1838. After taking a lease to Mar Forest he was
keen to polish his Highlander credentials.
The Marquess became an honorary member of the Braemar Highland Society
and then smartened up his retainers by providing each of them with full
Dunblane tartan (a newly-created pattern) Highland costumes, Viscount
Dunblane being one of his subsidiary, and Scottish, titles. His example was quickly followed by his
neighbours at Mar Lodge and at Invercauld House. At the time of the 1836 games, both the Earl
of Fife and Mr Farquharson of Invercauld were out of the country. The Marquess
of Carmarthen happily stepped forward to substitute for his absent neighbours
by presiding at the Gathering.
The expansion of the competitions by increasing the number of
categories being contested was a progressive trend. Highland dancing, at least as a demonstration
activity, had been introduced by 1841, when the sword dance was “much admired”
at the ball. The following year a prize
was offered for reading in the Gaelic language and its translation. Also, in that year a dancing competition was
held at the end of the ball at which prizes were given for the best dancer of
the “celebrated Strathspey, Ghillie Callum and other national steps”. A steeplechase involving the ascent of the
local hill, Creag Choinnich, over 700ft higher than the starting line, made its
appearance in 1843. This event was later
discontinued by Queen Victoria’s request after a competitor burst a blood
vessel on the ascent. It was replaced by
a hurdle race across the River Dee in 1865, the first winner being the renowned
Deeside athlete Donald Dinnie (see below). Eighteen forty three also saw the inception of
a prize for the best-dressed Highlander. In 1850 there was even a prize for the
Highlander who had worn Highland dress, the philibeg, for the longest time (11
May to 12 August). The high leap and long leap were also being contended by 1843,
the tug of war was introduced in 1876 and in 1895 vaulting with a pole was added
to the list of events. By 1850 there was
a prize for the best piper and by 1872 there were no fewer than six prizes for
bagpipe music. In 1851, the dancing
competitions were moved outdoors to the arena, where they were performed on a
raised platform within sight of all attendees at the Gathering. From time to time special prizes were donated
for unusual competitions. In 1857, three
prizes were given by Mrs Farquharson of Invercauld for Shepherd’s Tartan Plaids
manufactured in the district from home-spun Blackface wool.
The popularity of the Braemar Gathering as an event of the
summer season was gaining in profile with the upper classes. In 1843 the Newcastle Journal noted that,
“Most of nobility and gentry wearing full Highland dress”. That
year’s event also received possibly its first Royal visitor when Prince
Alexander of the Netherlands, wearing full Highland dress, attended as a guest
of the Duke of Leeds. An examination
of contemporary newspapers shows that 1843 was the first year in which there
was widespread reporting of the Braemar Gathering, even though the publications
mostly copied each other. The following year, the Perthshire Courier
attributed much of this increased popularity of the Gathering to the enthusiasm
of the Duke of Leeds. “It owes its
resuscitation of late years to his grace the Duke of Leeds who as Viscount
Dunblane maintains a regular following and himself wears the dress and full
accoutrements of a Highland Chieftain.”
There was another Royal visitor in 1844, His Serene Highness Prince
Edward of Saxe Weimar, then a British army officer. He probably enjoyed himself, because he made
an appearance the following year, too. The enthusiasm of the Duke of Leeds for
the Braemar Gathering continued, but the irony is that the Duke of Leeds was an
Englishman, albeit one who liked to masquerade as a Scot!
Queen Victoria and Highlandism
Queen Victoria was born in 1819, the only child of the Duke
and Duchess of Kent and christened Victoria Alexandrina. Thus, her early life occurred within the period
of the revival of Highland culture and multiple references show the impact of
this fashionable trend on her environment.
Even at the early age of six months, a painting of the future monarch as
an infant portrays her wearing a Scotch bonnet with a tartan ribbon. There is no doubt that the young Victoria
imbibed an enthusiasm for things Highland.
In 1834, when she was 15, Victoria sent her half-sister a “Scotch” dress
and the pattern for a new tartan. In
1837, the Queen’s mother, the Duchess of Kent, referred to Scotch bonnets
bearing a tartan ribbon as, “currently the height of fashion for little
English boys of the first rank”. Victoria
ascended to the throne of Great Britain and Ireland in the same year and in
1840 she married her first cousin, Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, a
union of two young people deeply in love with each other. In the next 17 years,
Queen Victoria bore nine children, Victoria (b 1840), Albert (b 1841), Alice (b
1843), Alfred (b 1844), Helena (b 1846), Louise (b 1848), Arthur (b 1850),
Leopold (b 1853) and Beatrice (b 1857).
The children were all dressed in tartan and kilts at various times in
their young lives. For example, in 1842
Albert Edward, her eldest son, wore a robe of Stuart tartan and two years later
he wore a kilt of Rothsay tartan. The
Duke of Rothsay is a subsidiary title of the heir apparent to the British
crown, so such a pattern seems to have been appropriate for Prince Albert
Edward, even though it was only designed in 1842! This last example was the first true
reference to tartan in the monarch’s journals.
Queen Victoria’s early visits to Scotland
Queen Victoria first visited Scotland with the Prince Consort
in 1842, taking in both Edinburgh and the Highlands. The Royal couple were entertained at Taymouth
Castle by John Campbell, the 2nd Marquis of Breadalbane. She would have been delighted to see Lord
Breadalbane’s men dressed in the kilt.
It probably helped to convince her that Scots always wore the kilt
though, on this occasion, Breadalbane had arranged the attire to please his
Royal visitors. In 1843, the Queen
appointed her own piper, one Angus Mackay.
Important Scottish landed proprietors each had their own piper, though
at this stage Queen Victoria was not one of them. Her second journey North of the Border was in
1844, when Victoria and Albert sailed to Dundee on the Royal yacht and visited
George Murray, Lord Glenlyon, at Blair Castle.
Later, in 1846, he became the 6th Duke of Athole,. His private army, the Athole Highlanders,
provided a guard during the Queen’s stay and impressed Her Majesty by their
Highland dress and bearing.
In the summer of 1847 Victoria and Albert made their third
visit to Scotland, sailing in the Royal yacht up the Irish Sea to the Western
Isles. The Royal couple ended their
Caledonian holiday with a visit lasting a month to the remote Ardverikie estate
at Loch Laggan, Inverness-shire, then tenanted by the Marquess of Abercorn, an
early deer-stalking enthusiast. During
this sojourn in Inverness-shire, the monarch got her first exposure to Highland
games and confirmed her deep affection for the Highlands. She wrote, “I love this place dearly and
the quiet, simple and wild life we lead here particularly – in spite of the
abominable weather we have had.”
The Queen had been subject to several cack-handed assassination
attempts in the early 1840s, which worried her and there was also an ongoing
concern at the potential threat from the Fenian movement, which sought to gain
Irish independence through violent means. Partly for security reasons, but also to seek
tranquillity away from the Court in London, the Royal couple decided to look
for property in remote locations. In
1844 they leased the Osborne estate on the Isle of Wight and then bought it at
the end of that year. By 1846 they had
built Osborne House in the Italianate style for their personal use, protected
from malcontents by the Solent. A Detective
Meiklejohn was assigned to Royal protection duties and had to scrutinise
passengers arriving on the Isle of Wight for Fenian suspects, but he never had
grounds for detaining anyone. During their
visit to the West Coast of Scotland in 1847 they were again on the lookout for an
isolated bolt-hole. Although the likes
of Ardverikie fitted the bill from the point of view of remoteness and scenic
grandeur, the almost incessant rain dampened their enthusiasm for the Western
Highlands.
The acquisition of Balmoral
The Queen appointed Sir James Clark, a Scot who had been born
in Cullen, Banffshire, as her personal physician in 1837 and in 1840 he also
took medical responsibility for Prince Albert.
Clark accompanied the Queen on her 1847 visit to the west coast of Scotland. Coincidentally, his son, John Forbes Clark,
was staying with Sir Robert Gordon, brother of the Earl of Aberdeen, at
Balmoral Castle in Aberdeenshire. John
was recuperating from an illness and wrote to his father telling him that
Deeside was enjoying good weather. This
information was relayed by Dr Clark to the Queen. Her thoughts of taking a Scottish estate then
switched from the western Highlands to Aberdeenshire. Sir Robert Gordon had taken a 40-year lease to
the Balmoral estate from the freeholder, the Earl of Mar. In October 1847 Sir Robert Gordon died
suddenly at Balmoral while eating breakfast and one consequence of his demise
was that the 20-year balance of the estate lease devolved to his brother, the
Earl of Aberdeen. He knew of the Queen’s
property aspirations and suggested to her that she might take the balance of
the Balmoral lease. After considering a
report on the area commissioned by Prince Albert and after viewing a portfolio
of paintings provided by the Aberdeen artist, James Giles, the Royal couple
decided to lease Balmoral, sight unseen.
The Queen and her husband planned to visit their new Scottish property
for the first time in the autumn of 1848.
The Earl of Aberdeen asked the local medical practitioner, Dr Robertson,
to assist the Royal family to settle in on Deeside. They must have been impressed by the doctor,
who was a native of Perthshire and who had provided medical services in the
Aberdeenshire village of Tarland, before starting a practice in Crathie, the
village which was part of the Balmoral estate. In July 1848 he was appointed as Her Majesty’s
Commissioner (estate manager) at Balmoral.
The 1847 Braemar Gathering
The year 1847 witnessed the last iteration of the Braemar Gathering
before Queen Victoria and Prince Albert became Deeside residents. By this time, the Gathering was essentially
fully-developed in its pattern of activities as the following, striking account
from the Scotsman newspaper illustrates.
“The Braemar
Gathering came off last weekwith even more than the usual eclat. The Duke of Leeds had a large party at Mar
Lodge including the reigning Duke of Nassau and suite and the Duke of Athole
with a following of more than half a hundred gentlemen. On Tuesday the General and Lady Duff entertained
Nassau and a distinguished circle to dinner and the following evening gave the
Braemar Highlanders a torch-light ball.
Amid a blaze of torches almost equal to daylight numerous groups of
Highlanders in their native costume were performing to the sound of a dozen
bagpipes several of their most spirited and characteristic dances. The neighbouring heights were lighted up and
it seemed as if the whole inhabitants of this district had come forth to enjoy
the enlivened scene. Thursday morning,
luckily for all parties, broke forth fine and about noon carriages and vehicles
of all sorts began to arrive and continued to pour in till there was neither
stall nor quiet corner in the commodious hotels of Braemar to be procured for either
love or money. The Highlanders in their
various costumes assembled opposite the old Castle of Mar (Braemar Castle)
and marched in procession, according to custom with their chiefs at their
head. They then ranged themselves round
the space roped off for the athletic games and presented a very striking and
picturesque appearance. The competitors
for the prizes were not more numerous than usual, but they displayed great
skill, dexterity and agility. After the sports
were over, two hundred sat down to an excellent dinner served up in the
banqueting hall of the old castle and an adjoining room. The Duke of Nassau and the other visitors at
Corriemulzie and Mar Lodge were of the party.
A grand ball was given in the castle in the evening and was attended by
several hundreds. Several prizes were
awarded to the best dancers and the mirth and jollity were kept up till an
early hour. Altogether, the Braemar
festivities of this year were of a most delightful character and gave the
highest satisfaction to all who participated in or witnessed them.” The Duke of Leeds certainly knew how to throw
a party!
But, note the balance between the various activities recorded. It’s essentially a report about the upper
classes enjoying themselves and being seen to enjoy themselves, before, during
and after the Gathering. These were big-wigs
sailing on a sea of Highland symbolism, in which the athletic games were the
least significant item, being allocated only eight words! This was also an occasion for ordinary people
to gawp at their betters. But the event
was due to receive a major boost to its appeal to all social classes from the
presence of a new proprietor, who was about to take up residence a few miles
down the road from Braemar.
Queen Victoria’s first visit to Deeside and the 1848 Braemar
Gathering
On Tuesday 5 September 1848, Queen Victoria, her children and
courtiers boarded the Royal Yacht “Victoria and Albert” at Woolwich and, with a
navy escort, sailed for Scotland. The
Royal family arrived at Aberdeen harbour on 7 September but did not disembark
until the following day to begin their journey along Deeside by coach, finally
arriving at Balmoral for the first time at 2.45pm. After lunch the Queen and
Prince Albert immediately set out to explore their now property, climbing a
local wooded hill, possibly Craig Gowan.
Prince Albert was soon out with his rifle to try to bag a deer, but he
was not immediately successful. The
Royal couple was particularly struck by the scenery. Sunday 10 September saw the Queen and Prince
Albert attend divine service at Crathie church, mingling with the village
people on the walk back to the castle across the footbridge from the church.
1848 Braemar Gathering, Invercauld House
1848 Braemar Gathering, Invercauld House
After her first attendance at a service at Crathie church, the
Queen expressed disappointment at the absence of kilts. However, Her Majesty’s enthusiasm for the
kilt and tartan continued unabated, as the Inverness Courier noted. “Her Majesty’s partiality for the tartan is
manifested more and more every day.
Scarcely anything else than tartan was worn by the Royal Family and
their attendants at Balmoral and we understand that our spirited townsman of
the Tartan Warehouse Mr D Macdougall who has done so much to popularise the
Highland dress has received an extensive order from Her Majesty. Tartan dresses, shawls, plaids, etc have been
ordered for the Queen herself, a full Highland costume by HRH the Prince
Consort and full dresses of costly description for the Prince of Wales and
Prince Alfred. All Prince Albert’s
hillmen are also furnished with Highland dresses for the hills with ornaments
for holiday occasions.” The Queen
clearly had not understood, and perhaps she never grasped that, at that time,
the kilt was not normal attire for the local people, even on a Sunday. This view was confirmed in 1870 when the
Queen discovered that some of her outdoors staff had been wearing knickerbockers. She fired off an irritable memorandum
demanding that her keepers and ghillies should wear the kilt of Balmoral tweed,
unless given special dispensation to don trousers.
Exploration of the Balmoral estate interspersed with more
slaughter of Cervidae continued into the next week, until Thursday 14 September, the day of
the Braemar Gathering. Queen Victoria’s
journal gave her immediate impressions of this annual Highland festival. “The
morning was a little dull & showery when we walked out after breakfast, but
it soon cleared, & we met people on foot & on ponies going to the
Gathering, to which we all went after on early luncheon. The Children, Lady
Gainsborough, & Miss Hildyard were in the Char-a-Bancs with the Boys in
full (Highland) dress. The Gathering took place at Invercauld only 9 miles from here which is in a
magnificent situation. The evening was beautiful, bright & warm Mr &
Mrs Farquharson, & Sir Alex. Duff received us. We stood on a terrace, where
there were many people, with a splendid view of Lochnagar, the Lion's Face, in front, & the Mar
Forest, to the left. Immediately below the Terrace were stationed the
Highlanders, including the Duke of Atholl & his men, the Duke of Leeds
& his people in the wonderful Plaid he has invented for them (author’s
emphasis) & the Duff & Farquharson men. (About two years later, the Queen and
Prince Albert would invent their own tartan design, the Balmoral tartan, which
was not entirely original, being essentially the Royal Stuart with the base
colour changed from red to grey.) Some of the games had already taken
place, & we saw the throwing of the Hammer, & running straight up Craig
Cluny. Each year the Gathering takes place at Invercauld is very largely
attended. Both Mr & Mrs Farquharson are
pleasing people & have a very fine family of 12 children, the oldest 14,
& the youngest, 3 months old, 8 sons & 3 girls were there, very fine,
nice boys. We afterwards saw Reels danced in a tent & I gave 4 prizes.
After going into the house, full of shooting trophies, we went home as we came
& took a walk by the river. It was a mild charming evening. — Dr Robertson,
the addition to our dinner."
However, the Dundee, Perth and Cupar Advertiser gave a
broader, more extensive and balanced account of the conduct of the Gathering,
making clear that the presence of the Queen had had an enormous impact on
attendance on this occasion by the ordinary populace. “The yearly Braemar Gathering took place on
Thursday (14th) under circumstances of more than ordinary
interest. It having been understood that
Her Majesty and the rest of the Royal Family would honour the occasion with
their presence, the utmost enthusiasm was awakened throughout the neighbouring
districts. On the appointed day hundreds
might be seen dressed in their holiday attire and wending their way from every
point of the compass towards the locality appointed for the gathering. Ballater and some of the villages were almost
literally emptied of their inhabitants and every description of vehicle and
beast of burden were in constant demand.”
The paper continued with a description of the location and the
scene. The games took place in front of
Invercauld House, not the usual venue just south of Braemar Castle, on a lawn
of about four acres, lying below the level of the house. A terrace had been built at the higher level,
with three “handsome rustic garden seats” for the use of the Queen and her
party. A carpeted footpath led from the carriageway to the Royal seats and a large square of Royal Stuart tartan cloth
had been spread out in front of the Royal position. The Farquharson Highlanders mustered about
1pm in plaids and kilts of the clan tartan and were soon joined by 98 of the
Duke of Athole’s men, who enjoy the role of the Queen’s bodyguard in Scotland. Their dress consisted of a black velvet
jacket with silver buttons and plaids and kilts of Athole tartan. Their mountings were of silver and “of the
most handsome description” and each man displayed a sprig of juniper in his
bonnet. Two standards were on display,
one bearing the arms of the chief. The followers
of the Duke of Leeds were dressed in Dunblane tartan and the Fife Highlanders displayed
the Duff tartan. (The following year the
tartan invented by the Duke of Leeds received a polite put-down from the
Aberdeen Journal, his men being described as “finely accoutred if not with
historical correctness at least with correct taste. The tartan was a large check formed on a greyish
ground by alternate stripes of red and yellow”.) Finally, a contingent of the Earl of Airlie’s
men was present. A wide range of
traditional arms was carried by the various clan representatives, with Lochaber
axes, broadswords and targets (small round shields), accompanied by
other military accoutrements. The
Lochaber axe was a kind of halberd with a hook behind the blade, which was used
for scaling walls.
The Queen arrived at 2.30pm accompanied by Prince Albert, HRH
the Prince of Wales, HRH Prince Alfred and HRH the Princess Royal, plus Sir
George Gray, Sir James Clark, the Hon George Anson, the Hon Captain Gordon, Lady
Canning and Viscountess Gainsborough. The
Prince of Wales and Prince Alfred wore Highland garb but the Queen and Prince
Albert were dressed plainly. This being
the Queen’s first visit to the Gathering, the athletic games were started on
the lawn “most of them being not so much for the purpose of competition as to
exhibit the nature of the games to Her Majesty”. She donated £5 to the winner of the race to
the top of the 700ft high hill, Craig Clunie.
Curious to see the full range of Highland culture, the Queen then asked
to see some traditional dances and eight men from each clan were detailed to
proceed to the ballroom inside the Invercauld House. There they performed five reels and in
appreciation Her Majesty presented a prize to one man from each clan. After taking dinner in the House, the Royal
party departed for Balmoral at 4.30pm. A
two-hour stay would prove to be the limit of the Queen’s tolerance over the
next 51 years.
Putting the stone
Tossing the caber
Putting the stone
Tossing the caber
After the exit of the Royal party, “the competition games
were pursued with great vigour”. But
that was not the end of proceedings.
Dinner for 300 VIP guests was laid on by the Farquharsons in a large
tent next to the House, followed by a ball, with more noisy Highland dancing in
the ballroom, which was festooned with evergreens and stags’ heads bearing
antlers. The ball, as was usual on these
occasions, went on far into the night.
The Braemar Gathering – cancellations, Royal attendance and
absence
Between 1848, when the Monarch first attended the Braemar Gathering
and 1900, the last occasion on which this Highland festival could have been
held before her death, there might have been a maximum of 52 iterations of the
event. In fact, the meeting was
cancelled on eight occasions and of the 44 held, Queen Victoria attended 20 of
them (45.5%). Death was the reason for
cancellation in each case, almost always the death of a senior member of the
Royal family or a senior family member of one of the Gathering’s patrons. The events which were cancelled, with
reasons, were as follows. 1862 – Death
of Prince Albert, the Prince Consort; 1863 – Death of Mr Farquharson of
Invercauld; 1870 – Death of Mrs Farquharson of Invercauld; 1879 – Death of the
Earl of Fife; 1888 – Death of Colonel Farquharson of Invercauld; 1892 – Death
of the Duke of Clarence; 1896 – Death of Prince Henry of Battenberg; 1900 –
Death of the Duke of Edinburgh and mourning the loss of life in the South
African War.
The Braemar Gathering - venue
In the years 1831 to 1886, inclusive, the Braemar Gathering
was held at Mar Castle, or Braemar Castle as it is now called, on every
occasion except one. In 1848, the year
of Queen Victoria’s first attendance, it was held in front of Invercauld House. Both Braemar Castle and Invercauld House were
on the Invercauld estate of the Farquharson family, who must have shouldered a
considerable financial burden over the years.
The reason for the switch of venue has not been uncovered but could well
have been due to the anticipated visit of the monarch. Perhaps the Farquharsons wanted to impress their
new Royal neighbour with the magnificence of their family seat with its extensive
lawns, in comparison with the rather austere Braemar Castle and its more limited and sloping (see below) sports arena?
Braemar Gathering at Braemar castle
Braemar Gathering at Braemar castle
1887 was the year of Queen Victoria’s Jubilee, marking 50
years since she ascended to the throne.
It was therefore fitting that the Royal Braemar Highland Society should
agree (they had little choice faced with a Royal command) that Balmoral should
be the venue for the Gathering in that year.
Indeed, 1887 marked the start of a period extending to 1901, the year of
the Queen’s death, when the venue chopped and changed frequently. In 1889, the Gathering took place at Old Mar
Lodge on the estate of the Earl of Fife.
It was the only occasion that this venue was used. The following year, 1890, the event returned
to Balmoral and in 1891 it was held on
the Farquharson estate, but this time at Clunie Park in Castleton and the
Gathering stayed on Farquharson land for its next four iterations, 1893, 1894
and 1895 – all at Braemar Castle, 1897 – at Clunie Park.
Braemar Gathering, Clunie Park?
Braemar Gathering, Clunie Park?
Queen Victoria had been a supporter of the Braemar Gathering
for 50 years and in 1898, the event returned to Balmoral. The following year, 1899, would be the last
year within her reign that the event was held and the last Gathering that the monarch
attended. Fittingly, it too was held at
Balmoral, the Royal home in the Highlands that she and the late Prince Albert
had chosen and developed together.
During the reign of Victoria’s eldest son, King Edward VII, the Braemar
Gathering was held at Clunie Park from 1902 to 1905 before it moved to its
present, permanent home, the Princess Royal and Duke of Fife Memorial Park, a 12 acre site in Auchindryne,
presented to the Royal Braemar Highland Society by the Duke of Fife in 1906.
1849 Balmoral Highland Games
1849 Balmoral Highland Games
No doubt enthused
by their experience at the Braemar Gathering the previous year, on 29 August
1849 Queen Victoria and Prince Albert held their own Highland games for
employees on the Balmoral and Invercauld estates at Balmoral. The Royal
Consort and their neighbour, Colonel Gordon, wore the kilt for the occasion but
the games were not a great success. Few of the Highland employees took
part in the events. John Bowman a ghillie from Invercauld won throwing
the hammer and Charles Duncan, a ghillie and carpenter on the Balmoral estate
won tossing the caber and the running race. The games were followed in
the evening by dancing in a temporary building. This seems to have been
more successful, being described as "very merry".
1859 Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement
of Science
In 1859, the Braemar Gathering took place as usual on
Thursday 1 September in front of Braemar Castle. The Queen did not attend, nor any other
member of the royal family, possibly because she had only arrived at Balmoral
from Edinburgh the previous day at the start of her autumn break. However, this was a year in which the British
Association for the Advancement of Science (BAAS) met in Aberdeen under the
presidency of Prince Albert. He took
this appointment seriously and gave a well-received presidential address to the attendees. In return for the public honour the Prince
had received, the royal couple invited officers and members of the BAAS to
visit Balmoral on the afternoon of Tuesday 22 September. This was an opportunity for the Queen and
Prince Albert to show off their Highland property and their credentials as
Highland proprietors and promoters of Highland culture, to the country’s
leading scientists. The entertainment
lasted from 2pm to 6pm and took the form of a replica Braemar Gathering, held
on the lawns in front of the Castle.
Initially the Highland Gathering was limited to BAAS members but then
extended to include their wives and finally thrown open to the public. In total there were about 3,000 attendees. The Queen watched the arrival of the visitors
in “huge omnibuses & other vehicles, laden with Philosophers,
&c”.
It had been arranged for the Farquharson, Duff and Forbes
Highlanders to be present, of course togged up as though it had been the real
Braemar Gathering. The Queen had even
managed to get the heads of the visiting clans to attend and lead their men,
Col. Farquharson, Lord Fife and Sir C Forbes respectively. Augmenting the ranks of the visiting
Highlanders was a guard of honour from the 93rd Regiment and employees
of the Balmoral estates in kilts of Royal Stuart tartan. All the clans were accompanied by pipers and
were drawn up to form a guard of honour to receive the Queen and the rest of
the Balmoral party. It all conformed to
the Queen’s notion of what a Highland event should comprise, as she described
in her Journal for the day. “It was a
beautiful sight, in spite of the frequent slight showers, which at 1rst tormented
us, & the very high, cold wind. There were gleams of sunshine, which with
the Highlanders in their brilliant, picturesque dress, the wild notes of the
Pipes, the Band, & the beautiful background of mountains, rendered the
scene striking in the extreme.” The
royal family too had donned Highland dress, “… Albert &
the Boys in Kilts, I, & the girls in Royal Stewart skirts, with shawls, over black velvet
bodices …”.
Following the exotic show of the arrival ceremony, the
Highlanders set to in athletic competitions, followed by dancing, with the
royal party watching from the terrace, flanked by the “Savants”. The Queen and Prince Albert watched for
almost three hours, a longer time than they would normally devote to attendance
at the Braemar Gathering. Her Royal
Highness was clearly satisfied with the events of the day. “Watched the Highlanders marching away, from the
window, also, the different people walking off, & the mighty omnibuses
filling with such curious people. — When all had gone, we took a short walk, to
warm ourselves. Much pleased at all having gone off so well.”
The artist Egron Lundgren recorded the events of the day in
an evocative painting contrasting the top-hatted, becloaked, umbrella-bearing, bemused
“philosophers” with the kilted, hirsute, prancing Highlanders. This watercolour is now in the Royal
Collection. In later years, the local
press confused this one-off event with the real thing and even John Michie, from
1880 the Head Forester at Balmoral, also paraded this false opinion.
1859 Balmoral Games
1859 Balmoral Games
1863 The Earl of Fife’s games
In 1862 no Braemar Gathering was held as a mark of respect
for Prince Albert, husband of Queen Victoria, who had died in December 1861. The Gathering for the following year was also
cancelled following the death of Mr James Farquharson of Invercauld, head of
the Clan Farquharson, in November 1862. He
had been the main sponsor of this event, along with the Earl of Fife. However, the Earl decided he would mount his
own substitute meeting, to be held at Mar Lodge on Saturday 28 September. There was again confusion in the press as
whether this was the true Braemar Gathering or not, for example the Northern
Whig reported, “Great preparations are taking place for the Braemar Gathering
at Mar Lodge which the Prince and Princess of Wales are expected to attend.” The Banffshire Journal made the same mistake. The Earl of Mar, intent on putting on a good
show, ordered his men to turn up for drill practice and inspection of “garbs”. While many Farquharson Highlanders turned
out, most of the Forbes men from Donside did not make the journey over the
hills, due to the death of the brother of Sir Charles Forbes, The Athol Highlanders too did not show up due
to the illness of their chief. The Queen
could not attend, as she was away in Coburg visiting relatives. At least the Prince and Princess of Wales
made the journey up Deeside to be present, the Prince in his kilt of Royal
Stuart tartan and his wife in a dress of Victoria tartan. The Grim Reaper seemed to have been intent on disrupting
Upper Deeside gatherings in 1863!
The Braemar Gathering - timing
Although the modern Braemar Gathering is held on the first
Saturday in September, this was not always the case. Between the mid-1840s and the end of Queen
Victoria’s reign in 1901, the event was almost always held on a Thursday in
August - September. The three exceptions
were Tuesday 26 August 1845, Tuesday 25 September 1854 and Friday 10 September
1858. Despite these variations in day
and date, the bulk of meetings were held on the last Thursday in August or the
first or second Thursday in September. Occasionally changes to the date were made at
the request of the monarch. In 1850 the
Gathering had originally been planned for 5 September but was put back by a week
to accommodate royal wishes. Although
1884 was a year when the Queen was absent from the Gathering, due to the death
of her haemophilic son Prince Leopold, Prince Albert Edward of Wales
substituted for her. However, due to an
engagement in Aberdeen on 28 August the original date set, the event was again
postponed by one week to accommodate him.
In 1893, the event was postponed for one week due to the death of the
Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, the elder brother of Prince Albert, the late Prince
Consort.
The Braemar Highland Society
The society adopted this name in 1826 and in 1831 became a
registered Friendly Society. It
maintained its Friendly Society function, even when the annual Gathering became
dominant in the late 1840s. This growth
in prominence of the Gathering gave the Society added leverage over its
members. By 1856 it was requiring all
its members to attend the Gathering in Highland attire, which helped to ensured
that the Gathering retained its Highland complexion. It also required contestants in the Society’s
events to be members and this no doubt boosted the annual income from membership
fees. But this ruling had the unwanted
and perhaps unanticipated consequence of excluding the best performers at
national level and, in athletic terms, the Gathering, while attracting
audiences due to its royal connection, was not noted for athletic
excellence. By 1860, this problem had
been partly fixed by having additional open competitions with prizes paid for
by wealthy visitors, as well as Society competitions restricted to members.
The rules of the Society governing eligibility to compete,
even for its members, were Byzantine in their complexity. The Aberdeen Journal gave an explanation in
1866. “By the Society’s rules the
competitions are open to all members, but each person is only allowed to carry
off one prize of the same class at any particular meeting and when a competitor
has gained first prize in any of the sports he is ever afterwards excluded from
obtaining the same prize. There are
challenge medals, however, open to be competed for by winners of first prizes
until they shall have been awarded the medals three years in succession when
they become the property of the gainer who is then excluded from prize-taking
altogether unless there shall be extra or open competitions for which rewards are specially given by
visitors.” Thirty years later, John Michie,
then a member of the Braemar Highland Society Committee, was utterly frustrated
by their archaic rules and inability to move with the times.
Donald Dinnie
Donald Dinnie was a son of mid-Deeside, having been born at
Birse, near Aboyne in 1837. As a youth, he
quickly became an outstanding Highland games athlete, specialising in the heavy
events and was recognised as the best such athlete in Scotland and possibly in
the world for many years. This Deeside
athlete and strongman first competed at the Braemar Gathering in 1860 but, not
being a member of the Society, he was limited to only a few competitions. Dinnie won three first prizes for putting the
28lbs stone, one from the Honorary Fund, one provided by Mr Farquharson and the
third a competition medal. The Queen
noticed his presence though she did not remember his name. In her Journal she wrote, “A
new man from Aboyne won almost all the prizes, at least for throwing the hammer
& putting the stone.” The reference
to throwing the hammer was due to Donald Dinnie making the longest throw but
being ineligible for the first prize.
Donald Dinnie as a young man
Donald Dinnie as a young man
Between 1860 and 1873, the Braemar
Gathering was held on eleven occasions and Donald Dinnie was present on all but
one of them. He also competed in 1876
before departing for more lucrative competitions away from Deeside and
especially abroad. Dinnie was a routine
first prize winner in those events in which he was qualified to compete at
Braemar, typically putting the stone, throwing the hammer, tossing the caber,
running and standing high leap and long leap. He won most events that he entered at the
Braemar Gathering and when not first, he came second. Donald was a great
favourite with the crowd, though his personality was somewhat deficient in both
tact and honesty. (see “The Life of Donald Dinnie (1837 – 1916) Revisited”
on this blogsite)
Two anecdotes are told about Prince
Albert and Donald Dinnie. When the
Prince first noticed Dinnie performing he asked who he was and received the
reply that he was the Deeside Champion.
The Prince’s response is said to have been in the form of a witty pun, “Dee-side
champion! That he is dee-cidedly!” On another occasion Prince Albert is said to
have arrived at the Gathering after the heavy events were over and the Committee
urged the competitors in the caber to return to the ring to put on a display
for the royal visitor. All agreed except
Dinnie who refused to take the field unless he was paid £2. This was refused and the demonstration went
ahead without Dinnie’s participation. Now,
the caber was Donald Dinnie’s speciality, needing both strength and skill, and
the other assembled athletes all failed to turn the log as required. Observing this deficiency, Dinnie overcame
his own objection, took the field and turned the caber with a single toss.
Clan attendance
The Earl of
Fife and Farquharson on Invercauld, heads of the two clans, Duff and
Farquharson, were the principal sponsors of the Braemar Gathering from the
1840s. They were the, more or less,
ever-presents throughout the 19th century in terms of sponsoring the
Gathering, in providing it with a venue and in sending along a contingent of
Highlanders to march to the venue on the day of the Gathering and to provide a
guard of honour for royal visitors and other VIPs. Until 1851 these Highlander contingents were
sporadically bolstered by other clans.
The Duke of Athol sent a large contingent from his private army on
several occasions, as did the Earl of Airlie, and the Duke of Leeds was also a strong
supporter, while he was the lessee of property in the Braemar area. From 1850 the Forbes clan, the Men of Lonach,
regularly marched across the hills from Donside to add to their bekilted brothers
on the banks of the Dee. In 1852, the
Athol men did not attend because they were still engaged in the hairst (harvest),
making the point that the attendance of dozens of estate servants could have a
significant economic cost.
March-past of the clans
March-past of the clans
But what of the
new proprietor, installed at Balmoral from 1848? She had appropriated the Royal Stuart tartan
for her own and thus her men could stand, distinctly clad, shoulder to shoulder
with the neighbouring clans. Surely, she
should be represented appropriately at this local Highland extravaganza? Although at this time, September 1849, the
Queen did not call her retainers “Balmoral Highlanders”, they were dressed distinctively
in Victoria tartan and headed by the Queen’s piper, Angus McKay, when they took
their place alongside their more numerous neighbours at the Gathering. There was a similar turn-out the following year
“few in number but handsomely
attired”. On the next occasion for the
Gathering in 1851, the Queen was absent from the show due to the Court being in
mourning, though there were official representatives from Balmoral, including
Dr Robertson, and the Balmoral servants were allowed to attend. It is unclear if they went uniformed or in
mufti. And, for many years, that was the
limit of Balmoral’s formal representation in the ranks of the clans at the
Braemar Gathering.
In the period
from 1853 to 1860 Highlanders from the Duff, Farquharson and Forbes clans
marched and formed the guard of honour at the Gathering. Then, for the next decade to 1871, the
attendees were the Duff and Farquharson clansmen alone. This was a period when the Braemar Gathering
went through uncertain times, as will be seen.
The year 1872
saw a new group of Highlanders on parade at the Gathering, not representing a
clan but drawn from the ranks of the Ballater and Crathie Rifle Volunteers, 60
of whose members under the command of Lieutenant Deans paraded along with the
Fife and Farquharson Highlanders, though they actually assembled with the Farquharson
men. It is likely that some of the
Volunteers were Balmoral employees.
After this year the Volunteers were present at most Gatherings, but
increasingly associated with the Farquharson Highlanders, being included with
the Farquharson men in the post-Gathering dinner thrown by Mr Farquharson.
The Balmoral
Highlanders, identified under that name, reappeared at the 1874 Gathering,
according to a report in the Dundee Courier.
Another appearance was made in 1876.
The Aberdeen Journal reported, “A detachment of the Crathie Highland Volunteers under Lt Deans joined
with the retainers upwards of 30 of whom appeared for the first time in
uniform.” But this was to have been a
false dawn and it was 1887, when the Gathering was held at Balmoral for the
first time that the Balmoral Highlanders effectively made their debut. Forty of their ranks mustered, led by Pipe
Major Ross, decked out in Royal Stuart tartan.
Their first role was to form a reception party for the arriving Fife and
Farquharson men at the Balmoral (Brunel) bridge.
Thereafter, until 1899, the last Gathering of Queen Victoria’s reign,
the Balmoral Highlanders were ever-present.
In 1889, the next year of the Gathering, the venue was Old
Mar Lodge on the estate of the Duke of Fife. The Queen attended and took her seat while a
30-strong contingent of the Balmoral men, commanded by Dr Alexander Profeit, who
had succeeded Dr Robertson as Commissioner at Balmoral in 1874, marched past in
single file. At their head was John
Michie, Head Forester, holding the new Royal Standard in silk, followed by Ross
and Campbell, the Queen’s pipers. The
Balmoral men had taken to carrying Lochaber axes (a kind of halberd, a traditional
weapon) and this became one of their distinguishing features, along with the
Royal Stuart tartan and a thistle and an oak leaf in the bonnet. The Farquharson men wore a sprig of fir in
their hats and the pipers sported eagle feathers. In the following years the Balmoral men
typically mustered 30 – 35 men for the Gathering.
Public attendance at the Braemar Gathering
No reports of the numbers attending the Gathering exist before
1887, when it was estimated that at least 4,000 were present. However, the attendance of royalty and
especially the Queen boosted interest in the Gathering from Deesiders and
tourists alike after 1848. Even in 1858
the crowd must have been essentially local, as the Aberdeen Journal reported that
the attendees were still extensively speaking the Gaelic. The Gathering of 1887, which was at Balmoral
for the first time, saw a big increase in attendance to 4,000, though others optimistically
put the figure at 8,000 – 10,000. The
press suggested that the public were not present to see the competitions but to
gawp at royalty on their home territory.
In terms of numbers, this was the most successful Gathering at that
date. The 1890 crowd estimate, when the
Gathering was again held at Balmoral, was 7,000 – 8,000. Thereafter the crowds fluctuated, influenced
in particular by the state of the weather and the presence, or not, of the monarch.
The biggest crowd of Victoria’s reign was undoubtedly 1898
when the Gathering came to Balmoral for the penultimate time. On this occasion 14,000 – 15,000 was the
estimated number of attendees, according to the Aberdeen Journal “larger and
more fashionable than ever before”. The
Queen gave the rather precise estimate of 13,483 attendees in her Journal. A remarkable 751 bicycles were counted on
site. Without doubt, the Braemar
Gathering at this time was the place to be seen at the end of the summer
season. The following year, 1899 was the
last Braemar Gathering of the Victorian era and, fittingly, was also held at
Balmoral. On this occasion the numbers
attending were down by perhaps 2,000 – 3,000 from their peak. The Queen was clearly fascinated by the success
that the Gathering had attracted when held at Balmoral and she drove down to the
Lodge near the Balmoral bridge to watch the arrival of some 350 clansmen and
the crowd. She wrote in her Journals
that “An immense number of breaks, coaches, wagonettes, bicycles, &c.
passed by.”
Accidents and incidents
Probably because the Braemar
Gathering was always held in proximity to the river Dee and involved athletic pursuits
such as hurling heavy hammers into the heavens, accidents and incidents were
not infrequent. The Dee can change over
a few hours from a shallow but rocky river to a raging torrent of fast-moving
water. In 1850 there were two tragic drownings
associated with the Gathering. A young
man, an intending participant, went for a swim at Castleton on the morning of
the Gathering. The current was too strong
for him and he did not survive his immersion.
The same afternoon another attendee crossing the river to reach the lawn
in front of Braemar Castle, where the Gathering was taking place, saw a child’s
body in the water. On recovering the
corpse, he realised that it was his own child.
As ever, alcohol consumption was and
is rife at the Gathering. In 1859, the Elgin
Courier made its point about the Gathering, “… giving all the ghillies, gamekeepers and flunkies in the
district a holiday and a night of carousing enjoyment.” sometimes led to amusing and even tragic incidents. In 1891, when the Gathering was being held at
Clunie Park, Braemar, such an occurrence was reported by the Aberdeen Free
Press. A drunk on the Invercauld
side of the river took off his coat and attempted to swim across while the river
was in a swollen state. He started to
flounder, and the crowd rushed to the bank to watch the unfolding drama. The drunk eventually reached the south side
in an exhausted state and then struggled to clamber out, repeatedly falling
back, but was eventually helped to gain dry land by the onlookers.
In 1850, one competitor burst a
blood vessel during the exertions to reach the top of Craig Choinnach in the
hill race, though he was not killed or seriously injured as a result. During the 22 lbs hammer competition in 1878,
a young man was hit under the armpit by a flying missile. Dr Profeit, the Balmoral Commissioner and a
local general practitioner, attended the casualty, who, miraculously, had
escaped without serious injury. At the
same event, the horses pulling a carriage panicked and bolted through a gate, the
vehicle being badly smashed as it impacted the gate post. There do not seem to have been any human or
equine casualties from the incident.
Queen Victoria’s attendance at the
Braemar Gathering
There is no doubt that the acquisition of the Balmoral
estates from 1848 onwards and the monarch’s subsequent attendance at the
Braemar Gathering helped to raise the profile of that meeting with the wealthy
tourists already frequenting the Highlands in mid-century. In the first decade of her Highland
proprietorship (1848 – 1857 inclusive) the Queen attended the event,
accompanied by other members of the royal family, on eight out of ten
occasions. This led to the claim, oft
repeated, that the monarch had a special affinity for the event and for the
competitions on offer. But right from the
start, the Queen made clear that there was a limit to the amount of time she
was prepared to spend at the Gathering.
She never remained for more than 2.25 hours and more typically her
attendance lasted from 1.5 hours to 2 hours.
This required the competitions to start before her arrival, to be paused
to organise the Highlanders into a reception party for her arrival and, usually, for the
program to be completed after her departure.
The Caledonian Mercury reported in 1866, “It was almost 4pm when the
Queen arrived. She departed shortly
after 5pm”. The monarch never attended the dinner, nor the ball, held
after the competitions had ended.
Hints of her disenchantment with the occasion were evident as
early as 1849. In her Journal entry she
wrote, “The Gathering itself was but a poor affair.” And in 1850, “After this, we went into the
Castle & saw some dancing, — nothing very particular.” The Queen’s next attendance was in 1852,
when her muted grumbling continued. “The
Highland games & dancing, in the open, went off well, but as usual, it was
a very slow affair.” A similar reaction
came in 1853. “The Games &
everything were just as usual, — always rather hanging fire.”
There had been no attendance by Her Majesty at the Gathering
in either 1851 or in 1854, the former year due to her being in mourning for her
uncle, Prince Ferdinand and, in the latter year, because she had not then
arrived at Balmoral from Osborne House.
Mild carping continued once the Queen’s attendance at the event had
resumed. 1856. “After an early luncheon,
we drove over to Braemar for
the Gathering, which was not full, the Duffs not bringing over their men!”
After 1857, Queen Victoria entered a period of 29 years, up
to and including 1886, when she only turned up at the Braemar Gathering on five
occasions out of the 25 years when the event was held. Of course, this included the years after Prince
Albert’s death (1862 -) when the Queen was depressed and mourning her departed love.
but, by the end of the decade she certainly gave the impression of having
recovered her composure. Her rare
attendances at the Gathering thus started before the death of Prince Albert,
continued through the years of depression, persisted during the time when she
had a close relationship with John Brown and were maintained after Brown’s
death in 1883. In the three years of the
Gathering immediately before Prince Albert’s demise, 1858, 1859 and 1861, when
the Queen was not present, Victoria was in residence at Balmoral on the day of
the meeting, but in no case did she give a reason in her Journals for her
non-attendance. For the first two years
she did not even acknowledge that it was the day of the Gathering.
Queen Victoria with John Brown outside the Iron Ballroom
Queen Victoria with John Brown outside the Iron Ballroom
The monarch did manage to gain some enjoyment from her attendance
at the 1860 Gathering, which saw the emergence of Donald Dinnie as a force of
nature. “The games were more
entertaining than usual …”. Perhaps the
Deeside champion was the reason, or maybe it was just the sunny weather?
Ever since 1849, turning up for the Braemar Gathering had
been viewed as, at best a duty but, in the last few years of Prince Albert’s
life, his wife had come to regard this event as a chore, to be avoided, if
possible and to be minimised, if not. Attendance
by her family, her courtiers, her commissioner and even her prime minister
substituted for the monarch. The curiosity
about 1859 was that while the Queen did not attend the real thing, she took
satisfaction from the success of her own version of a Highland gathering, which
was organised at Balmoral for her guests from the BAAS. “Much pleased at all having gone off so well.”
After 1861, the monarch’s existing disenchantment with the
Braemar Gathering was reinforced by her depression following Albert’s death and
the long period of rare attendance stretched out to 1886. The year 1864 was the next iteration of the
event, where she did not show up. It was
not acknowledged in her daily writings. In
the following three years, her depressive state was still evident. 1865 – not attended. “All our people going to
the Gathering, & though I
should not have wished to go I felt low & sad at the contrast with former
times.” 1866 - attended. “All, but the
dancing, & hurdle races were over by the time we came & the whole thing
was very dull.” 1867 – not attended. “All
the family, & everyone else in the house, went to the Gathering, only Jane
C. & Harriet P. remaining with me. —
Took tea on the lower Terrace with Jane & then rode with her & Harriet
round Carop, going up by Bowman's Moss,
& along the high path, where I so often used to follow my beloved Albert.” On
this and other occasions, it appeared that the monarch had put off taking a
decision about making the journey to the last minute. The Aberdeen Journal reported in 1867, “Contrary
to general expectation and we believe to Her Majesty’s original intention, the
Queen did not attend the Gathering. But
it turned out that Her Majesty had gone for a day’s drive by way of Loch Muick,
giving permission to the servants of the household to visit the Gathering.” And again, from the same source in 1886, “But when the rain started it was
anticipated that the Queen would call off and she did.” Attendance
at the Braemar Gathering was clearly never top of Her Majesty’s priority list.
The fallow period for Victoria and the Gathering continued,
though she often had valid reasons, clearly expressed or not, for avoiding travel
to Braemar. In several years (1868,
1869, 1880 and 1882) she was not in residence at her Scottish home at the time
of the event. Ill-health dogged her for
many years and was in evidence at Gathering time in 1871, 1876, 1877 and 1883. A
large abscess on the Queen’s arm was lanced three days before the Gathering in
1871. In her Journal, the Queen gave an
account of the operation. “Everything
was got ready & the 3 Doctors came in. Sir Wm Jenner gave
me some whiffs of chloroform, whilst Mr Lister froze the place,
Dr Marshall holding my arm. The abscess, which was 6 inches in
diameter was very quickly cut & I hardly felt anything excepting the last
touch, when I was given a little more chloroform. In an instant there was
relief. I was then tightly bandaged & rested on my bed.” In 1886 the Gathering was organised for 26
August, Prince Albert’s birthday, a depressing time for Her Majesty. Other years saw no excuse offered for the
Queen’s non-attendance at the Gathering (1872, 1873, 1881, 1884 and 1885). On some occasions, even though Queen Victoria
had decided to absent herself from the Gathering, she could not resist driving
out at the time when the crowds were streaming back along the North Deeside
Road, to observe their passing. This
happened in 1872, 1873, 1881, 1885 and 1886.
“Tea out near the Cottage, then drove with Beatrice & Jane C. along the high road, nearly
as far as Braemar & met no end of
people returning from the Gathering, in every possible kind of vehicle. It was
quite amusing to see.” This account is
from the Journals for 1872. Perhaps the
monarch felt some guilt at her non-attendance at the Gathering and was checking
on its success in order to dissipate her embarrassment?
Press criticism
The newspapers were often sycophantic when reporting royal
attendance at the Braemar Gathering, as with all events involving the
monarchy. But this stance was not
universal. Criticism was expressed, on occasions, both by the radical organs
and by traditional ones, who were not as enamoured of Highland culture as was
the monarch and her entourage. The press
had various targets in mind.
The lack of top athletes was frequently mentioned, for
example, in 1852 the Windsor and Eton Express wrote, “The games
were perhaps poor enough in themselves, the feats of strength having frequently
been excelled at less pretentious meetings”, and in the Aberdeen Evening
Express in 1881, “The hurdle race was disappointing, as there were only five
competitors, two of whom quickly gave up before the river was reached.” And
again in1886, “No
big-name heavy athletes, as in the previous year.” In truth it was often not worth their time
for top athletes to penetrate as far as Braemar, with its restrictions, at a
busy time of the year for other, more lucrative, Highland games.
Lack
of interest in the event by the local population and poor organisation were
similarly frequent charges. The
Manchester Courier in 1874, “… but for the
presence of royalty it would have been a very tame affair. When the games commenced only a few vehicles
had taken up positions round the ring while in former years by that time there
was a complete circle. The number of
spectators was also very limited.” And
the Huntly Express in the same year, “Up till noon, not a drum was heard, which
was very unlike previous years on similar occasions. The local patrons who are wont to take a
lively interest in the affair were viewed like strangers among the spectators,
with the exception of a few of Lord Fife’s men who marched into the park. The clans in general assembled like
straggling sheep without a shepherd.”
The Huntly Express continued, “… an event once popular in the history of
Scotland; but its popularity on this occasion lay entirely in the success of
its failure.” Aberdeen Journal, 1874, “and
it was not till the royal carriage came in sight that a couple of dusty couches
were brought out of the old castle and placed upon the slope for Her Majesty to
sit upon.” By the mid-1880s, it seemed doubtful
if the event could continue.
But by far the biggest bone of contention for the press was
the negative view of native Highlanders, the disdain for allegedly traditional
culture and the promotion of Highlandism by non-Highlanders, especially the English. The Scotsman, a radical newspaper based in
Edinburgh, home of the Enlightenment, held particularly trenchant views, as the
following quotations from 1852 and 1853 make clear. “The country’s practical experience of the
Highlanders – that experience of which the results come home to us in
destitution collections and emigration funds – is that they are idle, deficient
in self-reliance, fond of all amusements and addicted to hollow display. We know that they will sacrifice any duty for
a day’s amusement, that while listless in the serious business of life they will concentrate great energies in sport
and dissipation , that they are addicted to wearing gaudy decorations when they
have not sufficient clothing for comfort and decency and that the inability to
use any other but the Gaelic tongue keeps them in ignorance and fosters all
those defects that make them so heavy a burden to the rest of the
community. Yet with these propensities
looking them in the face and demanding correction, the friends of the Highlander
laboriously and expensively urge him to the amusements he is naturally too much
addicted to, encourage him to the dissipation which is his curse, give him
prizes for expensive and useless clothing and excite him in the employment of
the language which keeps him from participating in the energetic process of the
country at large.” And, “Scotsman asks
if it is sensible for Lowlanders and Londoners to act the parts as chieftains
and clansmen. Clan Duff and Clan Forbes
are Lowlands families that have of late begun to aspire after some of the
vanishing honours of savagery. Many of
the Forbeses are not Highlanders and not even Scotchmen.” The Elgin Courier, 1859. “Those of our readers who
have witnessed a competition for national sports once or twice will have no
particular desire to see the sight again.
It is one of the silliest, most stupid and most wearisome spectacles that
can be conceived.” Truth, another
radical newspaper, made fun of the discomfort shown by some members of the
royal family with having to wear Highland attire. “I
do not wonder that Prince Henry was glad to get back to Balmoral for he looked
miserably uncomfortable and embarrassed in his fantastical Highland dress of gaudy
Stuart tartan and reminded one of the proverbial hog in armour. It was moreover what Highlanders call a
“fresh” afternoon and as the air became keen the unfortunate young man’s teeth
seemed to chatter with cold for, the kilt is rather a trying garment under such
conditions.” Of course, in the
intervening decades, between then and now and despite press scorn, Highlandism
has emerged totally triumphant and it is very difficult to imagine any Scottish
newspaper currently espousing such views.
Despite her own
patchy attendance at the Braemar Gathering, in 1874 when the Queen discovered
that Colonel Farquharson, Lord Fife and Lord MacDuff would not be attending
that year’s event, she was less than pleased and upbraided them by letter for a
lack of support for this demonstration of national culture, which she felt was
in danger of being displaced by “low sports” such as pigeon shooting, gambling
and even polo! Colonel Farquharson and
Lord MacDuff then changed their minds, but the arrangements on the day were
underwhelming, no march of the clans taking place, though enough Highlanders
were cobbled together to form a guard of honour for the monarch. To cap it all, heavy rain caused a suspension
of the events. This was one of the years
which received heavy press criticism. The
monarch’s intervention ensured that the following year there was a big turnout
of marching Highlanders. The Queen attended
in both 1874 and 1875 but the following year, 1876, she again lapsed. She attended in 1878 but then followed seven
barren years devoid of Her Majesty’s presence.
In the middle of this period, in 1883, John Brown died and this loss,
like the loss of Prince Albert, had a devastating effect on the Queen’s mood. There
was now almost constant sniping from the press about the Queen’s failure to
turn up, though others, including the Prince of Wales substituted for her. Reporting on the1884 Gathering, the Dundee
Advertiser remarked acidly that the gentlemen in the royal party “were more
inclined to talk than to look” – clearly, they were not paying attention. In truth, the future of the Braemar Gathering
was in peril from a lack of commitment by the traditional sponsors, the Queen’s
habitual absence and a general deficit of enthusiasm for the event.
The 1887
Braemar Gathering at Balmoral
The following
year, 1887, it appeared that the decision as to where to mount the Gathering
was taken rather late. At the end of June,
it was announced that Lieutenant Colonel Farquharson had placed Braemar Castle
at the disposal of the Royal Braemar Highland Society, so perhaps the assumption
was being made that the event would, as usual, be taking place there. However, within a few days the president of
the Society, Angus Macintosh, had received a letter from General Henry Ponsonby,
Keeper of the Privy Purse and Queen Victoria’s Private Secretary, commanding
the attendance of the Society to celebrate their annual Gathering at Balmoral
that season. The Society did the
gracious thing and accepted the Royal Command.
It could hardly do anything else, but was probably delighted to receive
the directive. This was a very special year in Queen Victoria’s reign, being the
50th anniversary of her accession to the throne.
It is unclear
from where this idea came, though it is likely to have involved Ponsonby
himself, or why action was not taken earlier in order to leave more time for
preparation. The event had never previously been to this venue, though a
facsimile of the Gathering had been mounted there in 1859, when the BAAS
visited Aberdeen. For the Queen’s
advisers, it was an excellent opportunity to celebrate, and draw attention to,
this special occasion in her life - provided it was organised
successfully. Certainly, it was a way to
ensure the Queen’s engagement in and presence at the Gathering. Coincidentally, it was also a route to stopping
the rot which had sapped the enthusiasm of the main sponsors for this
celebration of all things Highland over the previous decade.
The date chosen
for the Gathering was Thursday 1 September.
On 11 August a deputation from the Royal Braemar Highland Society met
with Dr Alexander Profeit, the Royal Commissioner at Balmoral, to choose the
ground where the meeting would be held.
A grass park on the haugh land (flat agricultural land next to the
river) between the Dee and the South Deeside road, near the J E Boehm statue of
Prince Albert, was selected. The
necessary access and building works were delegated to James Anderson, the
Balmoral Clerk of Works, assisted by William Brown, the brother of John Brown,
then living in John Brown’s old Balmoral house (Bhaile-na-Choile). William was representing the management
committee of the Society. Meanwhile a
programme of events was drawn up and donations sought, the appeal for funds
being very successful. John Michie later
referred to the venue as “Waterside Park”.
Prince Albert statue by JE Boehm
Prince Albert statue by JE Boehm
About 11.30am
on the day of the Gathering the Queen took a carriage along the road by the site,
obviously curious to see its state of preparation. She recorded the scene in her Journals. “Breakfasted
all 6 in the Cottage, — Driving afterwards a little with the girls to
Abergeldie & back, & passed close to where the Gathering is to be held,
viz: on the field close to the river, extending from one bridge to the other.
Many people assembled already. The refreshment Tent, & booths, being put
up. It looked very gay.” Perhaps because
the monarch was not expected to be out at that time, many of the visitors did
not notice it was her carriage weaving through the crowds. This was the first year that the Balmoral
Highlanders, 40 in number and bedecked in Royal Stuart tartan, had paraded. They were led by Pipe Major Ross and his
assistant, Campbell, playing vigorously.
It seems likely that the Gathering’s staging at Balmoral had provided
the impetus for the proper establishment of the Queen’s own troop of Highlanders. The name was fanciful, for they had no claim
to constitute a clan. At 12.00 noon the
Balmoral Highlanders marched out of the Castle grounds and across the Brunel
bridge to greet the 80 Duff and 100 Farquharson Highlanders, who had arrived on
the north bank of the river, with an exchange of cheers. The Queen went down to the lodge to
watch. “It was a very pretty sight
seeing them marching along.” At 1.00 pm,
the massed ranks of the Highlanders then proceeded to the ground and were
entertained to lunch.
Brunel bridge (1857), Crathie
Brunel bridge (1857), Crathie
During the morning the visitors started to stream onto the
site and a diverse array of vehicles was drawn up around the arena, three deep
in places. In their reports of the
event, the newspapers estimated the crowd at 3,000 – 4,000 persons, though Her
Majesty, perhaps keen to bolster the event’s success in her mind, was happy to
record a higher figure, “There was an immense crowd, between 8 & 9000, they
say.” There is little doubt that,
whatever the true number, this was the largest crowd thus far attracted to the
event.
The competition arena, surrounded by a stout fence with flags
on tall poles at intervals, was on flat land but, at its western end, the park contours
rose to form a natural terrace. Here a
pavilion had been constructed for the use of the royal party, from which they would
have a good view over the site. The
monarch would later record, “We could see everything very well, as we were
quite close.” The pavilion, or dais, extended to about 30 ft by 30 ft and was
covered by an awning draped in Madras muslin, held aloft by crimson pillars projecting
above the structure as flagpoles, which bore the crosses of St Andrew and St
George. The front of the structure was
decorated with foliage in pots, brought over from the Castle gardens. To the rear were two “retiring rooms”, one
for the monarch and one for the other ladies.
The competitions were due to start at 1.00 pm but the
programme had slipped, and it was fully an hour later before they got underweigh. Rain had started falling at about noon and
was still significant at 3.00pm when the royal party approached the competition
ground, though very soon the sun emerged to bathe the scene in light for the
rest of the afternoon. The announcement
of the Queen’s imminent arrival generated a frisson of excitement in the crowd,
whose attention span was already exhausted by the tedious pace of the
competitions. The Highlanders formed
into two rows, between which the royal carriages could drive, and the enthusiastic
reception delighted the monarch. “The
people cheered very much & the pipes played.”
Two carriages transporting the royal party were drawn by four
grey horses and preceded by crimson-clad outriders. In the leading vehicle was the Queen with her
daughter, Princess Beatrice and grandson, Prince Albert Victor of Wales. Riding the rumble seat of the first carriage
were Francie Clark and Hugh Brown, respectively the cousin and younger brother
of the late John Brown, both in royal service, which emphasised the significant
position still held by the Brown family in the Queen’s favours. In the second carriage were Prince Henry of
Battenberg, the husband of Princess Beatrice, the Princesses Irene and Alix of
Hesse, granddaughters of the monarch, the latter later to die tragically at the
hands of the Bolsheviks. The carriages
entered at the east end of the site and drove to the royal accommodation at the
opposite extremity. Lord Bridport had
travelled ahead to receive the Queen and her companions as they alighted, to
show them to their places under the canopy.
The two other major sponsors of the Gathering, Colonel
Farquharson and Lord Fife (Alexander William George Duff, 6th Earl
of Fife) also attended with large parties of guests, though the latter committed
a protocol blunder by arriving an hour after the Queen. Both Farquharson and Fife, together with various
members of their entourages were presented to the monarch, so Fife had quickly been
forgiven for his faux pas. Two years
later the Earl would marry Princess Louise, the eldest daughter of Prince
Albert Edward of Wales and thus the Queen’s granddaughter. The Queen held animated conversations with several
of those presented. She seemed to be in
excellent form and even clapped some of the Highland dancers but after about two
hours she clearly felt she had done her duty and the royal entourage departed,
much as they had arrived, driving between the ranks of the Highlanders to the cheering
of the crowd on the way back to the Castle.
The crowd then streamed away, even though the athletic competitions had
not been completed, leaving the remaining competitors as almost the only people
on the ground.
In the evening the Highlanders were entertained to dinner in
the Iron Ballroom, followed by a dance held in a large tent. (The Iron Ballroom
was, and is, a prefabricated building, constructed with corrugated iron and hung
with typically Victorian scalloped barge boards. It is now the oldest surviving (1851) such
building in Scotland.) The Queen did
not attend these evening events, dining separately in the Castle, though “Eddy”
(Prince Albert Victor of Wales) and “Liko” (Prince Henry of Battenberg) did
attend the ball.
Iron Ballroom (1851), Balmoral
Iron Ballroom (1851), Balmoral
One of the innovations at the 1887 Gathering at Balmoral,
which has left a delightful legacy, was due to Mr James Hay, proprietor of the
Royal Athenaeum Hotel, Aberdeen, who was responsible both for the catering tent
on the show ground and the evening dinner.
He had hand-painted menus prepared which were decorated with scenes of
Highlanders putting the stone, tossing the caber and dancing the Ghillie Callum
(sword dance), the Fife, Farquharson and Stuart clan tartans being accurately
reproduced.
Many newspapers afterwards gave extensive accounts of the names
of socially significant attendees and of the attire of the royal party, for
example the London Evening Standard reported that the Queen “wore a dress of
black silk with black bonnet and grey feather.
The Princess Beatrice was also dressed in black, but she wore a light
bonnet with a pink flower and feather in it.
The Princesses Irene and Alix were dressed in grey with hats of the same
colour and black feathers. Prince Albert
Victor and Prince Henry of Battenberg appeared in Highland costume, their kilts
of the Royal Stuart tartan.” This paper
and others, however, gave no account of the competitions, or of the prize-winners. It was quite clear that for much of the print
media the athletics, dancing and piping competitions and their competitors were
not worthy of notice.
The report on the Braemar Gathering in the Dundee Courier was
in marked contrast to the London Evening Standard. Although it contained an extensive list of
visitors to the event, it also gave a good account of the competitions and the
athletes but was markedly deficient in royal sycophancy. However, the report of the competitive side
of the Gathering made embarrassingly clear that, as an athletics championship it
was insignificant, even second-rate.
There were few open events and no athletes who were recognisable much beyond
the confines of Deeside. Some events had
attracted very few competitors. By this
date, Donald Dinnie, James Fleming and the like, giants in the pantheon
Highland competitors, had departed for pastures new ayont Scotland. The Aberdeen Journal, after moaning about the
entertainment being dull, could only amuse its readers by remarking upon the “sturdy
limbs of the competitors” and attributing the assembled musculature to “the
dietetic properties of the oatmeal and porridge which are said to be the favourite
dishes of these mountainous regions”.
Queen Victoria
was evidently pleased with the way the occasion had played out. “The
afternoon was beautiful. We could see everything very well, as we were quite
close. Sat there till ½ p. 5 & enjoyed it very much. Numbers of people came
up to pay their respects, & several remained in my open tent … Went back to
the Cottage for tea, leaving the ground amidst loud cheers. — Later, drove with
the girls, along the lower road to Abergeldie, to see the people going away.” Old habits die hard! The success of the 1887 Gathering renewed
the Queen’s interest in the event. In
the remaining 13 years of her reign, this Highland festival was held on nine
occasions and the Queen, despite her advancing years (she was 71 in 1890),
attended six of them. On three further
occasions, the event was located at Balmoral.
The revival of the Braemar Gathering, which had been catalysed by the
1887 iteration, continued. However, the
success of the Gathering in that year was entirely due to its location at
Balmoral and the leverage that that venue exercised over upper-class English
tourists, local landed proprietors and their guests, as well as the hoi
polloi. But the impact of the competitions
on boosting attendance, it has to be concluded, was insignificant.
Alexander
Haldane Farquharson and the Braemar Gathering
Lieutenant-Colonel
James Ross Farquharson, the Laird of Invercauld, who was also known by the
sobriquet “Piccadilly Jim”, died in London on 17 March 1888, aged 54. Consequently, the Braemar Gathering for that
year was cancelled as a mark of respect for one of the event’s main
sponsors. His body was transported by
train back to Aberdeenshire and he was buried in the family vault in Braemar
churchyard. James Ross Farquharson had
one son, Alexander Haldane Farquharson, (AHF) born in 1867, the heir to the
Invercauld estates. AHF was first
educated at Eton College and then entered Christ Church, Oxford University in
1885. He was in his father’s party at
the Gathering in 1887 held at Balmoral and was presented, along with his
sisters, to Queen Victoria, who described him as “a nice-looking young man”. The heir apparent reached the age of majority
on 12 March 1888, just four days before his father’s premature demise. He returned to Invercauld after his
graduation somewhat inexperienced in life, but not lacking a belief, perhaps
misplaced, in his own capabilities.
Farquharson mausoleum, Braemar
James Ross Farquharson
Farquharson mausoleum, Braemar
James Ross Farquharson
In 1889 the
Braemar Gathering was held on the lawn in front of Old Mar Lodge on the Fifes’
estate. Strictly speaking, this was the
first time that the event had been to this venue about five miles west of
Braemar, though in 1863 after the true Gathering was cancelled due to the death
of the grandfather of AHF, a substitute event was organised there. On this occasion it is likely that the
placing of the event was due to more royal manoeuvring (the Scotsman said “by
special request”) in order to celebrate the marriage, in July 1889, of the Earl
of Fife to Princess Louise, the Princess Royal, Queen Victoria’s granddaughter.
Immediately after the wedding the Queen
had elevated Fife to a dukedom, the first Duke of Fife.
Duke and Duchess of Fife
Duke and Duchess of Fife
The Highland event
was held on 5 September, when 80 Duff Highlanders marched from Mar Lodge (also
known as Corriemulzie Cottage) to the Victoria bridge over the Dee opposite the
venue, to await the arrival of 30 Balmoral Highlanders who travelled in brakes
from Balmoral. “Owing to some
misunderstanding”, said the Aberdeen Journal, there was no participation by the
Farquharson men. Alexander Haldane
Farquharson may have been the source of the misunderstanding, but he was newly
down from Oxford and newly in charge of the Invercauld estate. Perhaps he had other things on his mind? AHF does appear to have been present at the
banquet which followed the Gathering.
The following
year, 1890, the event returned to Balmoral (see below). AHF did manage to send a contingent of
Farquharson Highlanders that year but the Queen cannot have been pleased with
their appearance. She noted in her
Journals, “The
Forbes men had already arrived, looking splendid, with Gen: Sir J. Forbes,
looking so handsome in his kilt & bonnet, his 2 sons, & young Sir
Charles Forbes at their head. The men were carrying halberds. We waited a
little while, & then the Duff men appeared, 80 in number, led by Capt: Mc Donald,
& lastly the Farquharson men, without any arms or pipers, & led by
no gentleman. The Fife men had many pipers.” AHF still had not got his act together,
perhaps because in this year he had become involved in a long and bitter dispute
over access to a path on Farquharson land, from Castleton (the easterly half of
Braemar) to the Lion’s Face Rock. (see “Benjamin
John Ottewell (1847 – 1937) watercolourist - Queen Victoria and Upper Deeside”
on this blogsite).
Alexander Haldane Farquharson
Alexander Haldane Farquharson
Eighteen ninety-one saw the Braemar
Gathering return to the Farquharson estate
for the first time since 1886, not at Braemar Castle, the usual Farquharson
site on offer, but to a park near Cluny Cottage on the Invergelder estate and
not with Alexander Haldane Farquharson as host. That role was taken by Sir Algernon Borthwick,
who was leasing the property at the time, though Gordon Foggo, the Farquharson
factor was responsible for the management of the event. On the day, the performance of the
Farquharson contingent was again chaotic.
John Michie noted in his diary, “The
Balmoral Highlanders assembled at the Castle at 9 am where breakfast was served
to them. Dr Profeit who was in command
drew them up at the front door. Campbell
the piper with his new assistant (Campbell his nephew) on the right &
myself in the centre, one pace forward, bearing the Royal Standard as usual. We marched to the Garden Cottage where the
Queen inspected us & the princess Beatrice took a photograph, mounted
carriage and proceeded for the scene of the Games. Got down at the Bridge of Dee & marched to
the gate of the Clunie park where the Duff Highlanders waited us & cheered
which we returned. The Farquharson men
were scattered over the whole place.”
The Aberdeen Free Press politely dodged this shambles by simply failing
to mention the presence of the Farquharson Highlanders.
There was no
Gathering in 1892 due to the death of the Duke of Clarence. However, the Lonach Society invited the Duff Highlanders to march over the hills to the Lonach Gathering on Donside and for the Balmoral Highlanders to march with them. The Queen agreed to this proposal and about 30 Balmoral Highlanders plus pipers undertook the march, together with about 30 Deeside Volunteers and 30 - 40 Duff Highlanders. It is not clear if the Farquharson Highlanders, who had also been invited, joined the party. The following
year the occasion returned to its old venue in front of Braemar Castle, with
AHF as the host. Again, there was
dissatisfaction with the performance of the Laird of Invercauld. John Michie gave an account of the stooshie
in his diary. “The lately married Laird of Invercauld was present and his
guests, but he did not make the Mar & Balmoral men his guests, therefore
there were expressions of dissatisfaction among the ranks, and there was a
general coldness evident as compared with the turn out when the Gathering was
held at Mar Lodge and at Balmoral where they, games, have been twice.” AHF gave lunch to the Farquharson men along
with the Ballater and Crathie Volunteers, but the Duff and Balmoral men had to
wait until the evening before they were fed.
It must have been a long and miserable day for them. No wonder they were “dissatisfied”!
The 1894
Gathering was also held in front of Braemar Castle at the invitation of AHF
and, at least in this year, the Farquharson Highlanders were under quasi-military
control and properly drawn up. But the
elements were against the Laird of Invercauld.
It rained heavily overnight and at intervals on the morning of the games
and, though the afternoon was dry, it was rather cold. Queen Victoria was present but only stood the
conditions for an hour before returning to Balmoral. There was a similar iteration the following
year when the weather was miserable, the crowd small and the Queen failed to
attend. In 1896 the Gathering was
cancelled due to the death of Prince Henry of Battenberg, husband of Princess
Beatrice, Queen Victoria’s youngest daughter.
In mid-July
1897, the committee of the Royal Braemar Highland Society were still unable to
fix a venue for the event. They had
written to AHF asking him to nominate a site but, at that time, he had failed
to reply to the secretary’s letter.
Fortunately, he had responded by the end of the month and Cluny Park was
fixed for the second time in the history of the event. There was little possibility of the Queen
attending on the nominated day, 2 September, as she would only arrive at
Balmoral the previous afternoon. During
this year Alexander Haldane Farquharson had shown commendable judgement. It was another Jubilee year for the monarch,
60 years since her accession to the throne and her arrival on Deeside called
for some pomp and celebration. On leaving
the royal train at Ballater there were two guards of honour drawn up from the 1st
Battalion Scots Guards and the 5th Volunteer Battalion Gordon
Highlanders, together with a reception party of Sir John Clark and Sir Alan and
Lady McKenzie. The Queen and her party
then took their coaches for the short drive to Balmoral. Victoria recorded in her diary what happened
on reaching the Brunel bridge across the Dee at Balmoral. “Before crossing the Bridge my carriage was met by Mr Farquharson
at the head of his men, with their Pipers, who followed my carriage, which went
at a footspace.” The Farquharson men
then crossed the bridge behind the Queen’s carriage until it reached a
triumphal arch at the entrance lodge.
Sir Fleetwood Edwards, the new Keeper of the Privy Purse was in the welcoming
party at the Castle door and presented the Laird of Invercauld to Her
Majesty. At last the new Laird of Invercauld had got
his act together!
The 1890
Braemar Gathering and the
role of John Michie
John Michie was
appointed Head Forester on the Royal Deeside estates in 1880. No reference has been found to his role at
the 1887 Gathering held at Balmoral but he is likely to have sourced and
prepared timber for the various structures on the meeting ground. The following Gathering was at Mar Lodge in
1889 and this was the second occasion when the Balmoral Highlanders made an
appearance, properly drilled and commanded, alongside the Duff Highlanders. Dr Profeit, the Commissioner, was in charge
and John Michie was given the role of carrying the new Royal standard, which placed
him at the head of the Balmoral men, marching one pace in front of the pipers. Michie retained this role throughout the
remaining years of Queen Victoria’s reign.
The next
occasion on which the Gathering came to Balmoral was 1890. Again, the Queen commanded that Balmoral
would be the venue, though the reasoning behind the Royal command for this
particular year is unknown. It does not
seem to have been a particular anniversary of a significant event. John Michie was discussing preparations with
Dr Profeit two weeks before the “Council” of the Royal Braemar Highland Society
formally agreed in the middle of July that the date would be Thursday 4
September at the Queen’s residence. Michie
and Profeit clearly had no concerns that the Royal command would go unheeded. The Balmoral Head Forester described his role
at the coming event. “I am engaged
preparing for the erection of various buildings for the Braemar Gathering such
as Queen's pavilion, ring, seats, &c.
Mr Anderson (Balmoral Clerk of Works) goes to Aberdeen tomorrow to
see Alan's people about drapery &c.”
The design of the pavilion was jointly by John Michie and James Anderson
and Michie included a sketch of the structure in his diary for 4 September
1890, the day of the Gathering. He was
unhappy with the drapery by James Allan & Sons of Aberdeen, which he found
objectionable in colour and style and took it upon himself to mute the effect “by
the use of evergreens &c colours of cloth &c. Running plain along both sides and up to
summit of gable-yellow which was ultimately subdued by a triple row of laurel
leaves running along the lower edge and a braid of purple heather bloom
above. The ground of gable was scarlet
on which rested the Imperial Crown. All
the hangings being of terracotta drawn up into knots at rather irregular
intervals. The centre portion of the building
projected bay-like some 2½ feet from the general line of front. The railing which passed round edge of dais
was covered with a thin cloth striped terracotta and which the front part under
the dais edge was filled up with spruce branches while behind the whole fabric
was screened by spruce fir trees being planted temporarily an open uncanopied
space stretched along the front and round the edge of B while the end was closely boarded up and covered with
spruce &c. The open space would be
about 6 ft. wide being somewhat more under the gable. There was a display of the various tartans of
the Highlanders present in front of the centre advanced portion immediately
behind was the Queen's portion.” The
Queen seems to have been happy with the finished structure, “Our Pavilion was
very prettily arranged & we all sat there looking on.”
1890 Balmoral pavilion, John Michie diary
1890 Balmoral pavilion, John Michie diary
John Michie had
become a member of the Society by 1890.
It may have been earlier, but his diaries are missing for the relevant
years. The annual subscription was 6/3d. The following year he paid his subscription
in a similar way, taking William Brown with him to the meeting of the Royal
Braemar Highland Society. Michie also
explained the structure of the annual payment.
“Quarterly payments of 1/6 is the thing really, but these are seldom
made at the time and a fine of -/1d for each omission is made - thus the sub.
for the year when made at one meeting it amounts to 6/3 per member, which I
paid today.”
There must have
been some discussion about the possibility of the Gathering returning to
Balmoral in 1891. In July of that year John
Michie reported in his diary, “To the Castle and find that it is likely the
Braemar Gathering may take place at Balmoral as last year, which means some
extra work in preparing. This matter
will cost the Queen probably between £150 & £200 if it takes place there.” Although the Gathering actually went to
Clunie Park, this information is useful in giving an idea of the additional direct
costs of hosting the event. John Michie
was also unhappy to learn that Gordon Foggo, the Invercauld factor, would be in
charge of the arrangements. His
misgivings were well-placed (see above)!
For John
Michie, a firm supporter of the monarch, much of what he was doing on her
behalf, both through the Society and on the ground at Balmoral, appears to have
been a matter of duty. He was not a
great enthusiast for the Gathering as an event and in one of his rare unguarded
moments expressed his opinion about the beliefs of the monarch and her servants
relating to this festival. “All workmen
get a holiday tomorrow on account of the Braemar Gathering. To state my opinion of donning the kilt dress
belonging really to the Queen, collecting at the Castle, marching in a kind of
order about the place with Her Majesty's pipers playing in front, then she
inspects these clansmen, they are driven to the Gathering to meet others of Mar
& Invercauld. The way by which her
Majesty enters the field to her pavilion is lined by these clansmen they are
dined, and the function is ended except that later on some get affected by
strong drink. Now there seems to me to
be a mutual misunderstanding. The Queen
thinks she is giving us all a treat by this day's outing, & we believe we
are pleasing the Queen by donning that Stuart tartan & strutting about. My private feeling is that both are mistaken.”
John Michie was
not himself a Highland athlete, though his brother Tom was, and appeared and
won prizes over several years at the Braemar Gathering. However, Tom Michie, while a capable heavy
athlete, did not have national standing. Despite
this lack of status, as John Michie recorded, “My brother Tom and A Neilson
from Blairgowrie were present as competitors and were either first or second in
the heavy competitions which either had not won within the last 3 years.” Commenting on the 1894 event, which was held
in front of Braemar Castle, John Michie acknowledged the modest nature of the competition. “The Braemar Gathering and a very slowly
conducted affair it was. Very few
outside competitors came forward. The
fact that the situation is distant from any centre, and that athletes who
compete must be members of the society while two prizes only are given in many
cases prevent a number of first-class men coming.” The Braemar Gathering simply could not attract
the top performers at this time and the source of its success lay elsewhere.
In 1894 John
Michie was appointed as a judge at the Braemar Gathering and continued in this
role for many years, possibly until the start of WW1 and the suspension of the
Gathering for the duration of the conflict.
By 1895 he had also been appointed to the Council of the Society too. (John
Michie sometimes refers to the “Council” and at other times to the “Committee”,
but it is not clear if they are one and the same body.) He was
not impressed by the conduct of business.
After the quarterly meeting held in April 1895 he commented, “The
business was got through in truly antiquated Highland fashion.” He was also aware of public dissatisfaction
with the conduct of the Gathering. “The
public complain of slowness of the competitions & I think they have cause.”
But he seemed unable to influence his fellow Council members. The Aberdeen
Journal commented on the longevity of Macintosh the president of the Society. “There near the doorway (to Old Mar Castle)
stands old Angus Macintosh the veteran president of the Braemar Royal Highland
Society, whose striking features have, it might almost be said, immortalised by
Gustave Dore for some 20 years ago the celebrated artist took a pencil sketch
of the hale old man and the picture is one of Angus’ most treasured
possessions.” In 1895 Macintosh was in
his 86th year and had been in post since 1882, when he assumed the
presidency from John Lamont who had been president since 1843! Old Angus Macintosh was neither malleable nor
flexible and the Gathering, or at least the conduct of the competitions,
continued much as before under his venerable leadership.
The 1898
Braemar Gathering at Balmoral
Significance
was given to this year by it being the 50th anniversary since the
Queen first landed at Aberdeen, prior to entering upon her new estate at
Balmoral. Like 1887, it called for
celebration in a variety of ways, one obvious action being again to command the
Royal Braemar Highland Society to bring the Gathering to Balmoral. News that this was to happen first leaked out
at the end of June of that year and the date chosen for the event was 8
September. Of course, the year 1887,
when the Gathering was held at Balmoral for the first time, had been very
successful in terms of drawing in the crowds and 1898 was likely to follow the
same pattern. The location, the almost
certain presence of the Queen, with other members of the Royal family and the likely
attendance of large numbers of bekilted Highlanders would be a magnetic
draw. The press was generally
enthusiastic about the prospect of a return to the Queen’s Deeside home, though
“Truth”, in characteristic style, managed to find a discordant note to play. Commenting on crowd behaviour twelve years
ago, “there was an overwhelming crowd
of “trippers” from Aberdeen and other places, and after the games there was a
great deal of drinking and many rowdy scenes, the function degenerating into an
orgy of the most pandemoniacal description.”
While there had been much alcohol consumption, this statement was surely
a wildly exaggerated prediction for the event’s outcome. Other press organs, alternatively, could not
resist verbal genuflection. The Aberdeen
Journal – “The great Braemar Gathering always so popular with Royalty” and, “For half a
century Her Majesty, when opportunity offered, has taken advantage of her
visits to her Highland home to be present at the annual gathering.”
The Yorkshire Evening Express – “Her Majesty has allowed the Braemar
Gathering to take place at Balmoral tomorrow.”
These remarks, too, were hardly accurate.
Dr Alexander Profeit, Her
Majesty’s Commissioner on Deeside had died in office in January 1897 and been replaced by Mr James Forbes. The new commissioner and John Michie quickly struck
up a good working relationship and the programme for 1887, which Michie had been
heavily involved in implementing, was largely repeated in 1898. “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” might have
been their maxim, though that much-repeated phrase would not be spoken until
1977.
Although John Michie’s diary for 1898 is not available, it
seems likely that he was largely responsible for the structural works on the
meeting ground. The Royal pavilion was
closely similar to the design previously employed and it was again furnished and
upholstered by Messrs James Allan and Sons of
Aberdeen. Tented accommodation for other
purposes on the site was provided by Messrs Shirras Laing and Co, including a
large marquee for the clansmen’s refreshments.
Braemar Gathering pavilion (1898) at Balmoral
Braemar Gathering pavilion (1898) at Balmoral
Attendance was estimated at 14,000 –
15,000 and was probably limited by the availability of transport from Aberdeen,
but especially from Ballater, where all available horse transport was pressed
into use. The crowd described by the
Aberdeen Journal as “larger and more fashionable than even in its history”. Many people travelled by bicycle, including a
substantial number peddling all the way from Aberdeen. The weather had been dry and the roads were
exceptionally dusty, covering vehicles, animals and travellers in a thick grey
layer. Many people stopped at the Coil-a-Criech
Inn, between Ballater and the destination to slake their thirst. Apparently, some never completed the journey,
such was the allure of the hostelry after the heat and dust on the roads.
There was a grand turn-out of
Highlanders, headed by the Balmoral men, whose number was not stated but
usually extended to about 35 servants.
They were commanded by James Forbes, with John Michie as standard-bearer
and James Campbell, the Queen’s piper followed by Colin Cameron, piper to the
Duke of Fife. The Balmoral Highlanders were carrying Lochaber axes and sporting
the oak leaf and thistle badge in their bonnets. At 12.00 noon they were drawn up in a
semi-circle opposite the entrance to the Balmoral estate. Then lining the road towards the bridge were 40
Duff Highlanders bearing pikes and with a sprig of holly aloft. They were led by six pipers. Next in line were the Farquharson men, along
with the Volunteers and all carrying swords.
Finally, present for the first time in eight years were the Forbes men
carrying halberds, who had marched from Donside. They displayed a sprig of broom in their
bonnets. The Athole Highlanders had thought
of attending, but the distance from Blair Atholl to Balmoral was considered too
great to undertake on foot. The massed Highlanders marched to the ground, were
fed, and prepared to form a guard of honour at 3.00 pm for the arrival of the
Queen and Royal party, much as in 1887 They
were kept hanging about and one of the Duff Highlanders fainted in the heat
before Her Majesty arrived.
While waiting for the arrival of the
monarch, the crowd were entertained by the 1st Aberdeen Volunteer Artillery band. They were commanded to attend so near to the
event that they had no time for practice and could not acquire transport. The day was saved by James Forbes who arranged
carriages for them. At least the bandsmen
were rewarded afterwards with a telegram from the Queen to their commander,
Colonel Ogston, thanking them for their performance.
Queen Victoria and party arrived at
3.40pm to rapturous cheering from the multitude as she took her place in the
pavilion. Also in the Royal party were Princess
Henry of Battenberg (Queen’s youngest daughter), Princess Aribert of Anhalt
(granddaughter of Queen Victoria), Prince and Princess Leiningen (Queen
Victoria’s mother was a Leiningen), Duke of Albany, Princess Alice of Albany
(granddaughter of Queen Victoria) and the children of Princess Henry of
Battenberg. Several senior members of
the Royal Household were also present, including the Earl of Stafford, Lt Col
Davidson (equerries), Dowager Lady Churchill (in attendance on Her Majesty), the
Honourable Harriet Phipps, the Honourable Sylvia Edwards, the Right Honourable
Sir Fleetwood Edwards (Keeper of the Privy Purse) and Sir James Reid (Royal
Physician). There were also two Indian servants
hovering, dressed in “highly picturesque attire”. The Queen remained for her customary two
hours and in this time many presentations were made to her, so at least the
social function of the Gathering had been effectively discharged. On this occasion, all the competitions had
been completed before the Royal departure, not that many would have noticed,
since the attention of the crowd was on the spectacle of the Highlanders lining
up to bid farewell to the monarch and her party.
One obvious difference from the 1887
event was the possession of cameras by several people in the crowd and by some
members of the Royal party. Messrs Walker
of Aberdeen also cinematographed the occasion.
Apparently, there had been an infiltration of pickpockets, but the 40
police officers on duty managed to keep them under control. One serious accident marred the occasion,
when a young woman was knocked down at the gate on departure and suffered a
compound fracture of the leg, when a carriage wheel rolled over her. One characteristic of the Gathering had not
changed. As the Aberdeen Journal pointed
out, “There was nothing sensational in the sports and they formed perhaps the
least interesting part.”
The 1899 Braemar Gathering at
Balmoral
In the ultimate year of the century, Queen Victoria again
commanded that the Braemar Gathering should be held at Balmoral, though there
was no special anniversary to give a justification for doing so, unlike 1887
and 1898. Perhaps the Queen’s renewed interest
in the event, which had started a dozen years previously, simply carried over? She seemed to like the event being staged on
her property, where her own people would control the organisation, where there
would be no tedious travel to and from the chosen location, where there would
be sure to be a large attendance and she would be smothered in adulation from
her landed neighbours and their august house party guests and from other visitors,
both high and low. The message was
released early that the Queen would be very likely to attend along with all
members of the Royal family present at Balmoral and, additionally, the Duke and
Duchess of Fife from Mar Lodge.
The staging of the 1899 iteration could be simply described
as more of the same. Same venue, same
Highlander representatives arriving, guarding and leaving, same band
playing. A new and even more decorated pavilion
had been designed and erected, elaborating on what had gone before. It was in the Scottish Baronial style, with a
battlemented roof and turrets rising from the four corners. The Royal and Scottish standards flew above
the structure, whose front and sides were covered with juniper. The capitals of the pillars were embossed
with lines of blooming heather and the arches were draped with Royal Stuart
tartan. A large shield bearing the Royal
Arms and above that a crown set in roses, thistles and shamrock embellished the
front, with the words “Welcome back again!” picked out in flowers. The inside of the structure was, as usual, covered
with exotic drapes, provided by James Allan and Company.
The weather was mostly good, which brought in a large crowd,
estimated at 11,000 – 12,000, perhaps 2,000 down on the previous year but still
a large crowd by historical comparison. As
usual, overloaded, horse-drawn vehicles of all kinds, including horse-drawn lorries
fitted with garden seats, laboured out of Ballater up the Craigendarroch brae,
this time under the vigilant eyes of two officers of the Scottish Society for
the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. Again,
the games did not form the centre piece of the attraction, though there had
been some small changes to the rules. Events
which were previously restricted to Society members were now opened to members
of the Lonach Society from Donside too and one heavy athlete of national
standing, George Johnson, competed in the open events, where he was inevitably
successful.
The monarch and her party left as expected at 6.00 pm. “There was a tremendous quantity of people
& a fine gathering of Highlanders. We sat in a very nicely arranged
Pavilion & witnessed the usual games & a great deal of dancing. A number
of people, visitors, neighbours &c, passed by, including the Neumanns
from Invercauld. Had tea in the Pavilion
& left again at 6 …”. The Queen had
enjoyed her day. It would be her last
Braemar Gathering.
The Denoument
The 1900 Gathering was cancelled, in part due to the death of
the Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, Queen Victoria’s second son, from throat
cancer in July of that year. She had
commanded, “No gaieties of any sort”. But the monarch was also distressed by the Second
Boer War. At the July 1900 annual
meeting of the Royal Braemar Highland Society, a message was received from the
Queen expressing her wish that no Gathering be held that year on account of the
great loss of life in South African. The
Society dutifully complied. On 22 January 1901 the Queen too cast off her
mortal coil. Inevitably, at a time of
great national mourning there was no Braemar Gathering that year either. Thus ended Queen Victoria’s long association
with the Braemar Gathering on a subdued note, perhaps not the way she would
have wished it to end, but a visit from the Grim Reaper is not always signalled
in advance.
The Queen and the Braemar Gathering – five phases
Queen Victoria’s
changing attendance at the Braemar Gathering fell into phases, initiated and
defined both by her evolving view of the event and by signal occurrences in
both her official and her personal life.
On entering
upon the newly-acquired Balmoral estate in 1848, the monarch was riding the
then current wave of enthusiasm for all things Highland and she embraced
Highland culture with enthusiasm. The
Braemar Gathering was already well-established, celebrating the gathering of
the clans, the wearing of Highland attire and the admiration of Highland
cultural and sporting activities. Where
the cultural norms in the local towns and villages did not conform with the
idealised view of the Highlands being promoted by the upper classes, the Queen
and Prince Albert commanded changes on their own estates so that their fantasy
world became, as far as possible, reality.
The invention of new tartan patterns, the wearing of the kilt as work
attire and the teaching of the Gaelic language, were all promoted or even
commanded. Thus, her attendance at the
Braemar Gathering was entirely to be expected.
But then
reality began to sink in. The Queen
found the Gathering to be rather tedious, especially the athletic events,
though she did sometimes enjoy the Highland dancing. From the start she limited the duration of
her attendance essentially to a two-hour stint and she did not ever attend the evening
dinner or ball. Still, in the period
1848 to 1857, inclusive, the Queen was present on all occasions, except two. She was doing her bit to promote and sustain
Highland culture and that was seen as an important duty.
The Queen did
not attend the Gathering in1858,1859 or 1861, even though she was in residence
at Balmoral. Further she did not attempt
to justify her absence. Disenchantment
was starting to win over duty.
Prince Albert,
the Prince Consort, died on 14 December 1861 which cast the Queen into a deep
pit of depression and gloom, which continued for several years. In addition to poor mental health Queen
Victoria also suffered from various physical ailments, though there may, on
occasions have been a psycho-somatic reason for her maladies, lurking in the
background. It then became normal for
the monarch to absent herself from attendance at the Gathering. In the period 1862 – 1886 the Braemar Gathering
was held 21 times, but the monarch attended only four times. This period of rare attendance also covered
the years when the Queen was close to her Highland servant John Brown, when
other aspects of her life seemed to be bringing some joy. John Brown’s
premature death in 1883 changed nothing, as the Queen still did not make the
journey up the Dee valley to celebrate Highland history and culture. During this period, the Braemar Gathering became
lack-lustre. There was a deficiency of
commitment from the other local sponsors and, with the monarch’s attendance
being ever uncertain and likely to be cancelled for any excuse, attendance by
the public was modest. The press frequently
quipped at the royal absence or even made snide remarks. Unless something could be changed, the Braemar
Gathering looked destined for terminal decline.
In 1887, the golden
jubilee of Queen Victoria’s accession to the throne, the monarch or, more
likely one of her senior advisers, had the bright idea of bringing the Braemar
Gathering to Balmoral, as part of the official celebration’s of the Queen’s
long reign. It would involve the monarch
in some additional expenditure, a commitment to probable attendance and a
substantial amount of additional work for the estate staff. Whether it was conceived with other aims in
mind is not clear but mounting the Gathering at Balmoral was highly
successful. As a celebration of Highland
games, it was slow and the athletic performances modest but that is not why the
multitude made the journey 50 miles up Deeside. The draw for the crowds at all levels of
society was the grandeur of the Queen’s Highland home, the near-certain
attendance of the monarch and her extended entourage, a full turn-out of kilted,
weaponised Highlanders with pipes skirling and, on the day, fine weather. The Gathering was a spectacular success.
The Queen, re-invigorated
by the cheering crowds at Balmoral, arranged for her grand-daughter Princess Louis
and her newly acquired husband, the Duke of Fife, to have their own day in the
sun, basking in the adulation of the multitude, when she commanded that the
Balmoral Gathering would go to Mar Lodge the following year. Although Mar Lodge was easily the least
convenient venue for the event and despite the confusion which led to the
Farquharson men being absent, this edition of the Gathering, too, was successful. 1890 saw the Gathering return to Balmoral and
more large crowds and the following year, although back on Farquharson land at
Clunie Park, had the benefit of Sir Algernon Borthwick’s expenditure of both
money and enthusiasm. The Braemar
Gathering had returned from the brink.
Between 1893
and 1897, the Gathering was held on four occasions, all on Farquharson
land. Queen Victoria suffered a relapse
of indifference and only managed to be present once. But the old magic returned in 1898 and 1899
with the final two Balmoral iterations.
The Queen and her Highland home really were the magic ingredients which guaranteed
success. It is reasonable to suggest
that Queen Victoria, although perhaps not aiming to revive the fortunes of the
Braemar Gathering and save it from collapse, may well have done just that by
hosting the event repeatedly at Balmoral.
Don Fox
20200411
donaldpfox@gmail.com
Bagpipes were not banned as part of Proscription
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