Logo: small map of Scotland
Link to Local Information and Links, Maps, Contacts & Tourist Advice
Link to detailed map from MultiMap: Launches Popup Window








The Sutherland Arms Hotel
The Sutherland Arms Hotel

The story of Golspie is in large measure the story of the Dukes of Sutherland and their predecessors. The 100ft statue (counting the plinth) on top of Beinn a' Bhragaidh just west of Golspie is of the 1st Duke of Sutherland. It was erected in 1834, a year after his death, by "a mourning and grateful tenantry" to "a judicious, kind and liberal landlord".

St Andrew's Church of Scotland
St Andrew's Church of Scotland
Evergreen Cottage
Evergreen Cottage
Dunfermline Building Society
Dunfermline Building Society
Caberfeidh Hotel
Caberfeidh Hotel
Golspie Main Street
Golspie Main Street

At the start of the 1800s the Sutherland estates of the Countess of Sutherland and her husband, the Marquess of Stafford (later to become the Duke and Duchess of Sutherland), amounted to some 1.5 million acres and formed the biggest private estate in Europe, extending inland to Lairg and beyond. The discovery that more money could be made from the land if it was grazed by sheep than from the rents of the crofters led to what some have described as "agricultural improvements".

Golspie's Beach
Golspie's Beach
...And Pier
...And Pier
Duke of Sutherland's Statue
Duke of Sutherland's Statue
Ben Bhraggie Hotel
Ben Bhraggie Hotel

These "improvements" meant the forcible and sometimes brutal removal of up to 15,000 people from the Sutherland estates to make room for the sheep mostly by the estate factor, Patrick Sellar. In terms of numbers this is not far short of the combined population of Wick and Thurso today. Some displaced people were resettled in coastal communities to take advantage of the herring boom. More were shipped abroad: many to North America where they in turn helped displace the Native Americans.

The Clearances fundamentally changed the landscape of much of northern Scotland. The pepper-potting of tiny settlements was simply swept away, leaving occasional ruins in the largely deserted countryside you see today inland from the east coast.

So there's a certain irony in the wording on the plinth. Perhaps those who remained felt grateful they had not been burned out of their houses and forced into a boat bound for distant lands. Today, local feelings still run high. Some local residents would happily destroy the monument, scattering its remains over the hillside, or relocate it to the grounds of Dunrobin Castle. Others feel the monument should remain: not to glorify a "kind and liberal landlord" but to ensure this dark passage of local history is never forgotten.

It is not just the monument that reminds you of the Sutherlands in Golspie. Just a mile to the north is the magnificent and extravagant Dunrobin Castle, their ancestral home. A castle was built here in about 1225, and parts still remain within the later additions. Most of today's fairy tale castle dates back to 1840 when it was extensively remodelled by Sir Charles Barry, designer of the House of Commons. Dunrobin Castle is open to the public during the summer months, and offers visitors the chance to see a few of the 189 furnished rooms in the castle, plus the formal gardens and a museum.

Elsewhere in Golspie you are treated to some excellent buildings. The extremely attractive Sutherland Arms can be found on the main road leading north out of the village; and this end of the village is also home to a number of fine cottages and a very nice church. St Andrew's Church of Scotland was largely built in 1737, on the site of a series of earlier churches dating back to medieval times.

The main centre of Golspie is more functional in tone, but provides a wide range of shops, facilities and leisure opportunities. These include a swimming pool for those days when the excellent beaches are weather-bound.

Golspie also offers a nice little harbour, with a pier extending out into the Dornoch Firth between the beaches. And when you've walked the length of the pier and turn back to face the village, you are confronted with history once more: because wherever you go in Golspie there's no getting away from the 100ft Duke on top of his 1300ft hill.

Top of Page Top of Page