Great British Railway Journeys (2010) s02e25 Episode Script

Lochailort to Skye

In 1840, one man transformed travel in Britain.
His name was George Bradshaw, and his railway guides inspired the Victorians to take to the tracks.
Stop by stop, he told them where to travel, what to see and where to stay.
Now, 170 years later, I'm making a series of journeys across the length and breadth of the country to see what of Bradshaw's Britain remains.
Still guided by my 19th-century Bradshaw's Handbook, I'm completing my journey through the Scottish Highlands.
Today, I'm on the western extension of the West Highland Line that takes me to Mallaig.
This railway was built at the cost of many lives so that others could enjoy this journey.
And what a stunning journey it is.
This is the line that reaches the places that are unreachable.
And, refreshingly, it's so much more interesting than a journey by car.
It took over 3,000 navvies four years to build this 40-mile stretch of the West Highland Line, and it transformed the local economy.
It was completed at the end of the 19th century, so I've swapped my usual "Bradshaw's" for a later edition to help me trace the legacy of industries that once thrived here.
On this leg of the journey, I'll be discovering how the railways helped to train the first generation of commandos This is wonderful, isn't it? "An agent enters the room and says, 'I have important information.
"' "'An enemy train will pass through Lochailort on its way to Mallaig at 1115 hours today.
That train must be wrecked.
"' visiting a coastal village transformed by the trains into Britain's biggest herring port Did the kippers go out on the train? There wasn't a box of fish landed here that didn't go by train.
Not one.
and crossing the sea to Skye to find out how modern crofters make a living.
(woman) This is a savoury smoked salmon cheesecake.
Hmm! You haven't lived till you've tasted that.
Thank you.
I've been travelling up the west coast of Scotland and through the Highlands, along a spectacular railway that's been voted the most scenic in the world.
I'm now embarked on the final stretch of the route.
From Lochailort, I'll travel to Mallaig where the line ends, before taking a ferry over the sea to Skye.
As I head towards my first stop, I'm passing through scenes that delighted Victorian visitors when the railway opened.
My Bradshaw's Guide gives great descriptions of mountain countryside.
"No sooner is one defile passed over than a second range of hills comes into view which contains another and a strath of uninhabited country.
" In the 19th century, much of this wild landscape was given over to sporting estates.
Many had their own private railway halts for the convenience of wealthy visitors, like Inverailort House, my first destination.
This stunning country brings us to Lochailort, a place which, for many, many years, people have been coming for hunting and shooting.
But in recent history, it attracted a different sort of person altogether.
In 1940, this remote estate was requisitioned to create the first ever school for guerrilla warfare.
With regular forces retreating from German-occupied Europe, it was time to think beyond conventional tactics.
The former hunting lodge, Inverailort House, was a perfect location for an unorthodox experiment in military training, as Stuart Allan, of National Museums Scotland, explains.
- Stuart, hello.
- How do you do? - Why here? - Well, there are a number of reasons.
Principally, the practical reasons are that this type of environment gave everything that was required for that kind of work.
There was tough mountain country for sending trainees out on exercises.
We're close to the sea here, there's a sea loch across from us.
They could practise boat work and landings and so on.
Also, it was remote.
It was out of the way.
This was secret.
The nearby railway was crucial in choosing Inverailort.
Much of the area was accessible only by train, so the military could control who came in and out.
It also allowed a steady stream of raw trainees to travel quickly to this wilderness.
I heard that if you were a new recruit, you might come under live fire when you first arrived.
People have told me that this was one method whereby people were unsettled on arrival.
Charges would go off and they would be harried down here to the camp, which was over there.
Isn't it the case that they wanted to practise blowing up railway lines? This was certainly part of the course.
Demolitions were one big element.
In the exercises, the railway was often a target, as the records show.
This is wonderful, isn't it? "An agent enters the room and says, 'I have important information.
"' "'An enemy train will pass through Lochailort on its way to Mallaig at 1115 hours today.
That train must be wrecked.
"' "'The station is guarded and the railway patrolled, but there are no guards this side of the bridge.
"' "At that, the agent takes off his beard and cloak and proves to be an instructor in disguise.
" - That's fantastic.
- It all sounds a bit unlikely.
I have a sense the instructors were enjoying themselves here.
One of the founders of the school was the powerful Highland landowner Lord Lovat.
He saw that traditional estate skills like deerstalking could be adapted for tracking and attacking enemies.
(Stuart) They were improvising, so they brought civilian stalkers from Lovat's estates here and used these techniques to teach those kind of skills.
The training here included knife fighting and the kind of things that soldiers previously would not necessarily have been expected to do.
It was considered that brutal times required brutal methods.
The whole kind of culture of deerstalking was brought in as a kind of sense of being professional about the job of killing.
The recruits were taught to be on their guard at all times.
Mock combat could erupt anywhere, even inside the house, led by a team of unorthodox instructors.
An officer who trained here told me that the first time he came in here, he was encountered with two men.
Suddenly, they came tumbling down the stairs and emerged in a crouched position ready to kill.
They were retired policeman from Shanghai called Fairbairn and Sykes.
Their speciality was unarmed combat and knife fighting, because Shanghai in the '30s was a pretty dicey place.
Criminal gangs and so on.
People like that were brought in.
Polar explorers, some of whom had been with the Scott in the Antarctic.
Again, quite elderly men, but they had skills which were not normal military skills at that time and they would teach about endurance out in low temperatures, diet, that kind of thing.
So it really was a mixing place of all the talents - that could possibly be required.
- Certainly at the beginning.
There was an enormous freedom from the War Office to just let them get on with it and sort something out.
So they pulled in people they knew and people who knew people and assembled this original team.
It was never quite the same after that.
It all became a bit more regularised, but the elements of field craft, of demolitions, of using the country, teaching small-boat skills, all that stayed and became the basis of what we now still know as commando training.
The approach was radical in its day, but it had support from the highest level.
(Stuart) Churchill always had a sympathy with this kind of special endeavour.
He was interested in its aggressive spirit.
In 1940, when everything is in crisis, we're going to do something which will take the fight to the enemy.
We're not going to sit here and wait.
That's the kind of thinking where this type of enterprise appealed to Churchill and produced complete new structures like the commandos.
- I find it quite a moving place.
- It certainly has an atmosphere.
I'm very stirred by stories of wartime courage and ingenuity.
The idea that young recruits arriving here at Lochailort for special training might be subjected to a mock ambush using live ammunition is amazing.
These are remarkable stories and extraordinary people.
- (woman) Morning.
- Morning.
- This one has more room.
- Thank you.
I'm now on my way to Mallaig on the coast, travelling along some of the last tracks to be laid in Victorian Britain.
The great railway building age coincided with the life of Queen Victoria.
Most of it was done within her reign.
I find it poignant to think that this magnificent railway running through her beloved Scotland was completed in 1901, just as the Queen entered the last months of her life.
The aim of this new railway was to connect the abundant fishing grounds of the west coast with the rest of the country.
The place eventually chosen for the terminus of the line was the tiny hamlet of Mallaig.
"Welcome to Mallaig.
" Mallaig had good reason to welcome the railways, because before the coming of the trains, this was a small village, a collection of cottages.
But with the railway, it was possible to start a large herring fleet and to supply fish through the railway to all parts of Scotland and further south.
The railways were the making of Mallaig.
The line converted what had been a community of just 28 houses into a substantial herring port.
Trains took fish out and brought coal in, enabling Mallaig to employ the newest steamships to boost the catch.
Beside the station, smoking sheds sprang up to turn the herring into kippers.
I'm taking a tour of the docks with Elliot Ironside, whose family once depended on the herring trade.
So your mother was a kipper girl, Elliot? Yes, she was.
She certainly was.
I remember well going down to watch her kippering.
One of the last memories was of all the women singing.
- They sang.
A lot of hymns they sang.
- Did they? Sang and worked all day long.
In the height of the herring season, local kipper girls like Elliot's mother were joined by itinerant labour who used the railways to follow the herring around the coast.
Did the kippers go out on the train? (Elliot) There wasn't a box of fish landed here that didn't go by train.
Not one box.
The women had to get up early, five o'clock in the morning, pack the kippers into special boxes, then they were loaded into vans and away they went attached to the 7:45 passenger train in the morning.
From 1948, Elliot himself worked on the railways, which carried smoked kippers and fresh herring.
If there was just very light fishing, they used to attach vans to the back of the passenger trains, maybe five, six, up to ten vans.
But when the fishing was heavier, they ran special trains.
Fish specials made up entirely of fish.
The herring trade continued to boom.
By the '60s, Mallaig was the biggest herring port in Europe.
But that wasn't to last.
Years of overfishing took their toll and in 1977 a ban on catching herring was imposed.
The fish trains became a thing of the past.
Does it make you sad to see the station not what it once was? Sometimes, yes.
To work on the railway was hard work at times, but I enjoyed working on it.
It was great.
The calibre of guys that you worked with, fantastic men.
The old drivers were really something else.
Luckily for Mallaig, that wasn't the end of fishing.
These days, the town is famed for langoustine.
I'm going out on one of the langoustine boats that fishes around Mallaig with Duncan MacKellick and his crew.
Very good to see you.
Hi, guys.
Pleasure.
How are you doing? Every day, they put out to sea to check what they've caught in their traditional cages, or creels.
Langoustines thrive on the muddy beds of the nearby sea lochs.
They're also known as Norwegian lobster or Dublin Bay prawns.
Their tails are made into scampi.
You're sorting them into different sizes? Different sizes, yes.
We've got large, medium and small.
Just three grades.
Isn't that a beauty? I guess that could give you quite a nasty nip.
- Yes.
- Even through your rubber gloves.
Right through the rubber gloves.
Right to the bone.
- So you need to take care.
- Yeah.
- Do you get bitten quite often? - Yes.
Too often.
Don't like it.
It's one of these things you never get used to.
Very painful.
Today, a third of the world's langoustines are landed in Scotland, worth nearly £100 million a year.
But they haven't always been so highly prized.
They used to shovel them over the side, get rid of them in the trawlers when they were after fish.
They were just a nuisance.
- Because there was no market? - No market for them, no.
But it's fairly changed.
Just as the railways transformed the herring trade here, air freight has made langoustines profitable for fishermen like Duncan.
These will be packed tonight and then they'll be boxed, the temperature is lowered.
Then they'll be live in the market in Barcelona tomorrow.
That's where we get really good money for them.
Does anybody eat them here in Scotland? Not so much, no.
Some of the tails, they do.
But it's a very limited market.
With these, when they go to Spain, they're just sold straightaway.
They just can't get enough of them.
That's funny.
I'd be very happy to eat them here in Scotland.
I'd be a lot happier if more people did eat them.
That would be better.
(Michael) How many langoustine will you pick up in a day? Any idea? It sort of varies between sort of 18 to 30 stone thereabouts.
- 18 to 30 stone? - Yeah.
You still use old money.
But, yeah.
Sounds like an awful lot.
- They don't weigh very much, do they? - No.
The fisheries work hard to ensure that langoustines remain sustainable.
By using these traditional creels, they can return young or pregnant langoustines to the sea.
But the cages do entice other sea creatures.
You've got a nice octopus there.
He's really got a hold on you, hasn't he? - A lot of suction.
- It's amazing how they change colour.
If you put them on the white, he'll turn white.
Or if he's threatened, he'll turn red.
(Michael) Look at the change.
- He's having a go at your langoustine.
- They're a bit of a blight for us.
They go into the creel and they eat everything in the creel.
- They get there first before you.
- Yeah.
So you get lots of empty shells.
Hopefully we won't see him again.
Bradshaw would certainly have written about the success of the new langoustine industry.
He loved to trumpet the good and had a habit of not mentioning the bad, like the appalling midges here that blight Highland holidaying.
Even Queen Victoria in her diaries complained of being bitten.
I'm anxious to avoid that royal fate.
Hi.
Have you been holidaying in the Highlands? We just arrived yesterday in the rain.
Ah.
Have you not experienced the midges yet? A few.
We've got some spray-on just to try and keep them away.
Have you thought of wearing a net? I think that's a bit over the top.
It's not that bad.
- You've just arrived, haven't you? - Yeah.
Is that famous last words? At the end of your holiday, I'll ask whether you should have brought a net.
Good luck.
- Are you on holiday in Scotland? - Yes.
Have you had any trouble with the midges? No.
Luckily, they leave me alone but they love my husband.
- They love your husband? - Yes.
- Do you mean they eat him? - Alive.
Eat him alive.
Why don't they touch you, do you think? I don't know.
I eat lots of garlic.
It could be the diet.
I eat lots of herbs, garlic.
Natural, organic food.
He loves his fish and chips and he loves cooked breakfasts.
I don't know.
So you think maybe midges like fish and chips and don't like garlic? That's the best tip I've heard.
I've heard you've got to put creams on your body, wear a net, but you've given me the answer now.
Eat garlic.
Well, maybe that's a repellent too far.
Now I'm leaving Mallaig to cross the water to Skye, my final destination on this journey.
By the time my guidebook was written, this island was no longer the preserve of hardy climbers and was attracting a range of visitors who toured the Highlands by rail.
My Bradshaw's Guide says of Skye, "The coast is broken up into several wild bays, some edged by cliffs 400 feet and 700 feet high.
" He says, "It's an island nearly 50 miles long, separated by the Channel or Sound of Sleat, only half a mile broad at the narrowest point.
" I think there's a hint there, a gleam in the Victorian eye, the possibility of a rail bridge linking Skye.
But that was never built.
The first bridge constructed was at the end of the 20th century, a road bridge.
So the island of Skye had to get by without the advantages of Mallaig, without the advantages of being linked by rail to the rest of the United Kingdom.
There were and are no trains on Skye.
But "Bradshaw's" tells readers arriving by steamer where best to admire the island's rugged beauty.
My guide describes its wild and lonely inlets and steep, dark mountains, but says little about the island's people.
And perhaps that's not surprising.
In the decades before my guidebook was published, Skye's population had plummeted during what was known as the Highland clearances.
I'm meeting historian John Norman MacLeod at the ruined village of Leitir Fura to find out more.
We've obviously met in a desolate village.
The Highland clearances, what were they? The term Highland clearances refers to a process in history from about 1750 to 1880 when the people were removed from their ancestral homes.
(Michael) Some of these clearances were violent.
(John) Yes.
In some areas, houses were obviously burned, their walls were knocked down, trees were planted within the ruined steadings to stop people coming back.
This ruthless policy was carried out by Highland landlords and their agents.
Short of money, they decided that sheep farming offered the best option.
Large sheep farms were introduced around the 1780s to the Highlands.
The best land was given over to the sheep farm.
The people were moved to the less profitable, less fertile areas.
People across the Highlands were forced onto small, barely fertile patches of land known as crofts, while others were left with no choice but to move to the cities or emigrate.
Emigration ships came in and took the people away.
There were two instances in particular in 1837 and also in 1853 when the people from Glengarry were taken overseas to Canada.
What were the conditions like on those ships? Atrocious.
There was overcrowding, there was obviously disease, typhoid, people regarded them as the coffin ships.
The conditions were worse than on slave ships, in many ways.
It's thought hundreds of thousands left the Highlands and Islands.
Life for those who stayed was hard.
Farming a tiny croft was barely sustainable and the crofters lived under the constant threat of eviction.
What strikes me is that this goes on way into the Victorian era.
The Victorians were social reformers, they abolished slavery.
Did they turn a blind eye to the Highlands? The Highlands were very much isolated.
Certainly, they weren't very much on the conscience of the nation at the time.
But in later years, certainly, more was written about the Highlands.
There were journalists arriving and giving accounts of actual clearances as well.
In the 1880s, the crofters began to fight back with rent strikes and protests.
In 1886, they won legal rights to their land.
With public attention drawn to their plight, there were calls for better transport to boost the economy an argument that helped to get the West Highland Line built.
What's the story today? The story today is that the Skye population is increasing.
In 1971, I think there were about 7,000 people.
Now we're talking about over 10,000 people in Skye and in this area alone the population has doubled in the last In Sleat, the population has doubled in the last 30 years.
So it is an area which has certainly regenerated.
These days people are migrating to Skye, lured by the prospect of a slower pace of life.
Traditional crofting is still protected.
Although it's not easy, it appeals to some, like Kenny and Angela Scott.
- Hello, Michael.
- Good to see you.
- Kenny, hello.
- How you doing? Angela, what brought you here? You're an American.
Yes, I am.
I'm born and bred in Brooklyn, New York.
- Brooklyn? - Yes.
Far from home.
But this is home now.
Why? What made you make the change? Well, 16 years ago, I came over on a holiday and I just fell in love with Scotland.
I felt so relaxed.
I had a high-pressure lifestyle.
I was an attorney in New York.
And I just really felt all the pressures sort of slide away and I thought, "This is where I need to live.
" I've never looked back.
15 years and it's the best thing I ever did.
What does it mean nowadays to be a crofter? Basically, it's much the same as it used to be, which is subsistence farming, small-scale subsistence farming.
As I look around, I guess this is what you do.
I see sheep, I see an awful lot of hens.
- What else do you do? - (Kenny) We grow a few potatoes.
We're planning for a polytunnel so we can grow more of our own vegetables and hopefully sell a bit of surplus in a farm shop sort of setting, as well.
- (Michael) You have a smokehouse.
- Yes.
What do you smoke in there? We smoke venison, which is usually local, wild venison.
We smoke salmon, a variety of cheeses, and nuts and a few other bits and pieces as they come to us.
- Mackerel, kippers, things like that.
- You've got me salivating.
Things have moved on since Bradshaw's time.
Now, some crofters manage to go beyond subsistence farming.
Kenny and Angela's smokehouse is a profitable small business.
Where is your lovely salmon from? (Kenny) This is Wester Ross salmon.
Basically, it's Freedom Food salmon where they've got more room in the cages.
And Pop that in that brine now.
(Michael) So, you put the salmon in the brine.
What happens next? Basically, we leave this in here to brine for a certain period of time.
Then it goes into the other fridge there to dry off before it goes into the smoker.
The secret is controlling the temperature.
The smoke is cooled to below 30 degrees before it's piped into the smoker.
This is really business in miniature, isn't it? - (Kenny) It is indeed.
- Tiny little smoker.
Look at that! - (Kenny) Finished article.
- That looks absolutely fabulous.
Kenny and Angela sell their smoked products across the United Kingdom.
- So, Angela, you're the slicer.
- I am indeed.
I usually trim off all the edges first so that it's not too tough or too smoky.
And then we just take a long slice like that.
And there we go.
- (Michael) Please.
- There you go.
Thank you very much.
Look at that.
- Marvellous.
- Thank you.
We do our best.
The salmon is superb, and Angela has also brought a little bit of Brooklyn to the Highlands.
- You can't be serious? - Made with our smoked cream cheese.
A savoury smoked salmon cheesecake with smoked cheese.
Hmm! You haven't lived till you've tasted that.
- Thank you.
- That's fantastic! As my journey up Scotland's west coast draws to an end, it strikes me that the advent of the railways started a process that continues to this day.
Successive technological advances from trains to aeroplanes to the internet have done no harm to these starkly beautiful places, but they've made them less remote.
This journey has been different from my others.
I haven't just been jumping on and off trains following my Bradshaw's Guide.
I've been absorbed by the story of the extraordinary West Highland Railway Line threading its way through wild terrain, connecting tiny but vibrant communities.
And following it has introduced me to some dark history of battles and Highland clearances.
But thanks to that magnificent achievement of Victorian engineering, the sumptuous beauty of Scotland is open to any one of us for the price of a train ticket.

Previous EpisodeNext Episode