A recent announcement by the Ministry of Defence has indicated that
nine sites in Scotland used by the Army, Royal Navy, Royal Air Force,
Defence Equipment & Support and the Defence Infrastructure
Organisation are to be disposed of over the next few years as part of a
nationwide reduction of fifty six MoD bases. In some cases the
announcement was expected as earlier strategic reviews had already
proposed the closure of some of these properties as being surplus to
requirements and no longer fit for purpose for 21st Century armed
forces. Fort George is Georgian, Glencorse Barracks is Victorian and
Redford Barracks is Edwardian.
Forthside and Meadowforth sites in Stirling |
Recent strategic reviews and
reductions of our armed forces have left a large MoD estate with not
enough units to fill them. This has happened many times in the past.
The Royal Navy no longer has a presence at places like Invergordon, Port
Edgar or The Royal Elizabeth Yard. When the Queen Elizabeth aircraft
carriers are built and leave Rosyth for Portsmouth their crews go with
them and MoD Caledonia will move to Edinburgh. Over the past fifty years
barracks have been sold off and redeveloped in Inverness, Perth,
Aberdeen, Ayr, Glasgow and Hamilton as the Army has shrunk. That’s not
even taking into consideration all the drill halls across the country
which have disappeared as the TA became the TAVR and then Army Reserves. Two RAF
air bases in Scotland have recently been converted to army barracks
when their aircraft departed - Kinloss and Leuchars, although some
non-flying RAF units remain on the bases as lodger units alongside the
army. Former RAF bases in Scotland now host museums, racetracks, car boot
sales and annual music festivals.
There are currently
four infantry barracks in Scotland – Fort George dominates the Moray
Firth and the other three are all part of the Edinburgh Garrison - Redford, Glencorse, and Dreghorn.
This announcement leaves only Dreghorn by 2032. So the question is not
so much what happens to the buildings and land but what happens to the
units occupying them?
Fort George |
It
should be remembered that only five years ago Dreghorn was also to go
along with Redford and Glencorse and a super-barracks was to be built at
Kirknewton airfield. That plan was scrapped two years later under a
further review when the army left Germany. Dreghorn has been reprieved
this time round and is unlikely to be disposed of any time soon. Who is
to say that in five, ten or fifteen years time another strategic review
will see a requirement for units to continue to be based in Glencorse or
Fort George? With continued fighting in the Middle East, a new occupant
in the White House - and an old-school one in the Kremlin - who knows
what future defence reviews will bring?
On a less
contentious note, something else which is of particular interest to us
in the Scottish Military Research Group is the war memorials currently
in the barracks. Fort George is currently shared with Historic
Environment Scotland and no doubt they will take ownership from the MoD
when the army eventually moves out. We’ve sixteen years to find out what
the Scottish Government will do with the site but it’s likely the
Seaforth Highlanders’ memorials will remain. But what happens to the
regimental memorials at Glencorse and Redford? Based on previous barrack
sales, these estates will probably be redeveloped into housing and it
is unlikely the memorials will remain. Perhaps they will relocate to
Dreghorn or the Castle. We’ll certainly be keeping a close eye on what
happens to them.
These are the sites being disposed of and what is happening to the current occupants:
(Click on the table to make it larger)