Kinloch Rannoch

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Reference WMO/182568

Address:

Eastern End of Loch Rannoch

Bunrannoch Place

Kinloch Rannoch

Scotland

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Type: Freestanding
Location: External
Setting: Roadside
Description: Cairn
Materials:
  • Stone Granite
Lettering: Inscribed on a plaque
Conflicts:
  • First World War (1914-1918)
  • Second World War (1939-1945)
About the memorial: The cairn is about half a mile south of the village. Almost as soon as the guns on the Western Front fell silent, thoughts turned to a way that the sacrifice of the fallen could be honoured. The Cenotaph in London, begun in 1919 and completed in 1920 became the focus of the Remembrance Day Service which honoured the unknown soldier. Across the country villages and towns wished to honour their own fallen, and usually with money raised from public subscription, small and large monuments were erected. Rannoch however did not raise its own memorial until 1930. The Duke of Atholl explained at the unveiling ceremony that took place on a September Sunday, that the delay was occasioned by the uncertainty as to whether the site would be affected by work on the Grampian Electricity Scheme which, originally, the heightening of Loch Rannoch was contemplatedi.  The design, it is said, is based on a tradition among the Clans where departing Clansmen would leave stones piled in a prominent place. On their return they would collect their stone, those that were left behind remained in place to honour the fallen. The cairn is made of stones taken from the shore of Loch Rannoch and stands around 30 foot high. The first top stone dressed in granite, honours those men of the Parish of Rannoch and the surrounding areas who fell in The Great War. The lower granite stone commemorates those who fell in the Second World War. This is not the only memorial in Rannoch, the fallen are remembered on a stone in Rannoch Church and the Kirk at Bridge of Gaur. The unveiling ceremony attracted a gathering of close on a thousand people, many of whom had come a considerable distance to take part in the historic event. Shortly before three o’clock, the Kinloch Rannoch Pipe Band, under Pipe-Major M’Master, led a lengthy procession from the village to the memorial, occasional glimpses of sunshine breaking through dark clouds overhead in the peace of a perfect autumn afternoon being symbolic of the aftermath of the world war. At the memorial there were paraded the district ex-service men, brethren of the recently formed Masonic Lodge Schiehallion in front of the large concourse of general public. Captain BV Wentworth of Dall, presided at the dedication service, which was in keeping with the simplicity of the memorial. The service opened with a prayer by the Rev. R. Walker, of St. Luke’s Church, and the singing of the peculiarly appropriate 124th psalm, “I to the hill will lift mine eyes”, and portions from the Old and New Testaments were read by the Rev. W. Scott of the Episcopal Church, and the Rev. W. Dunlop, Braes of Rannoch. The prayer and dedication was given by the Rev. A. Muirhead of Old Rannoch Church, after which Mrs Stewart of Bunrannoch, unveiled the memorial by withdrawing the Union Jack which had covered the names of the 27 enumerated on the tablet. A “lament” was played by Pipe-Major M’Master, and a two minutes’ silence observed, rendered doubly impressive by the entire absence of any sound save the soft lapping of the waters of Loch Rannoch on the shingled shore only a short distance from the hushed scene. In his address, the Duke of Atholl, Lord-Lieutenant of Perthshire, stated that “No situation could have been more happily chosen, looking as it did up a great glen laved with the waters of Loch Rannoch, perhaps one of the most beautiful views in all Scotland - a view which every one of those names they commemorate must have seen and loved, and often dreamed of in the long weary days and nights across the seas”. “That the cairn should be composed of stones from the edge of the loch is one of those happy thoughts so Celtic in character and understanding, which form an indissoluble link between those who are here, and those who have passed over, for your thought in building it has been most of all for what they would have liked.” “We commemorate the names of the 27 men who came forward at the time of their country’s need, and who never came back to the land they loved, but even more than their names, this cairn will stand for many years commemorative of that spirit of sacrifice, duty, and honour which was given to practically every man and woman in this country at the supreme moment of national existence and national need.” “When you pass this monument, rather than the sense of sadness, you will feel one of pride that it was given to you to be of same kith and kin as those whose spirits surround it.” “Rannoch has never shown itself wanting in bravery and in service, and it is not surprising that the district which was the cradle of men like Gen. George Duncan Robertson of Struan, General Sir Duncan M’Gregor of Learan, and the MacDonalds of Dalchosnie should be the home of men of the type who served in the Great War”. The National Anthem was sung after which “The Last Post” was sounded by Bugler Andrew Watson of The Black Watch, Perth, the clear notes peeling out impressively in the tense silence that prevailed. Many beautiful wreaths were reverently placed at the base of the memorial, these including tributes from the ex-service men, the Pipe Band, and relatives of the fallen.
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