HIGHLAND CLEARANCES, HENRY DUNDAS, AND THE SCOTTISH SLAVE TRADE: Oh, and the Duke of Sutherland

In HIGHLAND CLEARANCES, HENRY DUNDAS, AND THE SCOTTISH SLAVE TRADE: And the Duke of Sutherland Scottish history tour guides Bruce Fummey links three of the tales from Scotlands History that are too often obscured. At the time of filming we are in the middle of a discussion of Black Lives Matter #BLM. The debate about racial justice has often focused on controversial statues, Henry Dundas the most prominent. The Scottish slave trade is almost forgotten in our consciousness, but the Highland clearances remain.
Even Robert the Bruce has been bizarrely brought into the recent statue debate. I hope this video provides a broad context
Three ways to help Scotland History Tours video productions at www.scotlandhistorytours.co.u...
Here's a video explaining the three ways to help me make more videos • Crowdfunding Options t...
If you enjoy the Scotland History Tours videos then you can help support on a one off or regular basis by making a donation at Buy Me a Coffee Just click the link
www.buymeacoffee.com/Scottish...
Drone pilots were Liam McNamara
and Alan Stewart / @scottish-m3
Thanks to Rob Gibson for the photograph of The Duke of Sutherland.
Scotland History Tours is here for people who want to learn about Scottish history and get ideas for Scottish history tours. I try to make videos which tell you tales from Scotland's past and give you information about key dates in Scottish history and historical places to visit in Scotland. Not all videos are tales from Scotland's history, some of them are about men from Scotland's past or women from Scotland's past. Basically the people who made Scotland. From April 2020 onward I've tried to give ideas for historic days out in Scotland. Essentially these are days out in Scotland for adults who are interested in historical places to visit in Scotland.
As one of Scotland history tour guides people ask: Help me plan a Scottish holiday, or help me plan a Scottish vacation of your from the US. So from April 2020 I've tried to give a bit of history, but some places of interest in Scotland as well.

Пікірлер: 718

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours
    @ScotlandHistoryTours3 жыл бұрын

    Here are three ways you can help me make more video productions. Just click the link www.scotlandhistorytours.co.uk/support

  • @julianshepherd2038

    @julianshepherd2038

    3 жыл бұрын

    Isn't English a Germanic language not Latin ?

  • @julianshepherd2038

    @julianshepherd2038

    3 жыл бұрын

    Also could you mention the enclosures acts that cleared the English off common land in England.? They might use race as an excuse but it's about power, money and class. Oh and the transition from feudalism to capitalism. I really liked the video but a 13 part series would suit me better. L we get on BBC Scotland is that failed archeology guy. Kneel Oliver.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    🥱🥱😴

  • @buccaneersfan7948

    @buccaneersfan7948

    2 жыл бұрын

    You're right. All Lives Matter. No one deserves to be a slave. God created us all equal. Keep exposing the truth bud 👍.

  • @mitchelljm1617

    @mitchelljm1617

    Жыл бұрын

    Mate you are brilliant!

  • @janecooper3142
    @janecooper31423 жыл бұрын

    It needs adding - the Highland crofters that were 'cleared' out had their own sheep. Little, primitive, short-tailed sheep that they'd been farming back in AD83 and for thousands of years since then. Those little sheep were also cleared out with their croft owners and replaced with larger, white, longtailed sheep that had been introduced into Britain by the Romans. Those little sheep had provided the essential wool for clothing, bedding & more (Viking sails were made of wool), plus milk for cheese that could be stored over the winter as well as meat from older animals. The crofters only had tiny flocks and they were brought into sheepfolds by the croft house at night for protection. Without their little dunface sheep the crofters would have struggled to survive in the Highlands. Next time you rightly talk about the 'English' sheep driving out the crofters, please don't forget that the little dunface sheep were also driven out. The Scottish Dunface or Tanface sheep were thought to have been driven to extinction, but a few survived on St Kilda, and when that population was 'evacuated' with most of their sheep being sold to finance the evacuation, a tiny feral flock was left behind on Boreray island.

  • @shesaknitter

    @shesaknitter

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for this additional information. Fascinating!

  • @earlofmar7987

    @earlofmar7987

    3 жыл бұрын

    That was interesting. Are you a historian or in animal husbandry?

  • @leighgreendog9543

    @leighgreendog9543

    3 жыл бұрын

    And so an inner suburb exists at Melbourne Oz. Settled by those lucky to survive. Nay sheep sadly

  • @gustavmeyrink_2.0

    @gustavmeyrink_2.0

    3 жыл бұрын

    Those perfidious Romans and their large livestock! I am Friesian and we too had a run in with the Romans due to livestock size. At some point the Romans made it to Friesia and we negotiated a kind of tax to avoid war. The tax was a certain number of cowhides because the Roman Empire ran on leather ie they used for everything from sandals via uniforms to straps which held their siege machines together. So when a year later they returned to collect their hides they said our cattle and therefore the hides were too small and demanded 3x as many. That was too much for my ancestors to bear so war it was. There were two battles. The Romans lost the first and we crucified 900 of them. The Romans also lost the 2nd but instead of risking crucifixion 2500 Roman soldiers committed suicide (not long before the Romans had crucified 6000 survivors from Spartacus' revolt, a story well known throughout Europe). As Julius Caesar once remarked 'you cannot subdue the Friesians because they have no kings' and indeed Archeology has shown that there was no difference in status or wealth in Friesian society until christianity came along. The last Friesians converted in the 11th century. The historical upshot of all this is (and in a large part thanks to the geography of Friesia) Feudalism never took hold there as it did in the rest of Europe except Scandinavia.

  • @earlofmar7987

    @earlofmar7987

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@gustavmeyrink_2.0 Thank you for that information. I didn't know any of this. I like learning these bits & pieces of history. I think it's so important to see how our world was shaped.

  • @MackofDuart
    @MackofDuart8 ай бұрын

    Very moving my Scottish Brother. I write from the West Coast of the USA. I am here because of the Clearances so long ago. I would like to think that the success of the Scots in this country is a bit of a middle finger to those oppressors of that time. We are still here, still upright and doing well.

  • @francessocha6143
    @francessocha61432 жыл бұрын

    As a young teacher in the mid sixties I was told I was not allowed to teach the Highland Clearances. We need to leave these statues where they are but make sure folk know why. As ever greed, self -aggrandisement and self interest rule. We need to learn. “Haud ga’en” Bruce.

  • @dinkster1729

    @dinkster1729

    21 күн бұрын

    Where was this that you were not allowed to teach about the clearances? Some history in Canada is passed over, too. But since so many of our Scottish ancestors came because of the clearances, we know about it. Maybe, our parents teach us about it or our grandparents?

  • @francessocha6143

    @francessocha6143

    21 күн бұрын

    @@dinkster1729 This was in the county of Angus, NE Scotland, in the Northlinks Primary School which no longer exists in Montrose. The directive came from above, I hasten to add, not the Head Teacher who was ex-army and all for telling things as they were. He was a very good “Headie”. I’m long retired so have no idea if things have changed but I do know none of my grandkids, 29 to 16, studied the Highland Clearances .

  • @dinkster1729

    @dinkster1729

    20 күн бұрын

    @@francessocha6143 A lot of the bitter-sweet immigrant experience is reflected in this American German folk song from Pennsylvania: kzread.info/dash/bejne/iJyCrdCofLCxidI.html People who did better in their New World than they would ever have done in their former home would have an up and at 'em attitude. The Oscar Brand version uses the illiterate English version, "I come" rather than the standard "I came" form that Pete Seeger uses.

  • @dinkster1729

    @dinkster1729

    20 күн бұрын

    @@francessocha6143 Maybe, Scotland or U.K. authorities are ashamed to talk about it, right? The British probably don't talk about the Potato Famine in Ireland either and what they did about it. I did my practise teaching round in Essex, England. Most of my fellow students were of Irish descent and some of them were planning to go to Ireland after our month in England in 1973. I was shocked by how against the Irish the British were. "Oh, you don't want to go there! they said, "The Irish are so uncivilized." Lord knows what they think of the Scots.

  • @francessocha6143

    @francessocha6143

    20 күн бұрын

    @@dinkster1729 Did you not know? The men all have ginger hair, beards, wear kilts and spend most of their time drunk going round hills shooting haggis. They just don’t mention the women 😂. That’s a bit harsh, the northerners are fine, they are looked on as much the same as the Scots, a slightly lower form of life than the southerners 🙄. I know how the Irish feel. My maiden name may be Donald but I have Irish catholic on one side and Irish Protestant on the other both a couple of generations back. There are problems both sides but it would be nice if we could all follow “ tell the truth and shame the devil”. Historical truth is important. Maybe if governments world wide followed that we wouldn’t be in the mess we’re in today.

  • @jamescoughlan8193
    @jamescoughlan81932 жыл бұрын

    All school kids should be taken to these statues and be told the truth, serves a much better function than tearing them down to be forgotten

  • @dinkster1729

    @dinkster1729

    21 күн бұрын

    Maybe, their descendants with a great deal of power and money would object to that.

  • @abj777
    @abj7773 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this history! As a Black American who finds the Dundas clan on my family tree , this is one cool lesson!

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'm not entirely sure he was one of the good guys

  • @lolatyou

    @lolatyou

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ScotlandHistoryTours can any of us say we are 100% good guys?

  • @charlesgreaves3293

    @charlesgreaves3293

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lolatyou Amen, all we do is walk forward as best we know and do no harm.

  • @bravodelta6193

    @bravodelta6193

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lolatyou Very true brother , good and bad in everyone at some point and time

  • @stevenwheeler5324

    @stevenwheeler5324

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's a half lesson.. Henry Dundas ended slavery in Scotland.also Canada.he fought for Irish soldiers pensions.he also fought for Catholic emancipation.he also got sailor's wife's money when their husbands had been pressed ganged. He completely changed and improved the royal navy to be the greatest navy ever. Was first ever War minister.he wrote pitts India policy for ending the tyranny of the East India company. Endlessly promoted scots to high positions.. his story is complex for sure and he has always been the villain of the empire.

  • @muleepete8
    @muleepete82 жыл бұрын

    As a 66 year old retired US Navy man, a member of the Clan MacMillan and a member if of the human race, it was finding these videos and the host who is so honest and eloquent in his presentations that I have found someone with whom I feel a deeper kinship than even my brothers at arms. Bruce, you are a refreshing and enlightened voice who tells great stories without prejudice. You are a wonder to listen to. Thank you for your lessons in Scots history and moral perspective. May I call you Friend?

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ah you've brought a tear to a middle aged fat man's eye

  • @junestewart5098
    @junestewart50983 жыл бұрын

    Well done and I would like to think most people feel the same. We Scots have a long and varied history which, as you so rightly say, must be exposed and accepted for the age in which it had happened. We should move on from learning these very lessons but often we end up repeating them. Brilliant video Bruce 💕.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    I doff my cap to you ma'am

  • @sapien82

    @sapien82

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think our national anthem sums it up with the line "and in the past, they must remain" this applies to all of Scotland's brutal and disturbing past and our age of tyranny and oppression and warfare and fear. Lets us not forget it, but look to the past so we don't fail in the future.

  • @tbwpiper189
    @tbwpiper1893 жыл бұрын

    I'm a white man in his sixties, Irish by descent, and heard the stories of the Irish being starved off of their land. I am aware of such tragedy but allow it not to impede my forward momentum into the future. While history is important, the future is equally and critically so. They're the two halves of the human scale. But never must one outweigh the other, lest the imbalance turn over the entire structure. Slavery was, is, and always will be the scourge of mankind, no matter the colour or race of the perpetrators and their victims. As you said, ALL LIVES MATTER. Once that is understood the scales of humanity will again be leveled. This was an excellent video and touched home the lives of all who love the peoples of the world.

  • @harlandeke

    @harlandeke

    2 жыл бұрын

    Beautifully said

  • @okiejammer2736
    @okiejammer27363 жыл бұрын

    Wow. Sigh. Shaking my head. Just ... Wow. I watched this more than once. This video needs to be required viewing for students in middle and high school classrooms - everywhere.

  • @monicalynnjames
    @monicalynnjames3 жыл бұрын

    A truly beautiful tribute to the complex history of the highlands, thank you so much for your work to tell the whole story!

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    You are so kind. Thank you. You may also enjoy these kzread.info/dash/bejne/eIVtlMGdY9iZgaQ.html

  • @mysteryhombre81
    @mysteryhombre812 жыл бұрын

    This is one of the most hauntingly poetic videos I've ever seen, your words and atmosphere took me back to that time.

  • @seanryan5005
    @seanryan50053 жыл бұрын

    Profoundly touched by your voice. Thank you!

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    You're very kind. Thank you

  • @dreichoutdoors5274
    @dreichoutdoors52743 жыл бұрын

    I clicked on your video and wondered how you would be able to do that story justice in just 10 minutes. I'm very pleased to say that you did it incredibly well. I just wish that story was better known and taught within our education system. I remember taking my 11yo daughter to see the remains of one of the cleared township here in Argyll, she struggled to comprehend the inhumanity of what had happened there. It was gutting to have to tell her how the highlands are littered with such villages. My own ancestors were amongst those cleared from their land and relocated to Brora as part of the Sutherlands' clearances, only for my great grandmother to find herself employed as a lady in waiting at Dunrobin Castle in the very early 1900's.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Man's inhumanity eh? Takes many forms

  • @alexandria8743
    @alexandria87433 жыл бұрын

    fucking yes i found a mad guy w dreads to explain my history

  • @sallycosten4539
    @sallycosten45393 жыл бұрын

    My God, that rocked me to my socks! Thank you once again Bruce.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Funny, I've never heard my wife say that

  • @marianfrances4959

    @marianfrances4959

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ScotlandHistoryTours LOL! It was great! 👍😎🇨🇦🌲

  • @diarmuidmacgiollaruaidh8936
    @diarmuidmacgiollaruaidh89362 жыл бұрын

    "Briseann an dúchas tri suile an cait" (nature breaks through the eyes of a cat - an old gaeilic proverb). The words you use to describe history are incredibly beautiful - "nobody wants to be separated from this land where mountain loch and Glen pervade your soul"!! Braught goosebumps on my neck. Just discovered your channel recently and love every video I've watched so far! Diarmuid - Gaeil ó Éireann.

  • @stuartmcallister1965
    @stuartmcallister19652 жыл бұрын

    I grew up hearing the rhetoric of “what the English done to us” we weren’t just victims of the Empire. We were the Empire. Puppets and puppet masters. Complicit in its greed and injustice. Great work Bruce.!

  • @jameshalfpenny4726
    @jameshalfpenny47263 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant, a perfect counter for the the aggression shown in George Square at the weekend........if only more people followed their country’s history.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'll be honest I've found it an upsetting time. Some attitudes that had been locked in the closet have come out recently and reminded me of the bad old days.

  • @jameshalfpenny4726

    @jameshalfpenny4726

    3 жыл бұрын

    Scotland History Tours yes I can well imagine, it’s amazing how history repeats itself....

  • @rsfaeges5298

    @rsfaeges5298

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ScotlandHistoryTours 😿💜

  • @sandrafraser6028

    @sandrafraser6028

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ScotlandHistoryTours Thank you for your work, you are making a difference.💕

  • @amandagraham4254
    @amandagraham42542 жыл бұрын

    I know that my Graham family fled to Canada in the 1800"s. I know that my Irish side did as well. I think it was the clearings because they were scared to death. IMO, we just had to get out! Unfortunately we brought this crap to the Indigenous people of North America, and for that I am eternally sorry 😞

  • @macleoddj
    @macleoddj3 жыл бұрын

    None can change the society and time we're born into. What matters is what we do. As a Carolina Scot, a product of the Clearances and a history of slavery in the region, this particularly hit home and made me sad a bit. Thanks for your thoughtful insight.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    The world is certainly messy

  • @rfitzy612
    @rfitzy6122 жыл бұрын

    The best comment I heard was from my auld man - don’t topple the statues - explain what they did and give the name and address of his family who inherited their bloody handed wealth.

  • @jocksjewelerygemstones8782

    @jocksjewelerygemstones8782

    2 жыл бұрын

    Let's hope no-one gives your address out for the crimes of your ancestors I mean why would I feel guilty for what people I never new did

  • @ukbuddhist
    @ukbuddhist2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this. An amazing video, you really are the best voice for Scottish history right now!

  • @vickiepower6201
    @vickiepower62013 жыл бұрын

    Beautifully told and yet so sad, truly touched my heart

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ah, I'm goin tae greet😢

  • @msheldon10
    @msheldon103 жыл бұрын

    Fantastic video Bruce! Shines a light on aspects of Scottish history that we're often backward about coming forward with.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks man. I really appreciate that coming from a proper arty/techy like yourself

  • @msheldon10

    @msheldon10

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ScotlandHistoryTours Cheers. That should be former arty/techy who is back at Uni trying to become a brainy type :P

  • @gordonchristie246
    @gordonchristie2463 жыл бұрын

    Another great video Bruce. I am glad of your knowledge and your wisdom. Have a great week my brother. Very best regards Gordon.

  • @Tigrezebra
    @Tigrezebra2 жыл бұрын

    The way you put this video together was very heartfelt, and I feel tears in my eyes and a lump in my throat. Thanks for this, I truly cherish the truths you exposed.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    2 жыл бұрын

    You're so welcome!

  • @deejayk5939

    @deejayk5939

    Жыл бұрын

    So sad, beautiful video

  • @leonaandrickscott164
    @leonaandrickscott1643 жыл бұрын

    Fantastic video Bruce very well done. It was an honour to do a private tour with you in Scotland as well you were amazing.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    You are too kind, but I'll put that on my next poster anyway

  • @jamesmacdonald4637
    @jamesmacdonald46373 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for making this great video. I stumbled upon it - and your channel - accidentally, as I was looking into the Highland Clearances. Really insightful, and you're a terrific orator!

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks James, I really appreciate you taking the time to say hello. Please feel free to subscribe to the channel. There's loads more videos on things historically Scottish: scientists, inventors, monarchs, battles, heart warming stories, and beautiful views along the way I hope.

  • @jamesmacdonald4637

    @jamesmacdonald4637

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ScotlandHistoryTours Thanks so much, Bruce! Have subbed and I'm looking forward to checking out more of your videos and great Scottish stories.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, and enjoy

  • @DonMackay64
    @DonMackay643 жыл бұрын

    Beautifully filmed and very well written. Great work Bruce.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Many thanks!

  • @paulrosenberger2485
    @paulrosenberger24852 жыл бұрын

    This is a very powerful presentation. Thank you so much!

  • @darrylpatterson1091
    @darrylpatterson1091 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks again Bruce, wholeheartedly agree with your sentiments. History must not be buried or erased. We learn from the good and the bad to hopefully do better.

  • @tattil.c.6290
    @tattil.c.62902 жыл бұрын

    It really makes me sad to know that people treated other people so horribly due to whatever reason they felt justified for them to do so. I remember segregation in the south, I was young when that was ending. The attitudes of most are better today than when I was a child but in some areas that hasn’t been much change. I was taught better, thankfully and have taught my children better as well.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    2 жыл бұрын

    Good on you

  • @saidahamelin3118
    @saidahamelin31183 жыл бұрын

    Such incredible atmosphere to this story. Wow.

  • @andymcd6689
    @andymcd66893 жыл бұрын

    I have been thinking on this subject over the past number of days and after watching your excellent and thought provoking article, I think that now more than ever that Dundas should be removed from his place of honour, that is St. Andrews Square, and instead moved to the hall of shame. A statue in the centre of our capital should be for someone that we admire and gives us pride. Instead, we have someone who prolonged the misery of others and provides a sense of regret. I am not denying that we should remember the mistakes of the past, not at all, but we must learn these important truths in the class room, not the monuments where we would honour our heroes.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for being engaged. It helps

  • @Mybassgruvin
    @Mybassgruvin Жыл бұрын

    Great video like always Bruce and very timely. I agree with you 100%, it should not be ignored. When we ignore the past we are doomed to repeat it. I commented on your other video about Slavery and I was telling you how my Scottish ancestors were pushed out of the Highlands during the clearances. They immigrated to North Carolina and I believe they became slave owners themselves. As I stated in the other video, I don't know how they treated their slaves but I can only hope they didn't mistreat them based on their own inhumane treatment from the English, and their fellow Scots.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    Жыл бұрын

    Aye, yet humanity has a funny way of forgetting

  • @EKcyclist
    @EKcyclist2 жыл бұрын

    One of your most evocative videos, Bruce. My own family are supposed to have come to Glasgow, from around Oban, Taynuilt and Loch Awe. They “dropped the ‘Mac’ for bread”, as the saying goes. I wonder if there’s a story in that episode for you as a wrap to the Clearances section? I’ve been to see the Earl of Sutherland’s statue, by the way. I spat on it.

  • @tzefirayah_700travelmore.5
    @tzefirayah_700travelmore.5 Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating topic! Thank you for sharing this historic story. You're a wonderful storyteller! Peace.

  • @NotNowCato1254
    @NotNowCato12542 жыл бұрын

    Really good stuff. Refreshing perspective. Thanks Bruce.

  • @laragwen102
    @laragwen1022 жыл бұрын

    Very powerful and timely presentation. Thank you. Now stop making me cry!

  • @patmiller9236
    @patmiller9236 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you. A poetic and powerful statement- and it never does end as we currently watch Putin's genocidal efforts in Ukraine. I love your channel having just found it and find your much needed wise balanced perspective inspiring. Our last trip before the COVID closure was Scotland in January 2020. We look forward to returning again to your beloved country. Blessings from Colorado, USA.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Pat

  • @minskybrown8634
    @minskybrown8634 Жыл бұрын

    That was very informative. Thank you. I am trying to find out more about Scottish plantation owners in Jamaica and this sets the scene. So many Scot surnames there: MacKenzie, McLean, McIntosh, Graham & Stewart.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes they were rife

  • @wanabepetegreen1132

    @wanabepetegreen1132

    4 ай бұрын

    There's more black Campbell's in the west indies than white Campbell's in Scotland 😮

  • @eleanorkidd5840
    @eleanorkidd58403 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant video. If only history lessons in school were this good. Thanks Bruce

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    You are too kind

  • @christinat56
    @christinat569 ай бұрын

    Thank you for exposing what they did, it’s not to be forgotten. I appreciate your take on this. Writing from America where people want to forget and pretend nothing happened.

  • @davidgillis25
    @davidgillis25 Жыл бұрын

    Beautiful video, I'm currently in Canada after a couple centuries removed from the clearances.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    6 ай бұрын

    Come to one of my live shows in Canada in 2024. Shows in Halifax, Annapolis, New Glasgow, Moncton, Montreal, Perth , Ottawa, Toronto, Fergus, Seaforth, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria. Most of the details are here. www.brucefummey.co.uk/shows.aspx

  • @kerrwintersgill
    @kerrwintersgill3 жыл бұрын

    Excellent - thank you for an insightful and meaningful video!

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    No, thank you for stopping by. Please subscribe for more, if you haven't already done so

  • @shanedrewbattersby6291
    @shanedrewbattersby62912 жыл бұрын

    Bruce. Well said. At the end of this video you articualated what i have been trying to for months. On another note. Thank you for having this channel. Im Canadian witha deep scottish heritage. Ive learned alot about my past thru historians like you and Dan Snow. ( yes thats right you are just as good if not better a prsenter as him) There are 2 countrys on our planet i feel at one with. Canada and Scotland. Having visited scotland a few times. There is somthing familiar somthing in grained in my being something feels at home in both Countries. Its not the romance of being in a storied land. Its the smell of the air in the great glenn, the feel of the peat underfoot. Being one in my group to help the others understand some of the more west coast and northern Brogues. I spent 26 yrs in the Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders of CANADA. We had a few expats in our ranks. 1 was my first Company Sergent Major (CSM) He is Glasswiegian. He would get angery with us and start yelling we would understand the odd "EWES GUYS" but then he'd storm off leaving us on the parade square at attention for 2 or 3 mins while he calmed down. Then he'd come back and ask if we understood anything he said. He was a Corporal in the Scots Guards for10 yrs and would forget how thick his accent sounded to us. Funny. Here i was barley 17 grown up with tonnes of scots expats family friends. I though i could understand scots. Then enters CSM McCarrel. ALBAINN GU BRATH CHANADA GU BRATH

  • @johnmackinnon1026
    @johnmackinnon10263 жыл бұрын

    This was just an excellent,well thought out,and mature video, well done,....

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks. Pleasae spread the word

  • @georgefuters7411
    @georgefuters74112 жыл бұрын

    Wow, just recently found your videos: this is the best one yet! I was aware of Scots involvement in the slave trade from the wealthy owners to the Clyde built slavers. I've never been so moved by the knowledge as by your delivery... Total, unconditional Respect! Keep up the good work, I doubt I'll ever see a better view on the subject. Hope to see lots of plaques on statues in the years to come 😔

  • @jackmcnally9237

    @jackmcnally9237

    2 жыл бұрын

    However, it was essential to erase and will be so in the near future to remove Nelson, as from Dublin and indeed from Trafalgar Square, in order that Anglo - Norman Saxondoom learn a degree of humility. Keep up your guid work ! I'm Mac Con Ulaidh a grand name!

  • @georgefuters7411

    @georgefuters7411

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jackmcnally9237 No bi gurach, Nic Conulaidh. Removal defeats the end purpose: to make people aware of our collective history, the good and the bad. We can't erase their deeds and actions, or their effects on us today by denying the existence of people and deeds that make us uncomfortable or sit well with our current sensibilities. Much of the race problem in the states is due their whitewashing of history and denying their role in genocide and suppression of the rights and status of the indigenous and former enslaved peoples. Education is what is required not denial.

  • @eridanoooouuuuus
    @eridanoooouuuuus2 жыл бұрын

    I came across your channel this weekend and it’s safe to say I spent a sizeable portion of it watching your videos, and this was fantastic as always. While I think we should pull down the statue of Dundas in St. Andrew’s square, the statue over looking Comrie may as well be left alone, except for a new plaque explaining who he was. I am from Crieff, I was last at the Comrie statue last autumn. You are fantastically well spoken and a real pleasure to listen to. Thanks again

  • @rubywestmoreland7485
    @rubywestmoreland74852 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this. It is perfect for bringing all the frayed ends of this history together in one picture.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm glad you like it

  • @sparky2086
    @sparky20863 жыл бұрын

    These costume pictures are hilarious. Love these videos on our history. They should be in the effing schools.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks to my son for the thumbnail pictures

  • @Scottbutcher7

    @Scottbutcher7

    3 жыл бұрын

    The english don't want to teach the scottish about this stuff because it will make more people want independence 😂

  • @thefastandthedead1769

    @thefastandthedead1769

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Scottbutcher7 Totally true there! Can you imagine The Scotland Office run by the red and blue Tories allowing that?

  • @RichyCR1
    @RichyCR13 жыл бұрын

    Outstanding video and nails what attitudes are needed today 👍

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much

  • @tayman6665
    @tayman66653 жыл бұрын

    Excellent video very moving. well done Bruce

  • @audreycortesi4652
    @audreycortesi4652 Жыл бұрын

    This by far has been one of the best streams I’ve seen so far a very important message thank you so very much for this😢

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    Жыл бұрын

    You are so welcome

  • @kirstenperson4389
    @kirstenperson43892 жыл бұрын

    What a powerful message. Well done.

  • @josephcianflone9901
    @josephcianflone99013 жыл бұрын

    Powerful words, well said and well felt!

  • @macleod1602
    @macleod16023 жыл бұрын

    This is an uncomfortable reality and brought a tear to my eye. I wished everyone would watch this video.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Why.not share it with friends and little by little everyone will see it.

  • @macleod1602

    @macleod1602

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ScotlandHistoryTours I will, for sure.

  • @scrapbagstudios
    @scrapbagstudios Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this excellent video. You have packed a lot into this short video and painted a very vivid picture. I live in Australia and First Nations people are currently battling (still battling I should say) for recognition - of the true history - of culture, language and to be listened to, to be included in the constitution. I do not have First Nations heritage, I was born in England, but I cannot stand injustice in any form, wherever it lands and by whom it is wielded. I did not know a lot of the detail of the clearances, but I have known about them for a long time and like the Enclosures in England, that they caused a lot of suffering at the hands of fat cats. Keep up the good work. 💙

  • @stevefarable
    @stevefarable2 жыл бұрын

    And you my friend reveal history with such clarity, making it so relevant to day.

  • @julianolan2860
    @julianolan2860 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you from Australia where so many of us must carry the duty of reparation to the colonised indigenous people who were once free here. When the poor cleared Highlanders taken to Australia by force arrived here to work as indentured labour - paying back the cost of their forced journey (yes you heard it) over years in the colony, every door in the harbour town was shut against the 'dirty immigrants' passing through with their new overlords. We are a terrible species more so because we can do better. We know how to do better and we know everyone thrives when equality is widespread. Warm regards Julia Margaret Nolan- great granddaughter of Irish Famine refugees.

  • @par576
    @par5763 жыл бұрын

    Another great video! I am with you, and the people of Golspie, who don't think statues should be removed. We can't change the past but we can tell the truth. I think the removal of Confederate heroes in America is the wrong way to go about it.

  • @nikkolettguyer4913

    @nikkolettguyer4913

    2 жыл бұрын

    The confederate statues are participation trophies for losers and the people who complain about their children getting a participation trophy when the children play sports are the ones who want those statues to stay. They should have never been erected as they were erected to intimidate black people.

  • @cplmpcocptcl6306

    @cplmpcocptcl6306

    2 жыл бұрын

    I agree. Let them have their statues. No one is intimidated by them.

  • @gordanaparthur9267
    @gordanaparthur92672 жыл бұрын

    Poetic eloquence. Well spoken 👏 👌

  • @OublietteTight
    @OublietteTight2 ай бұрын

    Excellent Poetic Intense Hits home

  • @barbaralavoie1045
    @barbaralavoie10452 жыл бұрын

    A very good video and very enlightened for all to hear and understand. In all countries this stuff happened and yes, all lives do matter.❤️

  • @fractalnomics
    @fractalnomics3 жыл бұрын

    Agree. Thank you, our family story too, we went to NZ, and we never forget.

  • @TheBirdierouge

    @TheBirdierouge

    3 жыл бұрын

    My family story also, mine went to Canada... Nova Scotia which is New Scotland in latin. The Highlanders left a very strong culture that survives to this day in the entire province. In some areas Gaelic is still the spoken language. The flag itself is the Scottish flag with the colors reversed. Both you and I have come from Scottish survivors and as for myself I feel it's an honor to be so.

  • @annescott2748
    @annescott27482 жыл бұрын

    So well narrated; I absorb every word you say.

  • @jamesewanchook2276
    @jamesewanchook22763 жыл бұрын

    Well done!

  • @clockworkkirlia7475
    @clockworkkirlia74752 жыл бұрын

    Our opinions differ as to the statues in particular, but your perspective is undeniable and I thank you for this video. It's actually brilliant, with a really solid, excellent message. I'd say I'm a year late, but I'd share this video a hundred years late.

  • @octavialewis6817
    @octavialewis6817 Жыл бұрын

    I'm African American and truly enjoy your channel. 😘

  • @jamesmacdougall3546
    @jamesmacdougall35462 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely brilliant video! Thank you sir.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    2 жыл бұрын

    Very welcome

  • @HayleyK-
    @HayleyK-6 ай бұрын

    Wish there was HOURS long episodes, I’m born a Swede, stay in Sweden 🇸🇪 I’ve generations of Scottish family from the 1800’s & I can’t find anything interesting BEFORE THAT & NOW I know why. Extremely impressed & extremely interesting xxx 💁‍♀️😘☮️💕🇸🇪🇸🇪

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    6 ай бұрын

    Just watch a bunch in a row😂

  • @HayleyK-

    @HayleyK-

    6 ай бұрын

    @@ScotlandHistoryTours typical Scottish answer lol. At least I wasn’t told to SELLOTAPE them together, my “Grann-Da” told me sellotape my Snapped VHS tape of CINDERELLA together. My fave childhood film Forced on me because he’d get _Aww us wains_ plonked in front of the TV, was the Boys that didn’t like it best 😆 🏆🏆💁‍♀️😘💕🇸🇪🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇸🇪🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿☮️☮️☮️

  • @Cleverogue
    @Cleverogue3 жыл бұрын

    Simply brilliant Love the passion

  • @davbhoy10
    @davbhoy103 жыл бұрын

    Great video mate and a great message 👍

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks. I appreciate it

  • @atarrant81
    @atarrant813 жыл бұрын

    So good! Thank you! The Gaelic word for kinship, how do you spell it? And could you write it out phonetically too? Peace & Thanks

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Here's a link to SMO dictionary www2.smo.uhi.ac.uk/gaidhlig/faclair/sbg/lorg.php?faclair=sbg&seorsa=Gaidhlig&facal=duthchas&eis_saor=on&tairg=Lorg

  • @christopherlyon4946
    @christopherlyon49463 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this. I love your "insider/outsider" wisdom and insight and the way you bring the present into focus through the past, and vice versa. In particular I'm impressed by the way that, in the space of just over 10 minutes, you combine remote history, contemporary relevance, geography, issues of personal identity, economic and social justice, hard information and deep humanity. You manage to do this in a way that is both radically engaged, very accessible and open for the viewer to develop their own reflections. Best wishes from a new subscriber!

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    When you say it like that it sounds exhausting 😜 i hope you enjoy future bids. Sometimes I throw in bad.jokes as well

  • @christopherlyon4946

    @christopherlyon4946

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ScotlandHistoryTours It was brilliant, not exhausting at all, just rivetting. And although I have laughed out loud at the humour in the other videos I've watched, there were no jokes in this one: it was totally engaging on its own terms. Thanks again.

  • @Jonabob87
    @Jonabob873 жыл бұрын

    Great video, mate. Really beautiful.

  • @shelleygibbons1065
    @shelleygibbons10652 жыл бұрын

    Beautifully done !! As always. So we'll done . As a history lover . Who wants to learn from our past ! We cannot erase the past ! But we can change the future

  • @markdigital9350
    @markdigital93503 жыл бұрын

    How fantastically refreshing to find your channel! I love Scottish history,, to the point I have travelled and spent time there over the years, my advice is to go blind and get lost there.. MAGICAL! and when you have to come home, look into, read up on what you have found. I promise, this will forever keep taking you back . I to believe the statues should remain for the exact reasons you mention. It is rightly still, a part of the History...I remember 2 years ago listening to a black professor in the USA talking about deleting history by removal of the statues (in regards to john crow), I disagreed, back then. Orwell, if seen as a warning in 1984, hints at the huge irreparable damage/dangers to all our futures by deleting history. I fear that is happening today at an alarming rate in such a pervasive way and imo this would detract from Scottish History a lot! Would we want to repeat history? We need reminding at times. Your opinion on this reminded me of my fathers father who emigrated to England through Liverpool Docks, He came over from Commonwealth Nigeria after the second world war. Eventually settling in Manchester and then meeting my grandmother who was from Irish immigrant parents herself. Ironically though, they had to go back to Liverpool for the day to get married due to this being the only place in the whole of the UK that would marry interracial couples. There is a mural on the side of a building in Liverpool Docks that tells the story of the Docks and the part they played in the global Slavery economy... Also, growing up in Manchester I found the statue of President Lincoln (A gift) thanking the people of Manchester for supporting him in the abolishment of Slavery....All very interesting stuff. I will enjoy the rest of your videos (Binge Time) on this very over cast Sunday evening just outside of Manchester in the Peak District. You have my many Thanks )

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    We have one of those statues too 😎 kzread.info/dash/bejne/mmR_tLatkdHMiKg.html

  • @markdigital9350

    @markdigital9350

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ScotlandHistoryTours OMG!!!! Haa haaaa, just watched 10 seconds of that link, You have this game sewn up perfect! I guess you may have covered what could be called the "Industrial Revolution Clearances" Lots of Scots moved into a lot of the cities back then, I think I read somewhere a long time ago that they were 'economically' kind of forced' to do so, indirectly? Something totally unrelated, I knew an Indian man who's father was called William Wallace, he too was named after his Father, A British Officer stationed in India married into semi Indian royalty, the rest is history.. I never did get the full story of that time for them in their family history unfortunately, very fascinating and such a brilliant chap he was too.

  • @jacquelinemerrick4257
    @jacquelinemerrick4257 Жыл бұрын

    wow "nobody wants to be separated from this land where mountain loch and Glen pervade your soul"!! goosebumps

  • @weedmetalhempcore
    @weedmetalhempcore2 жыл бұрын

    So happy ti have come across yer videos Brucey boy, keep up the amazing work

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm happy too🥳

  • @lilzapper7904
    @lilzapper79042 жыл бұрын

    I completely agree that tearing down the monuments will do nothing to expose the hypocrisy and cruelty of those once exalted in stone. Yes, all lives matter. Celt, Pict, Scot, Slave, Irish (immigrant), child, Native American, Indian/Pakistani, poor, Hispanic...ALL lives. Thank you for having the courage to state your views.

  • @elizabethrusson7495
    @elizabethrusson74952 жыл бұрын

    For individual Scots that say "that wasna me", I did some research on a friend's family tree to find out her gggrandfather owned a slave in Grenada and he was born in the Highlands. Just the son of a farmer, nothing more. Another carpenter on Grenada had nineteen slaves. So it wasn't just the Dundases and the Sutherlands, but ordinary Highlanders were encouraged to both invest and work in the Caribbean trade.

  • @harlandeke

    @harlandeke

    2 жыл бұрын

    So what is that person supposed to feel? Like a monster because an ancestor partook of something that had been accepted for all of human existence? I don't understand what the point of that is. I am an American of mostly a Scot, Irish, Manx, English and Norwegian decent, and I don't know if any of my ancestors owned slaves, but me and my father and brothers recently did DNA testing and found that we were about 1% African...so who knows what it means? I hate slavery and true racism, but racism is a human problem...no particular ethnic group is free from that evil. There is hatred of the "other" in every ethnic group on earth..I refuse to be buffaloed into self loathing or embarrassment of my dominant race for things that I myself utterly abhor. In every race there are subsets that have committed the same gross atrocities against each other. We have to move past the finger pointing and move forward to a better future...the future that Martin Luther King dreamed of. May God help us find it...the current finger pointing is only dividing people, not bringing them together. Ok...let the hate and name calling spew forth..I don't care.

  • @raydriver7300
    @raydriver730011 ай бұрын

    So moving. I’ve said it before but it bears repeating: you have the words 🌞

  • @TedLindenIsHere
    @TedLindenIsHere2 жыл бұрын

    Here in Ontario, Canada, we have a TONNE of streets named after Dundas. Many here, particularly in Toronto, have been claiming his name should be removed because he 'helped enable slavery' here.

  • @paulcannell7188
    @paulcannell71882 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant Stuff. Sharing this.

  • @cgjoe64
    @cgjoe642 жыл бұрын

    Superb Well put and well presented Thanks

  • @littlejimmy5020
    @littlejimmy50203 жыл бұрын

    Brilliantly put Bruce

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    I thank you kind sir

  • @Murderbot2000
    @Murderbot2000 Жыл бұрын

    Bruce, I’ve enjoyed all of your videos. I have no idea how, nor why they showed up in my recommendations. But I’m glad that I got connected to them.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm delighted too josh

  • @sher3571
    @sher35713 жыл бұрын

    My Belief Is That Those Monuments Should Be Kept in Museum As a Testament To What They DONE But Never in The Public Square Where They Would Be Seen as Heroic

  • @StudeSteve62

    @StudeSteve62

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes. The distinction between celebration and commemoration is huge...

  • @christopherrotter3969
    @christopherrotter39693 ай бұрын

    God Bless you Bruce. I ‘ ll light a candle for you, in a beautiful church in New York….from a son of Clan Donald

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 ай бұрын

    😘

  • @ryanll7312
    @ryanll73122 жыл бұрын

    Again, I live in the American south and you’ve made another video that I love you for. Keep it up!

  • @rhonawill7085
    @rhonawill70853 жыл бұрын

    Wow, beautifully done.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'll be honest, I think it's my favourite

  • @ShiningNoctowls
    @ShiningNoctowls Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing; take care 🔥❤🌙

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the visit

  • @lunaneptune
    @lunaneptune2 жыл бұрын

    Incredible video Bruce. Thank you

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    2 жыл бұрын

    Very welcome

  • @annegraham1891
    @annegraham18913 жыл бұрын

    Well said!

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks. please share and spread the word

  • @scottish-m3
    @scottish-m33 жыл бұрын

    Fabulous, Bruce loved it,

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours

    @ScotlandHistoryTours

    3 жыл бұрын

    Couldn't have done it without you

  • @donaldwood606
    @donaldwood6062 жыл бұрын

    Just found your channel, you are on impressive historian and human being. All I can say is thank you for your insight.

  • @bobmcclure8069
    @bobmcclure80692 жыл бұрын

    There are no words... Wow... I managed to hold the tears back, but just barely. It is easy to justify brutality, just declare the other side non-people. As you said, it is an old game.

  • @christianfreedom-seeker934
    @christianfreedom-seeker9342 жыл бұрын

    That brought a tear to my eye too! My Scots-side family's village had been abandoned and destroyed during the Clearances. I've heard the "pro-clearance" side say that the population was simply getting too large and letting millions starve in the Highlands wasn't an option. Well sending them to fertile North America seems to have been a blessing to them and to the Highlands as well. Scotland had achieved "sustainability" and even England had her own "enclosure and clear" that effectively ended feudalism and hundreds of thousands of tiny manor villages had simply vanished. And of course, the opening of North America, New Zealand and Australia had taken the population pressure off Great Britian.