MHG57034 - WWI building near Boiler Shop - Invergordon

Summary

A small WWI building near the boiler shop in Invergordon.

Type and Period (1)

  • BUILDING (First World War - 1914 AD to 1918 AD)

Protected Status

  • None recorded

Full Description

A small WWI building near the boiler shop in Invergordon.

The site was investigated in 2015 as part of the ARCH project 'Invergordon in World War I'. The Dockyard workshops to the south of High Street comprised a number of specialist workshops, some quite large. Plans from WWI and WWII in private collection allow functions to be assigned in some cases. On the 2nd edition OS map (surveyed 1902) this area is part of the Bone Works, but there is no building on this site. During WWI there is a large Boiler Shop (see MHG57027), situated between a railway to the north running to the Fitting Shop, and a railway to the south leading to the east. On a WWI plan in private collection a small building extending from the southeast corner is depicted. An aerial photo from 1930 shows that the building was 3 storeys with two bays oriented north-south and possibly brick. It is the tallest surviving building in the workshop complex. A building extends to the southeast, possibly the one from WWI. The boiler shop was still there in WWII, where it appears black in aerial photos from 1947. An aerial photo from 1978 in the Invergordon Archive (no. 649) shows it, but one from the same year in the National Collection of Aerial Photography shows rubble where it had been. If the photographs are accurately dated, this suggests destruction in 1978. The shore road now runs through the site. <1>

At least three versions of a WWI Naval plan survive, two in private collection which probably date to wartime, and one in the National Archives (MPI 1/641/4) which dates to 1921. On all three the buildings taken over or built by the Navy are shaded, but there are a few discrepancies between the plans. One of the plans in private collection has enlarged details, but only shows the Admiralty buildings and not others in the town. Valuation Rolls also indicate some buildings not shaded on our plans were taken over by the military. It is clear from contemporary photographs that the army built additional buildings, particularly north of Cromlet Drive. <2>

Sources/Archives (2)

Map

Location

Grid reference Centred NH 7108 6854 (4m by 6m) (2 map features)
Map sheet NH76NW
Geographical Area ROSS AND CROMARTY
Civil Parish ROSSKEEN

Finds (0)

Related Monuments/Buildings (0)

Related Investigations/Events (1)

External Links (7)

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