Dingwall Sawmill

Attribution: unknown (Greenhill street  in Dingwall looking North)

J G D Munro and Partners (Dingwall Sawmill)

In 1946, just after the end of the war, Duncan Munro of Alness took over the remnants of his father’s sawmilling business using horse extraction and mobile steam engines operating in the woods. The produce was taken by cart to the railway station or harbour for onward shipment to the mines or railway.

In the 1950s the availability of road transport, in the form of four wheel drive ex army lorries enabled him to establish a static sawmill in Dochcarty, but frequent flooding of the Peffery led to this site being abandoned and in 1956 the mill was moved to the site of a wartime mule camp on Old Evanton Road.

In these years the mill cut mostly beech and other hardwoods for the furniture trade in Glasgow, the logs coming from local estates. This changed to softwoods cut for the mines and the railways, the staple markets of the old steam mills. As these markets declined in the eighties the emphasis turned to housebuilding timbers, and again in the nineties to treated fencing materials.

Today the mill employs 42 people full time producing treated fencing. A new high production line cuts thin double waney edge slats for fencing panels. 90% of the mill’s output is “exported” to England, converting local materials and labour into a valuable source of income for Dingwall and the surrounding area.

In recent years the firm has developed WoodBlocx, an innovative kit for building raised beds and planters for gardens. Sales throughout the UK have soared over the years and large-scale installations include Westfield, London, and the Olympic Park, Stratford.

The success of this invention has led to online sales and even the appointment of a distribution partner in Europe.

Another feather in the cap of the firm is the award of a scholarship from Highlands and Islands Enterprise to enable partner Henry Blake attend a 10-day course at Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s entrepreneurship development programme in January 2016.

For further information visit www.WoodBlocX.co.uk or telephone 0800 389 1420.

In October 2016 the company received planning permission for a £2million upgrade.

The proposal includes replacing one of two mills on the site, to enable the firm to diversify into new fencing products. The mill in question dates back to the 1980s and the new build will include modern soundproofing measures.

01 Dingwall Work

Attribution: unknown

Dingwall Work

Duncan Munro's Memories

Ross and Cromarty Heritage Society is grateful to Duncan Munro’s daughter, Mrs Edith Blake, for permission to reproduce Wood in his Blood, the account of his working life in the timber trade. All photographs are the property of the Munro and Blake families.

RCHS has taken the liberty of including in the text photographs supplied by Mr and Mrs Blake which are relevant to the history, although not originally included in the book.

View a photographic history of the dingwall sawmill

Click on photo album to view thumbnails and then click thumbnail to see the full size images 
Dingwall » Dingwall Places » Dingwall Public Buildings
08 Dingwall Public Buildings
08 Dingwall Public Buildings
Highland Council's Dingwall headquarters.
10 Dingwall Public Buildings
10 Dingwall Public Buildings
Dingwall Sheriff Courthouse opened in the 1830s and closed in 2015 when judicial work transferred to Inverness. Now a private dwelling.
09 Dingwall Public Buildings
09 Dingwall Public Buildings
Police Station.
07 Dingwall Public Buildings
07 Dingwall Public Buildings
Dingwall Town House.
02 Dingwall Public Buildings
02 Dingwall Public Buildings
Dingwall Academy crest.
03 Dingwall Public Buildings
03 Dingwall Public Buildings
Former Dingwall Academy.
04 Dingwall Public Buildings
04 Dingwall Public Buildings
Former Dingwall Academy.
05 Dingwall Public Buildings
05 Dingwall Public Buildings
The memorial plaque to former pupils who served in both World Wars, taken from the demolished Academy and located in the new building.
06 Dingwall Public Buildings
06 Dingwall Public Buildings
On 9 June 2008, led by the Academy's pipe band, the pupils re-enacted the walk in 1939 when their predecessors came from the Old Academy, in Tulloch Street, to their new school - this time from the site of the now-demolished Academy to their new school. [Photos RCHS]
01 Dingwall Public Buildings
01 Dingwall Public Buildings
Dingwall Academy 1939-2008.

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