History of the Old Station

Attribution: unknown (The ruin of Free Church in Jamestown)

History of the Old Station, Strathpeffer

Highland Railways Company had proposed that the line from Dingwall to Kyle of Lochalsh should pass through Strathpeffer but, due to objections from a local landowner, Sir William Mackenzie of Coul, the line ran to nearby Achterneed and so, from 1870 when a station opened there, visitors to Strathpeffer had to travel two miles by horse and trap from Achterneed to the Spa village.

Strathpeffer station building

Attribution: unknown

In 1897 the Highland Railway Company ran five trains a day on the branch line from Dingwall to Strathpeffer [see The Peffery Way]. The first train, at 7.40 am, was a mixed/mail passenger train. The journey took ten minutes. 

After the death of Sir William these objections were removed and the ever-increasing popularity of the Spa meant an alternative site for a station was sought. The Station in its present central position in the village was built for the Highland Railway and opened in 1885, when the old station was renamed Achterneed. Until the first World War Strathpeffer Station served visitors to the popular holiday village in the heyday of the “Strathpeffer Spa Express”, but wartime occupation of the hotels and changes in travel habits meant that Strathpfeffer never fully regained its former glory. Mounting debts and lack of patronage brought about the closure to passengers in 1946 and to freight in March 1951. The Old Station was renovated in 1986 and now houses the Highland Museum of Childhood and various other craft outlets.

Strathpeffer Station - coal yard

Attribution: unknown

Timeline of the Station

The Highland Museum of Childhood has produced a timeline of the station based on photographs, archives and memories, and the information below is quoted courtesy of their leaflet The Old Station Strathpeffer.

1884-1914 The Station’s Heyday
The branch line and station were built in 1884, opening June 1885. Murdoch Paterson, well-known architect and civil engineer was responsible for the design. The building included a stationmaster’s office, ticket office, waiting room, and offices/stores.

1914-1918 World War I The station was in use for wartime activity including bringing casualties by train to one of the four US Navy hospitals in the village (see Strathpeffer home page).

1918-1940 The Decline of the Station
The Highland Railway was absorbed into London, Midland and Scottish (LMS) Railways in 1923. In the 1930s a platform was built at the east end extending away friom the tracks towards the Goods Shed.

1940-1944 World War II
The station was in use for wartime activity.

1951-1980 After Railway Closure
After closure the station became mainly a coal depot until the early 1970s (see photo above). There was also an upholsterer’s workshop in the building.

1980-1990
The building included a cinema, toilets and a number of craft shops, including a cafê from the mid 1980s.

1990-2016
The Highland Museum of Childhood was established. The cafê continued to be popular. The basement under the entire station was filled in. Gents and Ladies toilets were available. Renovations took place in 1980 and the Goods Shed was built in 2010. The latter is an educational unit established by the Museum of Childhood.

Click on photo album to view thumbnails and then click thumbnail to see the full size images 
Strathpeffer » Strathpeffer Places » Strathpeffer Residential
Dunnichen
Dunnichen
Dunnichen
Dunnichen
Dunnichen today. Dunnichen (formerly Rondebosch) was built in 1902 for a South African on a grand scale, rich in overall form and exquisite in detail, and never sub-divided, in spite of its size, unlike other villas of the period.
No. 8 Kinellan Drive is a typical council house with an attractive garden.
No. 8 Kinellan Drive is a typical council house with an attractive garden.
Manderley
Manderley
The drive to Manderley showing on the skyline one of the carved stags that used to adorn the entry gates to Brahan Castle
Manderley
Manderley
The drive to Manderley showing on the skyline one of the carved stags that used to adorn the entry gates to Brahan Castle
Manderley - pond and front of house
Manderley - pond and front of house
The drive to Manderley showing on the skyline one of the carved stags that used to adorn the entry gates to Brahan Castle
Sunlight on Manderley
Sunlight on Manderley
The wonderful view down the Strath to Dingwall from the garden of Manderley
The wonderful view down the Strath to Dingwall from the garden of Manderley
The wonderful view down the Strath to Dingwall from the garden of Manderley. Manderley - For a contemporary house I think Angus Macdonald's "Manderley" is a worthy example of the period, also in a piended style with strong overhanging eaves, reflecting the owner's times working in the Far East. It is set on the hillside above the village with spectacular views down the strath to the Cromarty Firth. [Sadly, Angus Macdonald died in 2010.]
Raven Cottage (c. 1900)
Raven Cottage (c. 1900)
Raven Cottage (c. 1900) A very plain but elegant and well proportioned large white harled house of about 1785, the farm-house of one of the three original farms at the head of the valley.
Rondebosch in the 1930s
Rondebosch in the 1930s
Rondebosch (now Dunnichen) in the 1930s, with Provost Andrew Murray (Dingwall) and his wife Margaret.
Rondebosch (now Dunnichen) in the 1930s, with Provost Andrew Murray (Dingwall) and his wife Margaret.
Crancil Brae
Crancil Brae
One house not selected by Mr Murray is Crancil Brae, the photograph of which was taken early in the 20th century by the owner, T Wellwood Maxwell, the Strathpeffer chemist.
Kinettas (1999)
Kinettas (1999)
Kinettas (1999 ) A very plain but elegant and well proportioned large white harled house of about 1785, the farm-house of one of the three original farms at the head of the valley.
Raven Cottage
Raven Cottage
Raven Cottage An early cottage, originally thatched, tucked into the slope, now surrounded by Victorian villas and dominated by Cromartie Buildings, but it would have been in green fields at one time.
Timaru
Timaru
Timaru, completed in 1877 to the design of Inverness architect Alexander Ross, is a glorious essay - or at least the frontage is - in carpenter's Gothic style with finely carved posts and balusters and eaves boards. It was built for a retired New Zealand sheep-farmer and has an air of far-off lands about it.
Santrothen
Santrothen
Santrothen (beside the former filling station) is an interesting example of 1950's bungalow style with a part-piended (hipped) and slated roof and bold facing brick detail over entrance and at windows on the front elevation.
Castle Leod 2021
Castle Leod 2021

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