Strathpeffer Pump Room

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

The Pump Room

A visit to the last remaining pump room of the former Spa complex at Strathpeffer gives an idea of the procedures endured by those who came to “take the waters” at the beginning of the 20th century. Unfortunately, 21st century health and safety regulations no longer permit sampling of the contents of the sulphur or iron wells lying deep underground.

However, we can meet some of the characters who visited the Spa or meted out treatments.

Dr Fortescue Fox was an expert Victorian Physician who came to Strathpeffer where he developed an interest in Medical Hydrology. This field of medicine involved using the climate and waters.

In November 2019 RCHS was contacted by Dr Robin Fox, a grandson of Dr Fortescue Fox, as he is writing an article for a medical journal about his forebear, and has given additional information as follows:

“My grandfather moved from London partly for his health, and Strathpeffer was clearly good for him. He was soon married to a daughter of the Rev W S McDougall, Free Church minister of Jamestown, and living in a fine house where the family was awoken by a piper. He wrote “Strathpeffer Spa: its waters and climate”. During his time as medical superintendent the Spa expanded considerably. On returning to London he became something of a pioneer in Rheumatology and rehabilitation.”

Visitors to Strathpeffer came via the Highland Railway Company which opened its branch line to the village on 3 June 1885. Until then, visitors made the final stage of their journey by horse-drawn coach, which was both inconvenient and not very suitable for the many guests who were older, in poor health or invalids. In the first decade of the 20th century the Spa was overflowing with visitors and the Railway Company built their grand 90-bedroom Highland Hotel, which opened in 1911.

Nurse lowering patient into mud bath

Attribution: unknown

Meet the characters in the pump room and explore the treatments

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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