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Aerial image showing the symmetrical star‑shaped bastions of Fort George surrounded by the sea.

A fine example

Fort George is the finest example of 18th-century military engineering anywhere in the British Isles, though the army base never fired a shot in anger. Today, the fort would cost nearly £1 billion to build and equip.

Strategically located on a promontory jutting into the Moray Firth, the army base was designed to evade capture. Fort George was built on a monumental scale, making use of sophisticated defence standards, with heavy guns covering every angle.

The boundary walls of the fort housed accommodation for a governor, officers, an artillery detachment and a 1,600-strong infantry garrison. The fort was armed with more than 80 guns, with a a magazine for 2,672 gunpowder barrels alongside ordnance and provision stores, a brewhouse and a chapel.

Four historical reenactors in 18th‑century military uniforms stand in the courtyard of Fort George, viewed through a large stone archway.
A top‑down aerial view of the fort’s angular defensive walls, grassy ramparts, and a central stone building near the shoreline.
A small white‑walled vaulted room at Fort George containing a single display panel on a wooden plinth in the centre.

Countering the Jacobite threat

The Jacobite Rising of 1745–6 proved to be the last attempt by the Stuart dynasty to regain from the Hanoverians the thrones of Scotland and England and Wales.

Fort George was one of the ruthless measures introduced by the government to suppress Jacobite ambitions after the nearby Battle of Culloden. It was intended as the main garrison fortress in the Scottish Highlands and named after George II. 

Statement of Significance

Read our Statement of Significance to learn more about what makes Fort George so special.

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Interior of a historic barrack room at Fort George with rows of simple canvas beds and a mannequin seated at a wooden table near a fireplace.

Architecture of warfare

Lieutenant-General William Skinner was the designer and first governor of Fort George. He mapped out the complex layout of ramparts, massive bastions, ditches amd firing steps.

Defences were heavily concentrated on the landward side of the promontory – the direction from which a Jacobite assault was expected. Long stretches of rampart and smaller bastions protected the remaining seaward sides.

On the blog

Find out more about the brave recipients of the Victoria Cross in the First World War in a guest blog post from the Highlanders’ Museum at Fort George.

Read more on our blog
Close-up view of two massive, angled stone bastions at Fort George, with weathered stonework and long grass at their base.
A stone entrance gateway set into the high outer wall of Fort George, with a decorative pediment and a white timber footbridge above a grassy moat.

An active army base

Later in the 1700s, when the Jacobite threat was over, the fort became a recruiting base and training camp for the rapidly expanding British Army. Many a Highland lad passed through its gates on his way to fight for the British Empire across the globe.

Between 1881 and 1964, the fort served as the depot of the Seaforth Highlanders.

Fort George is currently the home of the Black Watch, 3rd Battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland (3 SCOTS).

Our archives and collections

Get a further glimpse into Fort Geore's history by exploring archive images and collections objects on trove.scot, your companion to researching Scotland’s past.

© Crown Copyright: HES
The Square, Fort George. © Licensed by St Andrews University Library (SCRAN), Edinburgh, Scotland)
An aerial view of Fort George, © Crown Copyright: HE
Wooden barrack room interior with a long table and benches, simple table settings, bunk beds against the wall, and shelves holding military clothing and equipment.

A Wraith at Fort George

Read a spinetingling story by William Kirk, set in Fort George
Read more on the blog