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A strategic site

Ruthven Barracks were built by George I’s government between 1719 and 1721 following the Jacobite rising of 1715. They were to house garrison infantry to police the area and enforce the Disarming Act of 1716.

The barracks are situated on the site of the medieval castles of the Comyns and the Gordons, of which only the well still remains.

The strategic importance of the site is obvious – visible from miles around, it dominates the head of the Spey valley.

A rural landscape, dusted with snow. There are trees, with a small mound slightly behind with a stone building on top. In the background are snow mountains.

For king and country

Ruthven Barracks could hold two companies of soldiers – about 120 men – and their officers, but it’s unlikely it was ever fully garrisoned. They were housed in two piles of three-storey barracks with a parade ground between them. Each pile had six rooms, with men sleeping 10 to a room and two to a bed.

Towers projecting from opposite corners of the protective wall housed the officers’ quarters, as well as:

  • a guardroom

  • a prison

  • a bakehouse

  • a brewhouse

The stables beyond the barracks, added on orders of Major General Wade in 1734, could hold up to 30 horses. They were used by dragoons protecting troops marching along the military road.

A deteriorated historic stone wall, with a space in the middle. There are some plants growing out of the stone.
A historical stone building sat on top of a mound. There are horses in front of the mound, with trees in the background. It is a cloudy day.

Statement of Significance

You can find out more about Ruthven Barracks in our Statement of Significance, part of a series of special documents outlining the history and development of Historic Scotland sites.

Read more

The second rising

The garrison saw action 26 years after it was first built, during the 1745 Jacobite rising.

In late August of that year, 300 Jacobites besieged the barracks, but were held off by the 12 redcoats inside. Just one of the barracks’ troops died, ‘by foolishly holding his head high over the parapet’, according to his sergeant.

The Jacobites returned in February the next year, this time with heavy guns. The garrison soon surrendered to Gordon of Glenbuchat’s men.

Let every man seek his own safety in the best way he can

The rising and the fall

The Jacobites were soundly defeated by the redcoats at the Battle of Culloden on April 16, 1746. The remainder of the army regrouped at Ruthven to await word from their leader, Bonnie Prince Charlie.

His message arrived on April 20, reading ‘Let every man seek his own safety in the best way he can’.

‘The answer, under existing circumstances, was as inconsiderate in Charles as it was heartbreaking to the brave men, who had sacrificed themselves in his cause,’ Chevalier Johnstone said.

A historical stone building sits on the top of a grass mound. You can see the path leading up to the building.

What was the Battle of Culloden, and why was it important?

Find out in our blog

Discover more on trove.scot

See archive photographs of Ruthven Barracks, plus archaeology notes and more on trove.scot. 

Ruthven Barracks on trove.scot