Sunday, 14 August 2016
466 Return To St Kilda
First viewed : 3 October 1980
This was a memorable one-off documentary on BBC Two on a Friday night. It marked the 50th anniversary of the evacuation of the inhabitants of the remote archipelago of St Kilda, the westernmost land in the UK, over a hundred miles from the Scottish mainlands. I watched it down at my gran's. She remembered the evacuation as a news story.
The islands ( or rather the main one, Hirta ) had been inhabited for thousands of years. The tiny community was by necessity egalitarian and had become strictly Sabbatarian. They survived on a few meagre crops, sheep farming and harvesting the seabird colonies ( mainly fulmar and gannet ) that nested on the highest sea-cliffs in Britain. The Atlantic storms meant they were effectively marooned for nine months of the year.
The First World War was the beginning of the end for the community. Hirta was used for a naval post and attracted some shelling from a submarine but it was the contact with the outside world that did for it. When the soldiers left in 1918 some of the islanders went with them. Although tourism in the next decade brought some extra income, the numbers were not viable. Health visitors expressed concerns about inbreeding.
The islanders took the decision to evacuate themselves and left on 29 August 1930. The sheep were left to become feral and their descendants remain on the islands today. Needless to say the scattered remnants of the community regarded the event with a great deal of sorrow and viewing it you shared their pain.
The programme interviewed survivors of the evacuation. One bloke explained the highly hazardous operation on the cliffs. The men were lowered on ropes from the cliff tops then had to move along the slippery ledges and break the birds' necks before they spat out the valuable stomach oil which fuelled their lamps. Both birds and their eggs were collected. He said St Kildans had developed particularly long toes for this purpose and took his shoe and sock off to illustrate this. I remember some years later to this in an argument with my bio-chemist housemate who said such localised genetic adaptation was impossible. God knows how it came up.
The last survivor, an eight year old girl at the time, died earlier this year.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment