“...while the troubles sweeping Europe and southern Britain comprised liberal and radical elements protesting against powerful elites to secure better rights, in Badenoch it was the opposite - a subtle exercise of power by a small but influential outsider elite seeking to sweep aside the long-established rights of the lower orders, whose mere presence disrupted their leisure pursuits. There was, of course, a measure of protest, but the scattered and impoverished nature of local communities rendered them powerless. Land-owners knew well enough which side their bread was buttered on - a trend that became increasingly evident over the next two decades.” ShootingElites19th CenturyLandownersBadenochSporting EstatesLeisure Class Book:'The People Are Not There': The Transformation of Badenoch 1800 - 1863 Source: 'The People Are Not There': The Transformation of Badenoch 1800 - 1863
“Badenoch encapsulates the dichotomy of the sporting estate. Rich southern incomers provided much-needed income and jobs, a new economic lifeline in difficult times, while at the same time riding roughshod over the last remnants of the traditional farming economy to suit their own interests - another blow to a way of life that had survived and evolved over countless generations.” ShootingHighlandsBadenochSporting EstatesDeer StalkingFarming EconomyGrouse Shooting Book:'The People Are Not There': The Transformation of Badenoch 1800 - 1863 Source: 'The People Are Not There': The Transformation of Badenoch 1800 - 1863