Walk almost any Highland glen and you’ll find them — low stone walls barely rising above the heather, empty doorways opening onto sky, roofless cottages slowly disappearing into the earth. Most visitors stride past without a second glance.

But these ruins are not random. They are the last visible evidence of entire communities — deliberately cleared, systematically emptied, and not as long ago as you might think.
What the Highland Clearances Actually Were
Between roughly 1750 and 1860, tens of thousands of people were forced from the land their families had farmed for generations.
Highland landlords — many of them Scottish themselves — discovered that sheep were far more profitable than tenant farmers. The evictions that followed were swift, often brutal, and entirely legal under the laws of the time.
Families arrived home to find their roofs on fire. Entire townships were cleared in a single day. People who refused to leave were physically removed from their homes.
Why the Sheep Came First
The story begins with economics. The wool trade was booming, and the vast Highland glens were perfect grazing land.
A single shepherd and his flock could use land that had once sustained dozens of families. From a landlord’s perspective, the arithmetic was simple.
The tenants — speaking Gaelic, farming small strips of land, paying modest rents — simply stood in the way of profit.
The Communities That Vanished Overnight
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Glen Calvie. Arichonan. Suishnish. Boreraig. These names appear on old maps but on very few modern roads.
In 1845, the families of Glencalvie in Ross-shire were evicted and took shelter in the local churchyard. A reporter from The Times witnessed their plight, writing what became one of the most powerful accounts of the Clearances.
The words scratched onto a window pane in Croick Church — “Glencalvie people was in the churchyard here, May 24, 1845” — can still be read today. It is perhaps the most heartbreaking inscription in Scotland.
What You Can Still Find in the Glens
The ruins are everywhere, once you know to look. In Sutherland, you can walk through the remains of Rossal, a cleared township now preserved as an open-air monument.
In Skye, the abandoned village of Boreraig sits above the cliffs where families once grew oats and kept cattle. The walls still stand. The lazybeds — the raised cultivation strips — remain faintly visible in the turf.
These are not museum exhibits behind glass. These are the actual homes of real people who had no choice but to leave.
The Diaspora That Changed the World
The Clearances scattered Scottish communities across the globe. Nova Scotia, Cape Breton, New Zealand, and Australia all became home to displaced Highland families.
You can see their traces today — in Gaelic place names across Cape Breton, in Highland Games held each summer from New Zealand to North Carolina, in clan societies that preserve surnames and stories on every continent.
If you’re tracing your Scottish ancestry and your family emigrated in the 19th century, there’s every chance the Clearances played a part in their story.
A Grief That Travels Down the Generations
It is not unusual to meet descendants of cleared families who feel the loss as something physical — a pull towards a landscape they have never seen, a longing for a home that no longer exists in any form they would recognise.
The Clearances left a wound in Scottish culture that has never fully healed. Poets, musicians, and novelists return to it generation after generation.
But the grief is also complicated by beauty. The emptied glens are stunning precisely because they were emptied. The wide open spaces, the silence, the absence of any village or road — that is what the Clearances made.
Visitors often describe the Highland landscape as “wild.” Very little of it truly is. It is simply empty.
How to See This History With Your Own Eyes
You don’t need a tour guide to find the Clearances. Walk almost any glen in Sutherland, Ross-shire, or Skye, and the ruins will find you.
Croick Church in Sutherland is one of the most moving places in Scotland — small, unassuming, and home to those scratched inscriptions on the window glass. Rossal township in Strathnaver is another essential stop for anyone who wants to understand what was lost.
If you’re planning a trip to Scotland, consider building time into your itinerary for the far north. It’s a different kind of travel — slower, quieter, and with a weight to it that stays with you long after you leave.
And the story of Scotland’s emptied places doesn’t end on the mainland. The last residents of St Kilda were evacuated at their own request in 1930 — a haunting echo of everything the Clearances had already done to the Highlands.
You’ll find more stories like this, and practical guides to visiting these places, at lovetovisitscotland.com.
The ruins scattered across Scotland’s glens are not ancient history. The people who lived in them had grandparents. The grandchildren of those grandchildren are alive today.
Next time you see a low stone wall in a Highland field, don’t walk past. Stop. And imagine what it felt like to leave it behind.
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