Every summer, visitors walk into empty Highland fields and look for something that isn’t there. They carry old letters, faded maps, and family stories passed down across generations. They’re searching for a village that was destroyed before their grandparents were born.

What Were the Highland Clearances?
Between roughly 1750 and 1860, landlords across northern Scotland forced thousands of crofting families off their land. The Clearances, as they became known, were brutal and deliberate. Families were evicted to make way for sheep — which generated far more profit than people.
Some were given days to pack up and leave. Others came home to find their roofs already burning. The aim wasn’t simply to relocate people. It was to end an entire way of life.
In some glens, entire communities were gone within a single generation. The landscape that looks wild and empty today was, not so long ago, home to thousands of families.
The Man Who Became the Face of Cruelty
The most notorious figure of the Clearances was Patrick Sellar, factor to the Duke of Sutherland. He oversaw the eviction of thousands of crofters across the north of Scotland.
Sellar was tried — though ultimately acquitted — for culpable homicide, after an elderly woman died when her home was set alight while she was still inside. His name remains one of the most hated in Highland history.
He was not alone. Across Sutherland, Ross-shire, and the Outer Hebrides, factors acting for absent landlords carried out evictions with little mercy and less hesitation.
The Ships and Where They Sailed
Many cleared families had nowhere to go except the sea. Landlords arranged emigrant ships to Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Others were pushed onto narrow coastal strips so thin and rocky they could barely grow food.
In Nova Scotia, Cape Breton Island, and Otago in New Zealand, the echoes of the Clearances still linger. Place names like Inverness in Nova Scotia or New Glasgow in Canada tell the story of people who never fully left Scotland behind.
The island communities suffered some of the most severe losses. The story of St Kilda — where the last residents ultimately begged to be evacuated in 1930 — is one of the most heartbreaking chapters in this longer story.
What’s Left in the Glens Today
Drive through Sutherland or the far northwest and you’ll pass through glens that feel unnaturally quiet. Too quiet for the scale of the landscape around them.
Look carefully and you’ll find the signs. Low stone foundations in the heather. Lazy beds — ancient cultivation ridges — running up hillsides. The ghost outlines of streets where people once walked every day. These are the remains of clachans: small farming townships that once held dozens of families.
At Badbea in Caithness, the ruins still stand on a clifftop battered by Atlantic wind. Families evicted from inland farms were forced to settle here. The wind is so fierce that children were reportedly tethered to rocks to stop them being blown over the edge. The memorial stone there is plain and bleak. It needs no further words.
Most of these places won’t appear in travel guides. But they’re there, waiting to be found. A road trip through the Scottish Highlands takes you through some of the most haunting of these landscapes, if you know where to look.
The Diaspora That Still Comes Back
Every year, Scots-Americans, Scots-Canadians, and Scots-Australians arrive at Highland archives with a surname and a mission: find the village. Many know only a general region and a family name. Some carry a tree going back six or seven generations, ending abruptly at a ship’s manifest.
What’s remarkable isn’t the absence of those villages. It’s the persistence of the people who search for them.
They feel a pull towards Scotland that they struggle to explain. It’s not nostalgia for a place they’ve never seen. It’s something closer to grief for a home that was taken before memory even began.
And when you stand in one of those empty glens yourself and feel that same inexplicable weight, you begin to understand why.
Many Scottish place names carry memory that the landscape itself has forgotten. The hidden language in Scottish place names reveals stories that no signpost will ever tell you — including, sometimes, the ghost of a community that no longer exists.
Scotland is a country that holds its losses quietly. The glens don’t announce themselves as memorials. The grass grows over the old walls. The wind keeps no record.
But people still come. They stand in empty fields and feel something that crosses oceans and generations. That persistence — that refusal to forget — says more about Scottish identity than any tartan or clan crest ever could.
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