Blairmore School Explained

Blairmore School
Motto:Capta Majora
(Latin: "Strive for better things")
Established:1947
Type:Private
Boarding school
Closed:1993
Country:Scotland
Gender:Co-educational
Lower Age:8
Upper Age:13
Colours:Navy blue

Blairmore School was an independent boarding preparatory school in Glass near Huntly, Aberdeenshire until its closure in 1993. The site is now owned and used by a Christian organisation called Ellel Ministries International[1] as a prayer, training and healing retreat centre.

History

Blairmore School was established in 1947 as an independent prep school for boys aged 8–13 by Colonel D.R. Ainslie D.S.O., B.A., a keen educationalist, Cambridge graduate and retired Seaforth Highlander. The school turned co-ed in 1975 and closed in 1993.

Blairmore had its own tartan.[2]

Former pupils

Blairmore House

Blairmore House, the former school's premises, is a Victorian country house set amid 50acres of park and woodland beside the River Deveron, 6miles from Huntly, 40miles from Aberdeen and 60miles from Inverness. The house was designed by the architect Alexander Marshall Mackenzie[3] and was built in 1884 as a private house for Alexander Geddes, a wealthy businessman and great-great grandfather of the former British Prime Minister David Cameron. Cameron's father, Ian Donald Cameron, was born in the house in 1932. Geddes made his fortune in Chicago in the US in the trading of grain in the 1850s, and a safe belonging to him which survived the Great Fire of Chicago was installed in the house's Billiard Room.

During the Second World War the house served as GHQ Home Forces for some of the auxiliary units based in Aberdeenshire and had a training area within the grounds of the house and nearby land. Auxunit Patrols was a special force consisting of between six and eight men trained in the utmost secrecy to a high standard. In the event of a German invasion, they would go to ground and carry out a clandestine war against the occupying forces.

After the school's closure, Blairmore House was run as a private hunting lodge for several years.[4] The building is now used as a prayer and intercession training school and retreat centre run by an evangelical Christian group called Ellel Ministries.[5] [6]

Blairmore House is a Category C listed building.[7]

See also

Footnotes

57.4456°N -2.9403°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ellel Scotland.
  2. Web site: Blairmore Corporate School Tartan. Tartans of Scotland. 7 February 2009. 9 January 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080109195353/http://www.tartans.scotland.net/tartan_info.cfm@tartan_id=1360.htm. dead.
  3. Web site: Blairmore House. Dictionary of Scottish Architects. 7 February 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20070928013023/http://www.codexgeo.co.uk/dsa/building_full.php?id=M009731. 28 September 2007. dead.
  4. Web site: Ross Clark . Highlands for the high life . https://web.archive.org/web/20130505125549/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/property/propertyadvice/propertymarket/3297914/Highlands-for-the-high-life.html . dead . 5 May 2013 . Telegraph. 26 January 2002 . 19 February 2012.
  5. Web site: Ellel Ministries, Blairmore House. 4 April 2013.
  6. Web site: Cool-Story. 7 February 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20110708065619/http://thebrokaars.blogspot.com/2006/09/cool-story.html. 8 July 2011. dead.
  7. Web site: Blairmore House (now Blairmore School) – Glass – Aberdeenshire – Scotland . British Listed Buildings . 11 September 1984 . 19 February 2012.