Great Polish Map of Scotland

The Great Polish Map: the West Coast of Scotland viewed from Northern Ireland

The Great Polish Map of Scotland is a large (50 m x 40 m) three-dimensional, outdoor concrete scale model of Scotland, located in the grounds of the Barony Castle Hotel, outside the village of Eddleston near Peebles in the Scottish Borders.[1] It is also known as the Mapa Scotland (derived from Polish mapa Szkocji) or the Barony Map. The brainchild of Polish war veteran Jan Tomasik, it was built between 1974 and 1979 and is claimed to be the world's largest terrain relief model.[1] The sculpture is a category B listed building,[2] and is being restored by a group calling itself Mapa Scotland.[3]

Background

Further information: Polish Armed Forces in the West
Barony Castle Hotel in 2011

Black Barony's connection with Polish Forces during the Second World War dates from early 1942, when the hotel, established in 1926, was requisitioned for use as the main Staff College for training Polish officers in Scotland.[3]

After the Fall of France in May 1940, the Polish Army in Scotland was reorganised as the 1st Polish Corps and entrusted by the War Office with the defence of a long stretch of the country's east coast between Arbroath (later extended to Montrose, 38 miles (61 km) north of Dundee) and Burntisland on the Firth of Forth against a possible invasion from German-occupied Norway.[4] The Poles strengthened existing defences by installing anti-tank obstacles, building pill boxes and patrolling the coastline in armoured trains. In early 1942 they gave up responsibility for Angus, taking over instead the defences of East Lothian.[5]

General Maczek's grave in Breda, one of the towns his forces liberated in 1944

Following the formation of the 1st Polish Armoured Division in February 1942, Polish troops under the command of General Stanisław Maczek trained in Perthshire, East Lothian, Berwickshire, and East Anglia before taking part in the Normandy landings of 1944. In the Normandy campaign they played a conspicuous part in the Battle of the Falaise Gap,[6] and in the liberation of the Netherlands[7] and defeat of the Third Reich. After the war and the Communist take-over in Poland, many of the Polish soldiers in the West, including General Maczek, were unwilling to return to Poland, where their personal freedom was far from assured. Many settled in Britain, particularly in Scotland.[8]

The large concrete map of Scotland was the idea of Jan Tomasik, a sergeant in the 1st Armoured Division, who during the war had been stationed in Galashiels, about 14 miles (22 km) from the castle.[3] He bought the hotel at Black Barony in 1968. In the early 1960s, finding his old wartime commander, like all Polish veterans, denied a war pension as a non-UK citizen, Tomasik employed Maczek in various jobs, including barman, in his Edinburgh hotel.[9] A friendship developed between the two men, and in the 1970s Tomasik provided a room for Maczek to enjoy summer breaks with his family in his newly refurbished hotel at Barony Castle.[1] This has led to speculation that Maczek, with his tank commander's interest in topography, may have had some input into the map, though that has never been established on the basis of evidence.[3]

The precise reasons why Tomasik created the map are unclear. It is known that Polish soldiers created an outline map of Poland on the ground at Douglas in Lanarkshire in 1940,[10] in the very camp where Tomasik was stationed after arriving in Britain. It is also known that he was fascinated by a large scale-model map of Belgium, which he saw at the Brussels World's Fair of 1958 on his way to visit relations in Poland. This map appears to have been the direct inspiration for the map at Barony Castle, though it is also possible that the wartime model may have been an influence.[3] Tomasik seems to have regarded the Barony map primarily as an added attraction for his hotel guests, expecting it also to draw sightseers. However, he is also on record as having said to hotel patrons that he wanted to show the country the Poles had defended during the war and was planning to invite George VI's consort Queen Elizabeth to open the map officially. He told them that the map was to be his legacy, describing it as "a gift to the Scottish people" for the hospitality the Scots had shown the Poles during the war years.[3] Tomasik died in 1991.

Construction

The map was designed by Dr. Kazimierz Trafas, a young cartographer from the Jagiellonian University of Krakow.[1] Despite the tensions of the Cold War, links between Scotland and Polish universities had been good since the late 1960s, when threshold analysis techniques in town and regional planning devised in Poland were refined and applied in Scotland for the Scottish Development Department.[11]

The Great Map looking northwards from the Scottish border with England

On a visit to Poland, Tomasik discussed his idea of the map with Professor Klimaszewski, head of the Jagiellonian University's Institute of Geography, vice-rector of the university and member of the Polish Council of State. Klimaszweski entrusted the task to Dr. Trafas who took charge of the project.[3]

The 'Great Polish Map of Scotland', as it has been christened by the group planning to restore it, took six consecutive summers between 1974 and 1979 to construct, although the bulk of the work was accomplished by the late summer of 1976.[3] In 1974, Trafas arrived in Scotland with his departmental colleague Roman Wolnik, surveyed the site and marked out the outline of the map to a scale of 1:10,000. The shapes of the mainland and islands were made with vertical shuttering and 300m, 600m and 900m contours laid in four-brick courses. Locations were correlated with a set of Bartholomew's survey maps of Scotland by means of a reference grid.[12]

In the following summer, Tomasik revisited Poland, returning with Trafas, Wolnik and three Krakow University employees hired under contract to provide the manual labour to construct the concrete map. The hotel manager Marek Raton, a son-in-law of Tomasik, and hotel maintenance man Bill Robson also worked on the project, especially the excavation of the surrounding pit. Some of the labour was supplied by hiring Polish exchange students visiting Britain.[3] The body of the map was gradually built up by infilling the prepared outlines with cement. Mountain summits were marked by vertical rods, their heights exaggerated five times relative to the horizontal scale to increase the visual effect. This was a standard traditionally adopted for British military terrain maps.[3] The topography was then finished off by manually sculpting the landforms according to the contours shown on the Bartholomew maps.[3]

After the last visit of the Polish cartographers in 1977, hotel employees and members of the Tomasik family continued to work on the map intermittently over two more summers before it was completed in 1979.[3] The surface was painted with forests, urban areas, major roads and lochs shown. A wall was built around the map to create an oval-shaped basin, 1.5m deep. This was then supplied with water diverted from a nearby stream to create the seas and lochs. The gravity-fed water also flowed through submerged pipes to the major river sources. The original plan to construct a metal walkway over the model to serve as a viewing platform never materialised.[3]

Professor Trafas, the chief designer and builder of the map, died in 2004.[12]

Restoration

After the sale of the hotel in 1985, parts of the map deteriorated slowly over the years and, while it remains generally substantial, some of the concrete is now in a fragile and ruinous condition.[3] In 2010, a group of volunteers calling themselves Mapa Scotland was formed which secured category B listed for the map from Historic Scotland in 2012[13] and aims to restore it to its original condition while promoting it as a heritage monument, educational resource and visitor attraction.[14][15][16][17] In 2011, they obtained a £20,000 grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, on the proviso they match this figure with funding from other sources and guarantee public access to the map.[15] The matched funding was secured in 2013 thanks to grants from the Barony Castle Hotel, Borders Council and others.

The Castle and the Map

The then Polish Consul General in Scotland, Tomasz Trafas, who happens to be a brother of Professor Trafas, said in a newspaper interview that the map is "a rare symbol of the broader heritage and a symbol of the cultural links between Poland and Scotland since the 16th century that is worth preserving for the benefit of the local community and wider nation".[16]

In May 2012, the MSP for Midlothian South, Tweeddale and Lauderdale, Christine Grahame, proposed a parliamentary motion (which was debated in September 2012) that the Scottish Parliament should recognise "the historic significance of The Great Polish Map of Scotland"[18] and support the project.[19][20][21]

Size

The Great Polish Map of Scotland measures approximately 50 by 40 metres (160 ft × 130 ft).[1][21] It exceeds the surface area of the solid terrain model of British Columbia in the Crystal Garden, Victoria74 by 40 feet (23 m × 12 m)claimed to be the largest in the world[22] (Mapa Scotland point out that the Scottish map is 2.8 times larger[21]). The 'land' area alone of the Great Polish Map of Scotland is 780 square metres.[3]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Bruce Gittings; Royal Scottish Geographical Society. "Polish Map of Scotland". Gazetteer for Scotland. The Editors of The Gazetteer for Scotland. Retrieved 11 July 2012.
  2. "Great Polish Map of Scotland". Historic Scotland. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Mapa Scotland. "Mapa Scotland website". Retrieved 24 January 2014.
  4. T. Ziarski-Kernberg, The Polish Community In Scotland, Caldra House 2000, p.48
  5. G Barclay,If Hitler Comes. Preparing for Invasion: Scotland 1940', Birlinn, 20013
  6. For the Poles' contribution at Falaise, see http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/46/a2450846.shtml
  7. For photographs from General Maczek's own picture diary from the campaign, see http://www.makers.org.uk/place/breda
  8. T. Ziarski-Kernberg, The Polish Community In Scotland, Caldra House 2000, p.11
  9. Stachura, Peter (2004). The Poles in Britain, 1940-2000: From Betrayal to Assimilation. Frank Cass. p. 53. ISBN 0714684449.
  10. http://www.ostrycharz.free-online.co.uk/Douglas.html Arrival of Strangers
  11. Boleslaw Malisz, Physical Planning for the Development of Satellite and New Towns: The Analysis of Urban Development Possibilities; Research Institute for Town Planning & Architecture, Warsaw. Institute Papers 113 (1966); Jerzy Kowalowski, "Threshold Analysis-an Economic Tool for Town and Regional Planning", Urban Studies, June 1968 5: 132-143; Scottish Development Department, Threshold Analysis Manual: Edinburgh, HMSO (1973)
  12. 1 2 Janus Szewczuk describes the building of the Great Map, Szkockja w Szkockja (Scotland in Scotland), published on mapascotland.org. Retrieved 16 March 2014.
  13. "Great Polish Map of Scotland granted listed status". BBC News. BBC. 17 September 2012.
  14. 'Team aims to restore 3D Scotland map at Borders castle', BBC News, 6 May 2010. Retrieved 11 July 2012.
  15. 1 2 'Hopes that map's rivers will once again flow lie with Historic Scotland', The Southern Reporter, 18 March 2012. Retrieved 11 July 2012.
  16. 1 2 Herald Scotland article, 'Campaign to save 3D map of Scotland', 7 May 2012
  17. "Rescue plan mapped out". scotsbarszcz.com/ (Issue 5). June 2010. p. 6. Retrieved 15 July 2012.
  18. Christine Grahame MSP (see Recent Motions tab), Recent Motions, Motion S4M-03061. Scottish Parliament website.
  19. 'Debate to ensure Borders map is not consigned to history', Border Telegraph (Galashiels), 3 July 2012. Retrieved 11 July 2012.
  20. Peeblesshire News, 'MSP's backing for model restoration', 1 June 2012.
  21. 1 2 3 'Grahame joins push to restore wartime reminder that could put Borders on map', The Southern Reporter (Selkirk), 3 June 2012. Retrieved 11 July 2012.
  22. "World's largest physical terrain model". Solid Terrain Modeling, Inc. Retrieved 11 July 2012.
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