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Inchindown, Royal Navy Fuel Tanks

Oil Storage Tank(S) (20th Century)

Site Name Inchindown, Royal Navy Fuel Tanks

Classification Oil Storage Tank(S) (20th Century)

Alternative Name(s) Inchindoun; Invergordon Oil Fuel Depot

Canmore ID 173294

Site Number NH67SE 57

NGR NH 68832 74492

NGR Description NH 68832 74492 and NH 69021 74606

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/173294

Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved.
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Administrative Areas

  • Council Highland
  • Parish Rosskeen
  • Former Region Highland
  • Former District Ross And Cromarty
  • Former County Ross And Cromarty

Archaeology Notes

NH67SE 57.00 68832 74492 and 69021 74606

NH67SE 57.01 NH 69324 74056 Structure

The Royal Navy underground oil tanks to supply Invergordon are situated upslope from Inchindown farmsteading. There are two stone and concrete built entrances in the conifer plantation with the tanks tunnelled into the hillside. A pipeline was built from here to the Invergordon base and elements of this can still be traced to Tomich (NH67SE 53), and beyond to the oil tanks at Invergordon.

J Guy 2000; NMRS MS 810/10, Vol.2, 116, Vol.3, 37.

Activities

Publication Account (2009)

The website text produced for Inchindown webpages on the Forest Heritage Scotland website (www.forestheritagescotland.com).

Introduction: The secret store

On the edge of Kinrive Forest, hidden in the side of Kinrive Hill, are two bolted doorways. Today they stand forgotten and unheeded, but during World War II they formed the entrance to a vital part of the British government's defence plan against the Germans and their allies.

The doorways lead to the bombproof fuel tanks beneath Kinrive Hill. Inchindown was one of three secret fuel stores constructed near the main naval anchorages in Britain, in this case Invergordon naval base. The tanks held a specific kind of fuel called Furnace Fuel Oil (FFO). The Royal Navy used this type of fuel for their ships until the late 1960's.

The government needed to keep stores of fuel, in case the German Navy managed to block the ports or destroy shipping convoys and stop fuel supplies reaching Britain from overseas. These supplies of fuel had to be hidden from view and protected or German planes would have targeted and tried to destroy them.

The fuel would make sure the Royal Navy could continue to protect Britain, no matter what happened. In 1941 the Germans did successfully destroy one of the above-ground oil tanks immediately beside Invergordon naval base.

Four miles of pipes connected Inchindown to the naval base, keeping it supplied with fuel and ready for action. The fuel flowed downhill from the stores to Invergordon, but restocking the tanks from the base was more problematic. To get the fuel back up hill they built three pumping stations, the largest located at Tomich.

People Story: Who built these stores?

The construction of the six fuel tanks inside Kinrive Hill was a major feat of engineering.

The tanks are enormous and held almost 32 million gallons of fuel. There were five main tanks and one smaller reserve one. The larger tanks were 9m wide by 237m long and 13.5m high; you could fit 16 double decker-buses end to end into one of these tanks.

The government contracted engineering firm William Arrol to build the depot, who in turn sub-contracted the work out, probably to the construction firm Yemen, Bald, and Hutchison.

It was not an easy task to hollow out the hill. Nor could it have been much of a secret. The hill was selected for its hard rock, and was deep enough to protect the tanks from bombing.

They quarried over half a million tonnes of rock and dumped it on the hillside. This was visible from the air and the Germans probably knew about the construction. The hill provided protection rather than a secret location.

Locals still remember the quarrying of the hill. As well as a local workforce, gangs of labourers from Ireland were hired.

Malcolm MacLeod recalls his father cycling the 5 miles and back from Adross to work a fourteen hour shift drilling the tunnels and tanks.

The tanks had no doors only four circular pipes, through which men had to pass to reach the tanks. The staff lay flat on a gurney, a wheeled board, and slid down the pipes. Today the tanks are clean but it must have been a rather dirty and smelly job.

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