BRIEF HISTORY OF THE
STRATHALLAN MEETING

1936 Committee
The Strathallan meeting in its present form has held a central place in traditional Scottish sport for 150 years. Before that its origin can be found in the sports gatherings of ordinary country folk when the Lairds met to play at, "Tilting at the ring" under a charter granted by James I in 1453. A link to the old Wappenschaws, (a kind of medieval "Home Guard" when every grown man had to show his weapons in good order), is tenuous, but what is certain is that by the early 19th century competitive sports were taking place here on a regular basis. William Litt of Cumbria wrote in 1823 of "The famous old school of wrestlers in Strathallan, Stirlingshire".
There is no record of when The Country
Archery and Rifle Club was founded but it was probably about 1825 and it also held sports
competitions at its meetings. Their competitions became the Strathallan Highland
Games and were organised by JA Henderson of Westerton from at least 1848 until 1858 when
he died. Major General Sir James Alexander, K.C.B., became Laird of Westerton in
1863 and reorganised the games which have been held annually ever since then with the
exception of the duration of the two World Wars.
Strathallan's committee has a unique claim to fame, it is intimately connected with the
birth of the modern cult of Body-building. In 1888 it was responsible for organising
the Highland Gathering at the Glasgow International Exhibition and in 1889 at the Paris
International Exhibition. When the Strathallan Committee and the highland games
stars they had brought to Paris for the Exhibition arrived, they found to their surprise
that the world's first Body-building competition was about to be held. The
competition was to be a team competition and had already attracted an entry of 300
strongmen, but nothing daunted, the Scots led by the famous wrestler Jimmy Esson of
Aberdeen, entered and won. Sadly Jimmy Esson died of his wounds in A German Prisoner
of War camp in 1916.
In 1999 the meeting reverted to its roots, until 1956 it was a traditional games with money prizes, then from 1957 till 1998 it affiliated to the amateur sports organisations. A new era demands a new start and in 1999, the year of the first Scottish Parliament for almost 300 years, we once again affiliated to the Scottish Games Association to continue to promote for the benefit of the coming generations, the old traditional Scottish sports, dances and music.