Glimpse into life in Wick more than 100 years ago

The oldest known moving images of Wick have been restored by the National Library of Scotland.

Glimpse into life in Wick more than 100 years agoThe National Library of Scotland

The oldest known moving images of Wick have been restored by the National Library of Scotland. 

The Wick Society gave five Kinora reels to the library’s Moving Image Archive around 20 years ago for protection and preservation. 

The Kinora was an early moving image device for which individual frames of film were printed onto small cards attached to a circular core. 

The reel of cards – like a large round flip-book – was placed in a Kinora viewer and revolved by turning a handle.

Deemed to be the work of local photographer John G Humphrey, the reels contain scenes and events that are estimated to have taken place between 1897 and 1910. 

Fishermen ‘redding’ their nets.The National Library of Scotland

The footage includes ships and tugboats arriving into Wick Harbour, fishermen ‘redding’ their nets, a storm in Wick Bay, and a church parade – likely marking Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee in June 1897. 

Together they provide a unique glimpse of a local industry just before the widespread adoption of mass industrial fishing.

Head of the Moving Image Archive, Alison Stevenson, said: “Kinora reels are tricky to work with. Given their age of about 120 years, they are in a very fragile condition. 

“Our specialists digitised these reels card by card by to reassemble and stabilise the films frame by frame. 

“The paper cards were bent and warped at different rates, so the digital image captured from each one had to be treated individually during restoration.

Reels deemed to be the work of local photographer John G Humphrey.The National Library of Scotland

“It has been a labour of love. The ‘Wick Kinora Reels’ are the only Kinora reels in the national collections, and the oldest surviving moving images of Wick. 

“We’re excited to finally be able to provide the digitally restored footage to the Wick Society while also making these unique films available online for the public.”

Chairman of the Wick Society, Ian Leith, said: “It was in 1989 that a Kinora Viewer and a collection of reels were gifted to the Wick Society by a Mr and Mrs Sutherland, then resident in East Kilbride. 

“They in turn confirmed that the reels had been the property of Mrs Sutherland’s grandfather, Henry Williamson, cousin of William Johnston of the famous Johnston Photographic Collection family. Henry Williamson and the Pulteneytown Good Templars were instrumental in encouraging the first cinema in the town, with Henry acting as projectionist.

“These reels then, are a most important part of the town’s history and heritage and the Wick Society is indebted to the National Library for making their time and expertise available in finally making these scenes from our past available again.”

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