About Cold War Scotland
Cold War Scotland explores the stories of Scots at the centre of this global conflict.
The Cold War was a 40-year nuclear stand-off between the USA and the Soviet Union after the Second World War. Scotland’s unique landscape provided a useful base for Allied military preparations and research.
The impact of the war still lingers in Scottish politics, culture and memory. Scots played an active role in the global conflict as soldiers within intelligence services and as part of voluntary civil defences. The exhibition will draw on Scotland’s rich history of Cold War-era protest and activism.
Cold War Scotland is an output of Materialising the Cold War, a collaborative research project between National Museums Scotland and the University of Stirling. The project explores how the Cold War heritage is represented and how museums can adapt to tell this story in future. Materialising the Cold War is funded by a major grant from the Arts and Humanities Research Council.
Image gallery
Exhibition highlights
Exhibition stories
- Discover
Nuclear Scotland during the Cold War
Nuclear power and nuclear weapons dominated the Scottish landscape, and people’s minds, during the Cold War. In 1959, Chapelcross, in Annan in southwest Scotland, became one of the first civil-military nuclear power stations in the world.…Keep reading - Discover
The Cold War and Scottish society
Cold War ideologies and cultures had a direct impact on Scottish society. Scotland was the site for cultural and political exchange from both sides of the Cold War across the 20th century. Politicians from both sides represented their…Keep reading - Discover
How Scotland became a Cold War Battleground
After the Second World War, Western and Soviet tension increased over plans for Germany. Western allies looked for collective security, and in April 1949 the North Atlantic Treaty organisation (NATO) was created. Scotland had huge…Keep reading
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