Brunton House: Difference between revisions

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'''Brunton House''', [[Brunton Street]] is a private house, once the residence of the hereditary falconers to the Kings of Scotland.
'''Brunton House''', [[Brunton Street]] is a private house, once the residence of the hereditary falconers to the Kings of Scotland.


It is probably oldder than the date of 1712 on the armorial panel.
It is probably older than the date of 1712 on the armorial panel.


It was restored in 1894–95 for the [[third Marquess of Bute]] by [[Robert Weir Schultz]] as a school for the Roman Catholic children of the village, and refurbished in 1910 for use for use by [[Lord Ninian]]'s chaplain,<ref name=playfair />. In 1953 Major [[Michael Crichton Stuart]] presented it to the [[National Trust for Scotland]].
It was restored in 1894–95 for the [[third Marquess of Bute]] by [[Robert Weir Schultz]] as a school for the Roman Catholic children of the village, and refurbished in 1910 for use for use by [[Lord Ninian]]'s chaplain,<ref name=playfair />. In 1953 Major [[Michael Crichton Stuart]] presented it to the [[National Trust for Scotland]].

Revision as of 12:40, 9 January 2021

Building details
Name Brunton House
Address Brunton Street KY15 7BQ
Other names Marchioness Dowager of Bute’s private school [1]
Date 17th century
OS grid ref NO 25239 7311
Latitude & longitude 56°15′09″N
3°12′29″W
Listing Category A
Listing ref LB31328
Listing name Brunton House, Brunton Street (including garden walls)

Brunton House, Brunton Street is a private house, once the residence of the hereditary falconers to the Kings of Scotland.

It is probably older than the date of 1712 on the armorial panel.

It was restored in 1894–95 for the third Marquess of Bute by Robert Weir Schultz as a school for the Roman Catholic children of the village, and refurbished in 1910 for use for use by Lord Ninian's chaplain,[1]. In 1953 Major Michael Crichton Stuart presented it to the National Trust for Scotland.

It was restored in 1970 by the NTS under the Little Houses Improvement Scheme.[2]

Listing description

Dated 1712 at sculptured armorial panel, 3-storey 3-window, coursed rubble, moulded doorpiece; crowstepped and pantiled with slate skirting. Crowstepped stair tower at back.[3]

Former residents

  • 1906: George Lumsden)[1]
  • Around 1906: Mrs O'Connor (teacher / manageress)[1]
  • 1911: Henley Woods (Roman Catholic Priest), aged 54, and his sister Cecilia Woods aged 32, both from Edinburgh and a servant (housekeeper), Lily Preston aged 28, from Ireland.[4]

Further references

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Playfair and Burgess
  2. Diane Watters and Miles Glendenning, Little Houses; The National Trust for Scotland's Improvement Scheme for Small Historic Homes (RCAHMS and NTS, 2006, page 105).
  3. Brunton House, Brunton Street (including garden walls), Historic Environment Scotland.
  4. 1911 census

Gallery

[Click on a thumbnail below to see an enlarged image]