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540:. His half-brother Dr. Stuart Threipland (1716β1805), repurchased Fingask in 1783 at a sale of forfeited land, for Β£12,207. He married firstly at St. Paul's, Edinburgh, in 1753, Jannet, daughter of David Sinclair of Southdun, Caithness, and secondly at St. Paul's Edinburgh, in 1761, Jannet daughter of Richard Murray of Pennyland, heiress of her cousin Grizel Budge (d. 1798) of Dale & Toftingall,
420:, which included Sir David Bruce who married Janet, daughter of Sir William Stirling of Keir. Their son, Robert Bruce held charter of Rate (Rait) in 1484, confirmed 1488, and his son David resigned his right to Clackmannan to his uncle in February 1506/7. At the time when Patrick Bruce was laird, a stone was set into the house showing the date 1594. A tombstone near the ruined church of Rait reveals:
758:
654:. In 1917 the Fingask estate was made up of 2,587 acres (10 km). This comprised arable 1,070 acres (4 km), hill 1,400 acres (6 km), and woods 116 acres (0.5 km). The rental of the Fingask, and those of the much smaller estates of Kinnaird, and Inchmichael (which he had added), had given Sir John an annual rental return of Β£4,000. Sir John became heavily indebted due to the
454:
200:
614:"Sir Patrick Threipland lived there, and occasionally at Toftingall, Caithness, with his three sisters Miss Jessie the clever, agreable hostess; Miss Eliza , sarcastic and sharp tongued, the manager of the stables; and Miss Catherine , the gardener β much less clever, but with far more sweetness than either of her sisters."
679:, amongst many others). By this time the estate had been reduced to 75 acres (30 ha). In 1996 Fingask was bought by Andrew Murray Threipland, son of Patrick Murray Threipland and Leslie McNair Scott. In 2020, Threipland revealed plans to transform part of the estate known as Witches Knowe into a
585:
for
Perthshire and Caithness. In 1792 he married his first cousin once-removed Jessy (d. 1855), daughter of William Scott Kerr of Chatto or Thirlestane. Her grandmother was a daughter of Sir David Threipland, 2nd Bt., by his first wife. Between 1828 and 1831 Sir Patrick added to the front west part
785:
The castle itself is dated 1592, and was built around a 12th-century structure. Between 1828 and 1840 additions were made to the south and west of the castle. Sir
Patrick Threipland, 4th Baronet (1762β1837) laid out the park, and his son planted the topiary gardens and installed statuary.
316:
332:
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of 31 March 1851 records a staff of seven at
Fingask: Housekeeper (Jean Oswald); Ladies Maid (Mary Gray); Cook (Margaret Stewart); Sir Peter's House Maid (Mary McLagan); Butler (David Chalmers); Footman (John Bertram); and Coachman (Andrew David). Mrs Drummond of
348:
529:, an English waterworks company which had begun to specialise in forfeited land. The company held the property until 1783, meanwhile leasing it to Dame Katherine (Kattrin) Threipland, "the lass of Gowrie" (d. 18 March 1762), daughter of the 2nd baronet.
589:
Sir
Patrick-Murray (aka Peter) Threipland, 5th Bt (1800β1882), was educated in Edinburgh and Paris. He served as a major in the Perth militia, retiring in 1843, and was a Commissioner for Supply for the counties of Perth and Caithness. He was also a
670:
In 1969 the estate returned to the
Threipland family, when it was bought by Mark Stepney Murray Threipland, grandson of Colonel William Murray Threipland. He was the son of Patrick Murray Threipland and Marged Howard Stepney (a descendant of the
485:
the same year. He renovated the building and laid out the gardens, and in 1674 he added the neighbouring Braes of the Carse tower house and estate of
Kinnaird to his realm. The same year he was knighted for his diligence in the suppression of
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The last of the Bruce lairds of
Fingask was Laurence Bruce, whose "pecuniary involvements necessitated the sale of the estate for the behoof of his creditors in the year 1671".
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cemetery, with over one thousand burial plots, as well as creating a semi-underground candle-lit chamber in which relatives can deposit the ashes of their relatives.
910:
1365:
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544:, Caithness. His sister Miss Euphame ("Aunt Effie") Threipland (1713- ) is said to have run the estate in his absence. Dr Threipland was President of the
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1283:& Co. Ltd. & John Leng & Co. Ltd., London, Glasgow, Manchester, Dundee, 1950. (castle is illustrated on pages 71 & 75, within the story:
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in 1925. The house was saved from ruin but wholly re-modelled, all spiral staircases removed and nineteenth-century frontal additions demolished.
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When Miss Jessie died in May 1871, Mrs
Drummond reported that the "life of the old house went out". On the death of Sir Patrick in 1882, the
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In 1826, the attainder of 1715 was repealed by Act of
Parliament, and Sir Patrick (aka Peter) Budge Murray Threipland (1762β1837), an
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became dormant. Fingask was left to his first cousin's second son, William Scott Kerr, who subsequently changed his name to
532:
Fingask Castle was badly damaged in 1745 by government troops, as the
Threiplands once more supported the Jacobites in the
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824:, a picturesque venue for things such as colloquia and wedding parties. There are statues by David Anderson, sculptor, of
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was moved to the grounds of the castle after being deemed an obstruction to street traffic in Perth's city centre.
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270:. It was later held by the Bruce family, and then by the Threiplands. In the eighteenth century it was owned by
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Jessy Scott Kerr married her cousin Sir Patrick Threipland in 1792. They had four children. She died in 1855.
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Dame Katherine (c. 1679β1762), daughter of David Smythe of Barnhill, and second wife to Sir David Threipland
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416:, including Fingask, from the 15th century. The Bruces were descended from the senior line of the Bruces of
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The castle passed out of the Threipland family again in 1917, when it was bought by whisky merchant
1077:
Views of the Seats of Noblemen and Gentlemen in England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland. Second Series
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658:, and committed suicide at Fingask on 6 February 1924. The estate was bought by H. B. Gilroy of
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Woods, Forests, and Estates of Perthshire with sketches of the principal families of the County
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Before and after his mother died in 1855 he lived at Fingask with his three elder sisters. The
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739:(1779β1869); the Bard of Gowrie, the Poet of the Carse, footman and mason to the Threiplands
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Post card of Fingask Castle, N.B., sent from Errol to Oxford, franked 15 August 1910.
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of the house. Embellishment and building onto the south front continued until 1840.
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of Sir Patrick Budge Murray Threipland, 4th Bart. (1762β1837), in a copy of a 1761
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1302:, Dundee, 26 April 2008, page 5. (photo of Ivan Govorkov & pupils at Fingask).
1352:, Perth and Kinross Council Archives. The collection comprises over 31,000 items.
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1213:, William Culross & Son, Coupar Angus, 1939 (reprinted 1975), (chapter 27).
461:'s painting of Dr. Sir Stuart Threipland, of Fingask (1716β1805), physician to
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Portraits of people associated with Fingask, and the Threipland shield in 1880
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812:, 7 January 1854, showing a match of 17 February 1853, sketch by H. H. Milne
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There are mentions of the lands of Fingask in the Foundation Charter of the
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Showing pre-1920s and post-1830 state of castle and garden, from south-west.
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Sir Patrick Murray Threipland, 5th Baronet (1800β1882), attributed to Sir
536:. David Threipland (1694β1745), son of the 2nd baronet, was killed at the
366:
Castle from the south south east showing lost 19th-century embellishments.
950:... While we sit bousing at the nappy, An' getting fou and unco happy,...
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flowing beside it. On a stone above the well are the appropriate lines:
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Official Guide to Perth and Its Neighbourhood by the Tramway Car Routes
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858:. By other sculptors are also to be found the naked black figure of
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The Butler's Day Book 1849β1855, Everyday Life in a Scottish Castle
1092:'Views in Scotland,' an undated collection of engravings, page 157.
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581:, was restored to the dignity of a baronet. He later served as
828:, of characters from Scots literature. Works depicted include
28:
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Willie Brewβd a Peck oβ Maut, And Rab and Allan camβ tae Pree
442:) from nearby Perth was relocated to the grounds of Fingask.
1025:"Fingask Castle (Category B Listed Building) (LB11634)"
258:
Fingask was once an explicitly holy place, a convenient and
1083:, 1824. Engraved by William Alexander Le Petit (1804β1896).
1314:
Patterson, Vicky Jardine. "Fun with the Fingask Follies".
408:. The date of the charter is said to be 1114 or 1115. The
626:. In 1915 he was appointed to command the newly raised
322:
Copper-plate engraving, John Greig after a drawing by
700:
Sir David Threipland (1666β1746), 2nd Bart., as a boy
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His son David, 2nd Baronet, (c.1670β1746) joined the
280:
Inventory of Historic Gardens and Designed Landscapes
224:, Scotland. It is perched 200 feet (61 m) above
521:
by act of parliament and Fingask and its estate was
1153:"Castle's owner wants to create barrow cemetery" -
390:
Postcard, pre-1920, view from the south-south-west.
232:, in the Braes of the Carse, on the fringes of the
172:
131:
113:
96:
525:. Fingask was purchased for Β£9,606 6s 4.5d by the
424:"Here lies Jonet Gibsone, spouse to William Bruce
1381:Category B listed buildings in Perth and Kinross
1343:Scottish land and society: The Threipland Papers
282:, the national register of significant gardens.
612:
481:purchased the estate, which was erected into a
422:
338:Fingask, from the south, drawn and engraved by
207:Location of Fingask Castle in Perth and Kinross
1262:Friends of Perth & Kinross Council archive
1194:Rev. James M'Turk Strachan, BD, FRSA (Scot),
948:, and his cronies drinking at Kirkton Jean's:
630:, and became Colonel of the regiment in 1937.
274:and was forfeited. The castle is a Category B
434:She died the last of Aprule Ano. Domi. 1647."
8:
1376:Inventory of Gardens and Designed Landscapes
517:. When the rising failed, the baronetcy was
426:Laird of Fingask who bore him ... children
971:, seen from the north looking towards Fife.
656:Prohibition of alcohol in the United States
428:Whereof five males was left behind her, who
102:
93:
79:Learn how and when to remove this message
1401:Tourist attractions in Perth and Kinross
1126:Scottish Garden Buildings by Tim Buxbaum
228:, three miles (5 km) north-east of
42:This article includes a list of general
1105:, Edinburgh, published 31st March 1831.
1009:
906:
690:
652:Sir John Henderson Stewart, 1st Baronet
297:
255:: a white or light-coloured appendage.
1103:The Topography of the Basin of the Tay
1049:
1047:
1045:
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199:
1238:, ed. Andrew Threipland, Perth, 1999.
1015:
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171:
91:Historic site in Perthshire, Scotland
7:
1258:, 19th edition, Delaware, USA, 2001.
886:Drink, weary pilgrim, drink and pray
432:And of her age the space of 33 yeers
430:Lived together the space of 18 yeers
278:, and the estate is included on the
1366:Country houses in Perth and Kinross
932:Statues looking south towards Fife.
920:, in nineteenth-century formation.
890:Unscathed by sun or scorching ray,
48:it lacks sufficient corresponding
25:
1171:β Perth Town Council (1907), p. 6
559:, Ludovicus Desprez, London, 1699
494:, although he died a prisoner at
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870:. Off the drive, in a sheltered
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1054:Historic Environment Scotland.
816:The garden is renowned for its
666:Return to the Threipland family
555:Steuart and Peter Threipland's
490:, and in 1687 he was created a
262:stop-off between the abbeys at
1229:Fingask Castle, Rait, by Perth
1202:, 1898. (48 years minister at
1075:From page 228 of volume IV of
903:Views of the garden at Fingask
513:against the government at the
438:Around 1660 the mercat cross (
1:
1285:Clever Bob, The Dog Detective
1196:From the Braes of the Carse,
1021:Historic Environment Scotland
236:. Thus it overlooks both the
1396:Murals in the United Kingdom
1371:Castles in Perth and Kinross
1318:, June 2008, pp. 64β68.
1294:. Perth. (pp. 490β492).
498:for adherence to the ousted
294:Visual architectural history
1406:Music festivals in Scotland
1056:"Fingask Castle (GDL00179)"
888:And bless St. Peter's well,
866:, and some small pieces by
724:Dr. (Sir) Stuart Threipland
1422:
1386:Listed castles in Scotland
1299:The Courier and Advertiser
1189:The Threiplands of Fingask
892:Or frost or thawing swell
862:; a full length statue of
412:family owned the lands of
624:William Murray Threipland
186:
182:
168:
101:
1101:as seen in James Knox's
864:William Pitt the Younger
598:of Perth and Caithness.
289:Fingas Castle letterhead
248:. The name derives from
1348:14 October 2010 at the
1305:Galbraith, Antoinette.
1290:Hunter, Thomas. (1883)
1256:The Kingdom of Scotland
1254:Burke's Landed Gentry,
1211:The Fair Land of Gowrie
998:Fingask railway station
856:Tam O' Shanter and Kate
809:Illustrated London News
557:Q. Horatii Flacci Opera
507:Jacobite rising of 1715
469:, and President of the
467:Jacobite rising of 1745
63:more precise citations.
894:
813:
647:
616:
610:described the family:
574:
560:
534:second Jacobite rising
527:York Buildings Company
509:, and fought with the
492:baronet of Nova Scotia
474:
436:
290:
220:is a country house in
108:Fingask Castle in 2008
884:
797:
641:
572:Book of Common Prayer
566:
554:
546:Royal Medical Society
538:Battle of Prestonpans
515:Battle of Sheriffmuir
471:Royal Medical Society
463:Bonnie Prince Charlie
456:
288:
1264:, newsletter no. 20.
1209:Melville, Lawrence,
820:, but also features
620:Threipland Baronetcy
592:Justice of the Peace
244:and beyond into the
153:56.43308Β°N 3.25360Β°W
449:Threipland baronets
149: /
1311:, 28 January 2007.
1308:Scotland on Sunday
1244:, 10 October 2006.
1191:, Edinburgh, 1880.
1081:John Preston Neale
985:Perth mercat cross
897:Perth mercat cross
814:
673:2nd Lord De Tabley
648:
644:John Watson Gordon
575:
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479:Patrick Threipland
475:
308:John Preston Neale
291:
158:56.43308; -3.25360
1206:& died 1936).
874:, is the Well of
775:Jessie Threipland
646:(95 x 60 inches).
596:Deputy Lieutenant
583:Deputy Lieutenant
222:Perth and Kinross
215:
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16:(Redirected from
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1331:Official website
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1338:Fingask Follies
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1221:, 18 July 1936.
1200:Poems and Songs
1185:Robert Chambers
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873:
869:
865:
861:
857:
854:, and Burns'
853:
852:
848:
847:Last Minstrel
843:
839:
835:
834:Watty and Meg
831:
827:
823:
819:
811:
810:
805:
804:curling house
801:
796:
789:
787:
780:
771:
766:
759:
754:
747:
742:
738:
732:
727:
720:
715:
708:
703:
696:
691:
686:
684:
682:
678:
674:
665:
663:
661:
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653:
645:
640:
633:
631:
629:
625:
621:
615:
611:
609:
604:
599:
597:
593:
587:
584:
580:
573:
569:
565:
558:
553:
549:
547:
543:
539:
535:
530:
528:
524:
520:
516:
512:
508:
503:
501:
497:
493:
489:
488:conventiclers
484:
480:
472:
468:
464:
460:
455:
448:
446:
443:
441:
435:
421:
419:
415:
411:
407:
403:
395:
386:
381:
374:
369:
362:
357:
350:
345:
341:
334:
329:
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318:
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309:
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298:
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287:
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185:
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176:
167:
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134:
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123:
119:
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105:
100:
95:
83:
80:
72:
62:
58:
52:
51:
45:
40:
31:
30:
27:
19:
1391:Portrait art
1315:
1306:
1297:
1291:
1284:
1281:D.C. Thomson
1273:
1268:
1267:Jack Prout,
1255:
1248:
1242:Country Life
1241:
1235:
1228:
1218:Country Life
1217:
1210:
1195:
1188:
1168:
1164:
1154:
1149:
1140:
1131:
1122:
1114:
1110:
1102:
1097:
1088:
1076:
1071:
1059:. Retrieved
1028:. Retrieved
964:
949:
895:
885:
880:Linn-ma-Gray
879:
845:
842:Walter Scott
837:
833:
822:The Pavilion
821:
815:
807:
784:
669:
649:
634:Other owners
628:Welsh Guards
617:
613:
600:
588:
576:
556:
531:
504:
476:
444:
440:market cross
437:
423:
399:
279:
257:
252:
242:Firth of Tay
234:Sidlaw Hills
217:
216:
177:β Category B
75:
66:
47:
26:
1156:The Courier
548:from 1766.
511:Earl of Mar
502:, in 1689.
465:during the
418:Clackmannan
406:Alexander I
156: /
132:Coordinates
61:introducing
1360:Categories
1277:Wonder Dog
1225:Christie's
1204:Kilspindie
1004:References
860:Doryphoros
781:The castle
457:Detail of
342:, c. 1831.
326:, c. 1830.
253:fionn-gasg
141:56Β°25β²59β³N
122:Perthshire
69:March 2019
44:references
1275:The Dandy
1270:Black Bob
963:Wilson's
878:with the
876:St. Peter
836:, Burns'
806:from the
802:pond and
660:Ballumbie
603:UK Census
568:Bookplate
523:forfeited
519:attainted
272:Jacobites
144:3Β°15β²13β³W
1346:Archived
1247:Burke's
1061:27 March
1030:27 March
992:See also
983:The old
798:Fingask
579:advocate
477:In 1672
260:numinous
240:and the
126:Scotland
114:Location
1251:, 1851.
1249:Peerage
1179:Sources
818:topiary
800:curling
790:Gardens
542:Halkirk
396:History
310:, 1824.
264:Falkirk
57:improve
18:Fingask
851:Ossian
840:, Sir
681:barrow
483:barony
250:Gaelic
46:, but
1117:, p.2
1079:, by
967:, by
826:Perth
675:and
410:Bruce
268:Scone
230:Errol
1063:2019
1032:2019
872:glen
594:and
414:Rait
266:and
226:Rait
118:Rait
844:'s
832:'s
404:by
1362::
1287:).
1279:,
1227:,
1187:,
1040:^
1023:.
1012:^
124:,
120:,
1065:.
1034:.
849:/
82:)
76:(
71:)
67:(
53:.
20:)
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