Gowrie House was a mansioun in the centre of Perth, Scotland, which existed in the 16th and 17th and 18th centuries. It was the scene of a controversial incident on 5 August 1600, and was later converted to army barracks.
Gowrie House | |
---|---|
Location | Perth Perth and Kinross Scotland |
Coordinates | 56°23′41″N 3°25′33″W / 56.394663°N 3.4259512°W |
Built | circa 1518 |
Location
editGowrie House formerly stood on what became Tay Street, its location now occupied by Perth Sheriff Court, County Buildings and 46–52 Tay Street.[1] The building extended from Water Vennel to Canal Street, bounded on the west by Speygate and on the east by the River Tay. Its entrance was an arched gateway on South Street.[2]
Early history
editAn earlier house on the site was standing in 1518,[2] built or occupied by Elizabeth Gray, Countess of Huntly and the second wife of Alexander Gordon, 3rd Earl of Huntly. A document of 1552 mentions the great lodging that she had built in the Speygate of Perth.[3]
In 1527, the building was purchased by William Ruthven, 1st Lord Ruthven, around a year before his death, from Elizabeth Ruthven, dowager Countess of Erroll.[4] The building's appearance at this time is acknowledged with a bronze panel, by Sir John Steell, on the south wall of the present building.[5]
Gowrie House and the Ruthvens
editGowrie House was so-named for the title Earl of Gowrie, given to William, Lord Ruthven, in 1581. The Ruthvens were frequently Provosts of Perth. A workman, Archibald Wylie, was killed by a fall of stone masonry during building work on the house on 5 May 1579.[3]
Christian Stewart
editIn 1596, Christian Stewart in Nokwater was accused of causing the death of Patrick Ruthven by witchcraft. Before her trial, she was questioned at Gowrie House by three Kirk ministers Patrick Galloway, William Couper, Archibald Moncreiff, and others, on 18 August, and on the 19 and 21 August. They produced and signed written statements called "depositions". Christian Stewart was taken to Edinburgh and another deposition was made on 13 September, in the presence of Robert Bruce, the physician Gilbert Moncreiff and the merchant Clement Cor. She was also questioned by King James VI at Linlithgow Palace. She seems to have confessed to obtaining a black cloth or "clout" from Isobel Stewart to bewitch Patrick Ruthven. The court in the Tolbooth of Edinburgh sentenced her to be burnt at the Castlehill.[6]
Gowrie conspiracy
editThe house was central to the Gowrie conspiracy, a series of events unfolding on 5 August 1600, in which John Ruthven, 3rd Earl of Gowrie (1577–1600), and his brother, Alexander, Master of Ruthven (1580–1600), were attempting to kill or kidnap King James VI for unknown purposes. The King was lured to Perth from his hunting near Falkland Palace, possibly by a story of buried treasure, and offered dinner in the house. James was separated from his companion and threatened in a room at the top of the house. His retinue killed both brothers during the attack, and the king survived. The angry townspeople of Perth were pacified.[7]
James VI ordered that the building be defaced by removing some of its corner turrets. In 1602, he gifted the building to the city, though he was careful to exclude its name when making the gift.[2] His hunting companions including Thomas Erskine were richly rewarded. King James continued to commemorate his rescue on every 5 August for the rest of his reign.[8][9] The house was granted to James Maxwell in 1622,[10] and latterly became the home of George Hay, 1st Earl of Kinnoull (1570–1634), amongst others.[2]
Army barracks
editIn 1746, the city gifted the house to Prince William, Duke of Cumberland, in recognition of his victory at the Battle of Culloden. It is believed the duke later passed the house to his nephew, Admiral Watson, who sold it to the UK government for £2,000.[2] It was converted into artillery barracks, and was occupied until the French Revolution. Several plans of the house were made during these years and are kept by the National Library of Scotland.[11] In 1805, it was traded back from the government by the city in exchange for a site on which to build a depot for prisoners of war. Five acres of Moncreiffe land were given over.[2]
During demolition in 1807 observers considered that the east and southern wings were older, with noticeably thicker walls, and were probably originally built for Elizabeth Gray. The west and northern buildings were built by the Ruthvens. The workmen were said to have found concealed vaults and closets in the old walls, one with an earthenware urn of bones. There was also a tower or garden building near the River Tay, known as the Monk's Tower, and intended to serve as a summer house or banqueting room.[12] The 17th-century painted ceiling of the Monk's Tower included the symbols of the zodiac and heraldry of Hay of Kinnoull.[13] The summer house was used for meetings by Charles II in 1650, and he may have stayed in Gowrie House.[14] A detailed household account covering Charles' months in Perth reveals that the king had a boat or barge on the Tay, and was allowed more sugar in his pies than his courtiers, but does not mention that the "King's house" where he resided in Perth was Gowrie House.[15] The older parts of Gowrie House and the Monk's Tower before demolition were indicated on plans published by David Peacock.[16]
In documentation from 1911, a Gowrie Rest House, Labour Yard and Lodging Home for Men and Boys stood on Speygate.[17]
References
edit- ^ Perth History Tour, Jack Gillon (2020) ISBN 9781398101425
- ^ a b c d e f Perth, the Ancient Capital of Scotland: The Story of Perth from the Invasion of Agricola to the Passing of the Reform Bill in 2 volumes – Samuel Cowan J.P. (1904), chapter 3
- ^ a b Robert Scott Fittis, The Merchant Princes of Bonnie St Johnstoun (Perth, 1875), p. 30.
- ^ Official Guide to Perth and Its Neighbourhood by the Tramway Car Routes – Perth Town Council (1907)
- ^ Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland: A Graphic and Accurate Description of Every Place in Scotland, Francis Hindes Groome (1901)
- ^ Robert Pitcairn, Ancient Criminal Trials in Scotland, 1:3 (Edinburgh, 1833), pp. 399–400.
- ^ Jenny Wormald, "The Gowrie Conspiracy", Miles Kerr-Peterson & Steven J. Reid, James VI and Noble Power (Routledge, 2017), pp. 194–206.
- ^ Clare Jackson, Devil-Land: England under Siege, 1588–1688 (Penguin, 2022), p. 141.
- ^ Philip Williamson & Natalie Mears, "The Creation of State Anniversaries: James VI and I and the Politics of Thanksgiving", The English Historical Review (October 2024), doi:10.1093/ehr/ceae205
- ^ John Maitland Thomson, Register of the Great of Seal of Scotland, 1620–1633 (Edinburgh, 1894), p. 129 no. 386.
- ^ National Library of Scotland: Military Maps images
- ^ James Scott, A History of the Life and Death of John, Earl of Gowrie (Edinburgh, 1818), pp. 168-172.
- ^ Robert Forsyth, Beauties of Scotland, vol. 4 (Edinburgh, 1806), p. 281.
- ^ Marilyn Brown, Scotland's Lost Gardens (Edinburgh, 2015), pp. 210-1.
- ^ David Stevenson, 'Minute Book of the Board of Green Cloth', Miscellany of the Scottish History Society, XV (Edinburgh, 2013), pp. 55-132.
- ^ David Peacock, Perth: its annals and its archives (Perth, 1849), between pp. 190-1 and pp. 240-1
- ^ Leslie's directory for Perth and Kinross (1911), p. 35