Old Photograph Beaufort Castle Beauly Scotland

Old photograph of Beaufort Castle near the town of Beauly located ten miles West of Inverness in the Highlands of Scotland. The present castle is a Baronial style mansion built in 1880, but incorporates older building work. There has been a castle on the site since the 12th century. Beaufort is the traditional seat of the Lords Lovat. The earliest mention of the site, as Downie or Dounie Castle, occurs in the reign of King Alexander I, 1106 to 1124, when a siege took place. The original castle was built by the Byset family. The castle came into the hands of the Frasers in the late 13th century. English forces besieged the castle in 1303. In the 1650s Dounie was attacked and burned by the forces of Oliver Cromwell from England during their invasion of Scotland. The Fraser estates were inherited by Simon Fraser, 11th Lord Lovat, born 1667, died 1747, in 1699. Known as The Fox, Lovat became deeply involved in the Jacobite cause, which aimed to restore the deposed House of Stuart to the thrones of Scotland and England. Exiled to France, Lovat joined James Stuart, the Old Pretender, and converted to Catholicism. He attempted to recruit Scottish nobles to the cause, carrying messages to Scotland, but his dealings led to ten years imprisonment in France. Returning in 1714, he apparently renounced the Jacobite cause in return for possession of his estates. In the 1740s he commissioned William Adam to design a new house at Dounie. Adam's last work, the project only progressed to the supply of stonework to the site: construction never started since the Jacobite Rising of 1745 intervened. Lovat, changing allegiance again, supported the Jacobites, but was captured and executed after the Battle of Culloden. Dounie Castle was razed by the Duke of Cumberland, and the estate was declared forfeit. From 1746 the estate was run by the Forfeited Estates Commissioners, appointed by Parliament to dispose of confiscated estates, and a small house was built on the site of the demolished castle to house the estate manager. In 1774 the estate was returned to Lovat's son, Simon Fraser of Lovat, born 1726, died 1782, who had raised and commanded the 78th Fraser Highlanders for the British Army. Proposals for a new house on the site were put forward in 1777 but not executed. In 1815 the estate was inherited by Thomas Fraser of Strichen, born 1802, died 1875, who was reinstated to the Lordship of Lovat in 1854. In 1839 he commissioned William Burn to extend the house, and also improved the grounds and estate. His son Simon Fraser, 13th Lord Lovat, born 1828, died 1887, built the present Beaufort Castle, to designs by James Maitland Wardrop, incorporating part of the 18th century house. The castle was sold in 1994 to Stagecoach director Ann Gloag, from Perthshire, by the 15th Lord Lovat, to meet inheritance taxes.





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Old Photograph Golf Course Crawford Scotland

Old photograph of the golf course in Crawford, South Lanarkshire, Scotland.





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Old Photograph Steamship Clanranald II at The Pier Glenfinnan Scotland

Old photograph of the Steamship Clanranald II on Loch Shiel at the pier in Glenfinnan, Scotland. Built by Thomas B Seath and Company in 1900 for Lord Howard of Glossop.



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Old Photograph Hotel Fearnan Perthshire Scotland

Old photograph of the hotel in Fearnan village by Loch Tay, Perthshire, Scotland. The land around the village has at various times in history belonged to both the Clan Robertsons of Struan and the Clan Campbells.



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Old Photograph Shop Orphans Home Bridge Of Weir Scotland

Old photograph of the shop in the Orphans Home in Bridge of Weir, Renfrewshire, near Glasgow, Scotland. The village here was founded as the Orphan Homes of Scotland in 1876 by Glasgow shoemaker and philanthropist William Quarrier on the site of the former Nittingshill Farm. Quarrier had a vision of a community allowing the young people in his care to thrive, set in a countryside environment and housed in a number of grand residences under a house-mother and father. This vision was realised by a number of donations from Quarrier and his friends. As a devout Christian, Quarrier also wished to pass on these values to the children in his charge. As such, he commissioned the building of the grand Mount Zion Church, known informally as the Children's Cathedral; his values are also reflected in the naming of streets in the village, such as Faith Avenue, Hope Avenue, Love Avenue, Praise Avenue and Peace Avenue.



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