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1854 BEAUFORT CASTLE, 12th Lord Lovat Thomas Fraser to Duncan Grant of Bught

$ 50.98

Availability: 57 in stock
  • Document Type 2: Manuscript Letter
  • Era: Victoria (1837-1901)
  • Estate or House name: Beaufort Castle
  • Year of Issue: 1854
  • Family Surname: Fraser
  • Letter From: 12th Lord Lovat
  • Brand: Unbranded
  • Theme: Inverness local History
  • Addressed to: Duncan Grant of Bught
  • Country: Scotland
  • City/Town/Village/Place: Beauly
  • Scotland County: Invernesshire
  • Titled Families: 12th Lord Lovat
  • Condition: Used

    Description

    1854 BEAUFORT CASTLE, 12th Lord Lovat Thomas Fraser to Duncan Grant of Bught
    This product data sheet is originally written in English.
    1854 BEAUFORT CASTLE, 12th Lord Lovat Thomas Fraser to Duncan Grant of Bught, Inverness. and relating to the money received for the use of the new Militia Depot
    No trace remains of the military depot in an area now occupied by Skinner Court immediately N of Merkinch School (NH64NE 687).
    The depot is depicted on the 1st edition of the OS 25-inch map (Inverness-shire, 1871, sheet c). It is shown as a roofed single building annotated 'Militia Depot' at the NW side of a quadrangle/ parade ground.
    By the date of the 2nd edition (1904, ibid), the depot had been enlarged and improved to include buildings around both sides of the parade ground and was now annotated 'Militia Depot (79th Regimental District)'. All subsequent editions do not show any annotation, but the only the building outline.
    The Object Name Book of the Ordnance Survey (ONB) describes the depot as' Situated on the west side of Telford Road where the stores of the Inverness, Banff, Moray and Nairn Militia are kept.
    Erected in 1856; property of the County
    . In addition to the store-rooms and magazines, which holds about 50 casks of g.powder (gunpowder), the orderly Room and Guard Room, Prison Cells and Lecture room; there are the quarters of the Pipe Major, Segeant-Major, Major, QuartermasterSergeant and Paymaster's Clerk. All in excellent condition'. (Name Book 1870).
    The depot has been demolished and the site is now occupied by Skinner Court.
    Information from RCAHMS (DE), August 2008
    The estate on which Bught House
    stood is now Bught Park, the largest park in Inverness. The house had large grounds, as shown on the Ordinance Survey map of 1868. The Ordinance Survey namebook of 1878 also has a passage describing the house as "A commodious residence situated on the West Bank of the river Ness, it has extensive outbuildings and garden attached, the buildings are in good repair and occupied by the proprietor Duncan Grant esq."
    Beaufort Castle or Castle Dounie (Scottish Gaelic: Caisteal Dhùnaidh) is a Baronial style mansion
    built in 1880 and incorporating older building work.[1] It is situated on the right bank of the River Beauly near the town of Beauly in Inverness-shire and is 1 mile (1.6 km) north of Kiltarlity and 13 mi (21 km) west of Inverness.[1] 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 Alexander I (1106–1124), when a siege took place.[2] 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 during their invasion of Scotland.
    The Fraser estates were inherited by Simon Fraser, 11th Lord Lovat (c.1667–1747), 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.[4] 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 factor (estate manager). In 1774 the estate was returned to Lovat's son, Simon Fraser of Lovat (1726–1782), 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 (1802–1875), who was reinstated to the 12th 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 (1828–1887), 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 by the 15th Lord Lovat, to meet inheritance taxes.
    Description
    The Baronial mansion incorporates a private Roman Catholic chapel.[5] The remains of Dounie Castle stand beside the house, and comprise a single wall, 11 metres (36 ft) long and 1.5 metres (4 ft 11 in) high, with a plaque stating that it is "the ruin of Castle Downie, the ancient stronghold of the Frasers of Lovat, built c. 1400, and destroyed by Cumberland after the battle of Culloden".
    The house is a category A listed building.[5] The grounds are included in the Inventory of Gardens and Designed Landscapes, the national listing of significant gardens in Scotland.[2
    :
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    1854 BEAUFORT CASTLE, 12th Lord Lovat Thomas Fraser to Duncan Grant of Bught, Inverness. and relating to the money received for the use of the new Militia Depot No trace remains of the military depot in an area now occupied by Skinner Court immediately N of Merkinch School (NH64NE 687).The depot is depicted on the 1st edition of the OS 25-inch map (Inverness-shire, 1871, sheet c). It is shown as a roofed single building annotated 'Militia Depot' at the NW side of a quadrangle/ parade ground.By the date of the 2nd edition (1904, ibid), the depot had been enlarged and improved to include buildings around both sides of the parade ground and was now annotated 'Militia Depot (79th Regimental District)'. All subsequent editions do not show any annotation, but the only the building outline.The O
    Document Type 2
    Manuscript Letter
    Country
    Scotland
    Estate or House name
    Beaufort Castle
    Family Surname
    Fraser
    City/Town/Village/Place
    Beauly
    Scotland County
    Invernesshire
    Theme
    Inverness local History
    Era
    Victoria (1837-1901)
    Addressed to
    Duncan Grant of Bught
    Letter From
    12th Lord Lovat
    Year of Issue
    1854
    Titled Families
    12th Lord Lovat