Whittingehame Tower

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Whittingehame Tower

Whittingehame Tower, or Whittingehame Castle, is a fifteenth-century tower house about 2.5 miles (4.0 km) south of East Linton, on the west bank of Whittinghame Water in East Lothian, Scotland.[1]

Structure

Whittingehame Tower is an altered L-plan keep, comprising a rectangular main block and small stair-wing.[2] It has a parapet which is corbelled out, with rounded corners.[1] There is a cap-house, which was used as a dovecote in the 1930s.[2] There is a vaulted basement. The hall, on the first floor, is panelled; its ceiling is finely painted. The entrance is by the stair-wing. Some of the windows have been enlarged.[1] The hall now houses a collection of documents and old prints.[1] The tower is a category A listed building, the highest level of protection for a historic building in Scotland.[3]

History

Whittingehame Tower was built on lands belonging to the Cospatrick Earls of March. In the 14th century the lands were acquired by the Douglases. During the reign of Mary, Queen of Scots, they were held by James Douglas, 4th Earl of Morton. The property subsequently passed through the hands of the Setons, Hays and Balfours of Balbirnie, who occupy the castle still. Arthur Balfour, Prime Minister from 1902 to 1905, belonged to this family.[1]

Whittinghame Tower in the 1920s

Tradition

It is said that in 1567 the Earl of Morton, the Earl of Bothwell – the future husband of Mary, Queen of Scots – and William Maitland of Lethington, the queen's secretary, were entertained here by the owner, Archibald Douglas. They conferred together in the shelter of a yew tree in the grounds to plot the murder of Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, Queen Mary's unpopular and increasinlgly estranged husband. Morton, just returned from exile in England after the murder of David Rizzio, was unenthusiastic, and requested the queen's direct guidance. Despite the queen's reluctance to give the matter her sanction, the plot put together at Whittingehame was put into effect in due course.[4] However, the hatching of this plot is more commonly thought to have taken place at Craigmillar Castle in late 1566.[5]

Mary's half-brother, the Earl of Moray, was received at Whittingehame by Morton and Lethington about 18 months later, and they concurred with his expression of horror at the murder of Darnley. Bothwell was by then an outlaw.[4]

The first cider gum (Eucalyptus gunnii) in Great Britain is said to have been planted in the grounds of the castle in 1853, and to have survived for over one hundred years.[6]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Coventry, Martin (2001) The Castles of Scotland. Goblinshead. ISBN 1-899874-26-7 p.413
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  4. 4.0 4.1 Tranter, Nigel (1993) Tales and Traditions of Scottish Castles. Neil Wilson Publishing. ISBN 1-897784-13-9 p.185
  5. Fraser, Antonia (1970). Mary Queen of Scots. Panther. ISBN 0-586-03379-3. pp.334–335
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