Everything about Whittingehame totally explained
Whittingehame is a parish with a small village in
East Lothian, about halfway between
Haddington and
Dunbar, and near
East Linton. It is an attractive corner of a very agreeable part of
Scotland, on the slopes of the
Lammermuir Hills. The old castle, or
Tower house of Whittingehame, circa 15th century, is a grand specimen of an old and massive baronial building and remains a residence to this day.
Barony
The barony was anciently the possession of the Dunbar
Earls of March family, and Chalmers'
Caledonia records that they held their baronial court there. In
1372 George de Dunbar, 10th Earl of March, gave in marriage with his sister Agnes to James Douglas of
Dalkeith, the manor of Whittingehame, with the patronage of the Chapel. The Douglases remained in possession for over 200 years: about
1537 Elizabeth (d. after August
1557), daughter of Sir Robert Lauder of
The Bass (d. 1517/18), married William Douglas of Whittingehame, and in October
1564 Mary Queen of Scots confirmed to their son,
William Douglas of Whittinghame (d.
December 17,
1595), a Senator of the
College of Justice, the barony of Whittingham, the castle, mills, and the avowson of the Church there, ratified by parliament on 19 April 1567. This William Douglas had married in
1566 Elizabeth (d. after
August 6,
1608), daughter of Sir
Richard Maitland of Lethington, a Senator of the College of Justice.
Darnley and Riccio
It is said that the plot to murder Mary's husband,
Lord Darnley, was discussed at length at Whittingehame castle in 1566, and in March of that year "William Douglas of Whittingehame, brother to Master Archibald Douglas parson of Douglas", is cited as one of those in the conspiracy to murder
David Riccio. On the 26 August 1582 William Douglas of Whittingehame is cited as one of the
Ruthven raiders.
On the 28 December,
1630, Sir Archibald Douglas, 5th of Whittingehame, son and heir of the previous couple, was a witness to the baptism of Archibald Sydserf at Whittingehame Church, but by 1640 Sir Archibald was dead with no issue. Whittingehame passed to his brother Sir William Douglas of Stoneypath, near
Garvald, whose daughter Isobel married, in 1628, Sir Arthur Douglas of the Kellour family, and their daughter Elizabeth (1632-1668) married, in 1652,
Alexander Seton, 1st Viscount of Kingston and carried Whittingehame to him (Elizabeth's brother Archibald having died unmarried). Their youngest daughter Elizabeth, carried Whittingehame to her husband William Hay of
Duns and
Drumelzier,
Peebleshire, upon their marriage in 1695. The Hays, as proprietors, were highly esteemed by their tenants.
In 1817 they sold Whittingehame and Stoneypath, near Garvald, to James Balfour, second son of John Balfour of Balbirnie in
Fife, who had made a large fortune in
India. James Balfour subsequently enlarged his estate by buying up a great many adjoining properties. By 1900 there were about 25 farms on the Whittingehame estate. The coal mines on their Fife lands greatly increased their prosperity throughout the 19th century.
Whittingehame House
James Balfour engaged James Dorward, from
Haddington, to build a new
neo-classical mansion and offices to designs by Sir
Robert Smirke, Whittingehame House, completed about 1817, with additions and alterations by architect
William Burn ten years later. This became the family home of the Balfours (as in Prime Minister
Arthur Balfour). This building, a huge country house and A-listed, still stands, albeit now divided into private apartments, isn't open to the public. Having passed through various hands after the Balfours (at one time it was a private school - Holt School, sadly it closed and the properly lay dormant.), there's still much of interest to see, including a spectacular ceiling to the dining room.
Church and hamlet
A parochial school, of which the laird was patron, was long established at Whittingehame, and in 1742 Mr James Hogg was appointed schoolmaster there, transferred from neighbouring
Morham.
In 1820 James Balfour rebuilt the church, supplanting the previous rebuild of 1722, and then established, in 1840, a new model village to the north-west of the former medieaval settlement. It consist of a schoolhouse and a string of cottages, all in red standstone.
Further Information
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