Queen Mary's House

Queen Mary's House
Mary Queen of Scots' House, Jedburgh
Type towerhouse
Location Jedburgh
Coordinates 55°28′43″N 2°33′10″W / 55.47861°N 2.55278°W / 55.47861; -2.55278Coordinates: 55°28′43″N 2°33′10″W / 55.47861°N 2.55278°W / 55.47861; -2.55278
Built 16th century

Queen Mary's House is a listed sixteenth century building in Jedburgh which is "said to be" where Mary, Queen of Scots stayed for a few weeks in 1566. The building has been open to the public since 1930 as a museum, although some doubt whether the Queen stayed in this building. The museum has concentrated on telling Queen Mary's story for thirty years.

History

The house was built in the sixteenth century in the town of Jedburgh near the Jed Water. The origial entrance to the house is thought to be from Canongate Bridge through what is not the garden.[1]

The house was recorded in a watercolour by the astronomer and artist Nathaniel Everett Green.[2]

In 1777 the house was the home of Dr Lindsay and his wife Jean. Ten years later their daughters were guides for Robert Burns when he visited Jedburgh.[3] Dr Lindsay's grandson, Lieutenant - General Robert Lindsay inherited the house in about 1819. He had entered the Russian army and became in time the head of the Saint Petersburg Mint. Robert allowed his aunts to occupy the house until 1869 when Elizabeth Armstrong died.[3]

Mary, Queen of Scots House by Arthur Perigal the Younger

The house was painted by Arthur Perigal the younger in 1879.

The building was given to the town by the Debenhams director F. S. Oliver who was then living in nearby Edgerston in 1928. It was restored under the supervision of the architect John Wilson Paterson of Edinburgh. It was opened to the public in 1930 by Mrs Oliver.[4]

In 1971 it became a Category A listed building.[4]

Description

It is a three storey stone built building with a four storey tower. The roof was originally thatched and it was later covered with tiles.

Mary who was the Queen of the Scots came with her entourage to Jedburgh in 1566 to hold a court. She paid £40 to hire a house. Whilst she was in Jedburgh she heard that James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell lay injured at Hermitage Castle. She took a hazardous journey to see him and returned ill from the experience. She was said to have later noted that she should have died in Jedburgh. She didn't die but she was forced to abdicate and she went to escape to England where she was imprisoned and much later executed. For the last thirty years Queen Mary's House has told this story.[5]

The ex-Callants assembled in the grounds in 2018

The building is open to the public and there is no charge. Visitors can tour the inside via a stone spiral staircase. In each of the rooms are artefacts and boards explaining the history of the building and the background to Queen Mary's life and eventual execution.

The extensive grounds include pear trees that were planted in the 21st century. The trees are of the variety that were grown in the area when the farming of pears was a major occupation in the town.[6]

Today the roofs are finished with grey slate.[4]

References

  1. Jeffrey, Alexander (1857–64). History and antiquities of Roxburghshire and adjacent districts, from the most remote period to the present time. University of Guelph Library. Edinburgh, T.C. Jack.
  2. Zilla Oddy (2004). Mary, Queen of Scots' House, Jedburgh: A Look at the Building and Its Inhabitants. Teviotdale Press. ISBN 978-0-9547440-0-7.
  3. 1 2 Information panels within the museum, August 2018
  4. 1 2 3 "QUEEN STREET, QUEEN MARY'S HOUSE WITH OUTBUILDINGS, BOUNDARY WALL AND RAILINGS (LB35591)". portal.historicenvironment.scot. Retrieved 2018-08-19.
  5. "The Mary Queen of Scots Visitor Centre at Jedburgh". www.historyscotland.com. Retrieved 2018-08-20.
  6. Council, Scottish Borders. "Queen Mary's House Gardens, Jedburgh". www.scotborders.gov.uk. Retrieved 2018-08-20.
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