Clan Dalrymple Lands & Places


View Clan Dalrymple in a larger map

Newhailes (just outside Edinburgh)
Sir David Dalrymple, purchased Whitehill House, near Edinburgh, in 1709. He renamed it Newhailes in memory of the ancient castle.
I live in Edinburgh and about a 15 min drive away from Newhailes house which was owned by the Dalrymples and holds a lot of their history. It’s one of my favorite places. You will hear some very dark stories about the planning of the massacre of glencoe.

Oxenfoord Castle (just outside Edinburgh)
Also just outside Edinburgh is Oxenfoord Castle which was owned by the Dalymples. My friends own an organic farm that is within it’s walled gardens. Sir John Hamilton Dalrymple, 5th Baronet, of Killock, who became the eighth Earl of Stair was created Baron Oxenfoord.

From here to the borders and Dumfries (very beautiful)
Dumfries House (Dalrymples were earls of Dumfries)
Near Cumnock, Ayrshire. Built by the Dalrymples in 1757, the building being design by John and Robert Adam for William Dalrymple, fourth Earl of Dumfries. The house is a classical mansion with a central block and pavilions. The property late passed to the Crichton-Stuart Marquesses of Bute.

Dalrymple of Castleton were in Ayrshire

Lochinch Castle – Stranraer, Dumfries & Galloway (also borders)
Lochinch Castle is the home of the Earl and Countess of Stair whose ancestor, Sir James Dalrymple of Stair, inherited Castle Kennedy and the surrounding estates from the Kennedy Earls of Cassillis. The original Castle Kennedy burnt down and Lochinch Castle was built in it’s place.

BALDOON CASTLE, ladnoch, near Wigtown, Wigtownshire, Dumfries and Galloway
This is just in ruins, but has a Dalrymple ghost!
The ruins themselves, quiet and deserted and with an air of tragedy about them, are haunted by the ghost of Janet Dalrymple who walks here in the small hours, her white garments splashed with blood. In the middle of the seventeenth century Janet, the eldest daughter of Sir James Dalrymple, was forced by her parents to marry David Dunbar, heir of Sir David Dunbar of Baldoon, although she loved the practically penniless Archibald, third Lord Rutherford. Dutifully, and worn down by her parents’ persistent objections to Archibald, Janet at last married David Dunbar in the kirk of Old Luce, two miles from Carsecleugh Castle, the old home of the Dalrymples. Her two brothers took her to the church and both declared later that her hands were cold as ice on that hot summer day.

There are three main versions of the events that gave rise to the haunting. In the first version the bride stabs her bridegroom in the bridal chamber and dies insane; in the second version the bridegroom stabs the bride and is found insane; and in the third version the disappointed Archibald conceals himself in the bridal chamber and escapes through the window into the garden after stabbing the bridegroom. Whatever the facts, Sir Walter Scott immortalised the story in The Bride of Lammermoor and describes how the door of the bridal chamber was broken down after hideous shrieks were heard from within and how the bridegroom was found lying across the threshold, dreadfully wounded and streaming with blood, while the bride crouched in a chimney corner, her white night-gown splashed with blood, grinning and muttering and quite insane. She never recovered and died shortly afterwards, on September 12th, 1669.

Dunbar is said to have recovered from his wounds but refused to discuss the events of his bridal night. In due course he married a daughter of the seventh Earl of Eglinton and eventually died from a fall from his horse in 1682. Archibald, Janet’s true lover, never married and died in 1685. A macabre touch is added to the story by local tradition that it was the Devil who nearly killed Dunbar and who tormented poor Janet until she was demented. Whatever the events of the night, they seem to have left their mark here forever and there are some who claim to have seen the sad and awesome ghost of Janet wandering pathetically among the quiet ruins, most often on the anniversary of her death.