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.Moray
House Estates & History
| The Summer House |
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There
is no record of when the Summer House was built in the garden
of Moray House. Indirect evidence suggests that it was built
in the latter half of the 17th century. The earliest map (Rev
James Gordon's
of 1647) shows Moray House facing 'Canongait' with
its garden extending down to the South Back of Canongait,
but with no Summer House building. However, Edgar's
map of 1742, the first properly surveyed of Edinburgh and
the Canongate, shows the small Summer House on the east wall
of the lower garden. John Ainslie's map of 1780 (?) similarly
shows the Summer House in the grounds of the 'Linnen Hall'
(although the property still belonged to the Earl of Moray).
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Moray House intro page | Estates
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Homepage ]
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The Cowan family leased the house and garden in 1793/4. The family commissioned
the Thomas Shepherd prints of 1829. These show how the Cowans had done much
to restore the former Moray House as a fine family home. They converted
the Summer House into a hot house with a conservatory addition (as
in picture above), possibly for the growing of oranges or vines.
An 1856 drawing of Moray House
Normal School and its garden clearly shows the Summer House. The
Summer House did not remain in this state for very long. In his memoir
of about 1909 W G Penney writes of his school days at Moray House in the
1850s:
| "It
was originally a summer house, I was told, but when I saw it first
it was an abandoned hot-house. Afterwards it was fitted up for
a sewing-room. What pranks we boys played there! There was a furnace
underneath it which was reached by an open stairway. I fell into
that hole one day and broke my left-arm, so that I retain a very
vivid recollection of the little old building." |
Shortly before the construction of Paterson's Land in 1911-14 the partly
buried Summer House, in the lower playground, was renovated, the cost
being met by a public subscription raised by Lord Guthrie. It seems that
the
present doors and shutters were fitted at that time. The ceiling
was plastered and decorated with motifs copied from the Balcony Room in
Old Moray House. The two stone
animals were removed for safe storage.
Signing
of the Act of Union in 1707
With
the first election in May 1999 to the devolved Scottish parliament in
Edinburgh there was increased interest in the historical connection with
the Moray House Summer House.
In 1707 the Earl of Seafield was Lord Chancellor of Scotland, charged
with taking the Act of Union through parliament. It was he who uttered
the famous words "there's an end of an auld sang" when the Act was finally
passed.
At
this time Seafield had a tenancy at Moray House. Together with the Duke
of Queensbury, he led the faction for Union. James Grant, writing in 1880
says:
| "There
long remained the old stone summer house ...wherein after a flight
from the Union Cellar many of the signatures were affixed to the
Act of Union, while the cries of the exasperated mob rang in the
streets without barred gates. 'No Union. No Union.' " |
History does not explain why Seafield wished to append the signatures
of Scottish Grandees to the Act of Union. The only necessary signature
would have been the Royal Assent. Nevertheless the tradition persists
that such an event took place. However, this is now considered unlikely,
although some signatures may well have been set down in the Summer House.
Material
compiled & edited in 2002 by David Starsmeare
and
Hugh Perfect,
Honorary
Archivist, Moray House Archive
.
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