Plootering around
Haven't done all that I should today, still one more thing on my to do list. This is a fancy seat probably for the posh ladies that lived in Kilmory castle before these vandals at the Council took over the building. It's not every cooncil that has it's HQ in a castle! Mind you the cooncellors seemed to have inherited the posh folks delusions of grandeur as they look after themselves better than they do the tax paying punters.
More info here
This article is about the 19th-century manor house. For the 15th-century castle on the Isle of Bute, see Kilmory Castle, Bute.
Kilmory Castle
Kilmory Castle seen from the south-west
Coordinates
56.02567°N 5.42133°WCoordinates: 56.02567°N 5.42133°W
Listed Building – Category B
Designated
20 July 1971
Reference no.
11039
Location within Argyll and Bute
Kilmory Castle, also known as Kilmory House, is a large 19th-century house located just to the south of Lochgilphead, in Argyll, Argyll and Bute, on the west coast of Scotland. It is currently occupied by the headquarters of Argyll and Bute Council. The gardens are open to the public and form part of a country park on the former estate. The house is protected as a category B listed building.[1]
There was a church at Kilmory in ancient times, and in the 1550s the church and lands of Kilmory were held by the Abbot of Paisley. In 1575 the estate was owned by Donald Campbell of Kilmory, and remained in the Campbell family for over 250 years. A house may have stood here as early as the 14th century.[2] The Campbells built a house, or extended the existing one, in 1816-20.[3] Eliza Campbell, the eldest daughter and co-heir of Peter Campbell, married Sir John Orde, 2nd Baronet in 1824. He purchased the estates following the death of his father in law in 1828 and of his wife in 1829. Orde demolished the modest old Campbell house and replaced it with a grand Gothic style mansion designed by architect Joseph Gordon Davis. The core of the older house was retained, but was extended into an L-plan, with new exterior and interior decoration, and a large octagonal tower at the south-west corner. Orde also greatly expanded and improved the grounds and estate, engaging William Hooker to extend the gardens in 1830. Further extensions were carried out in the 1860s.
Orde was buried in the private burial ground adjacent to the house in 1878. His son succeeded to the baronetcy, and changed his name to Campbell-Orde in 1880. The Campbell-Orde baronets retained the estate until 1938. It passed through several owners thereafter, and served variously as a hotel, hostel and conference centre.
In 1974, Argyll County Council purchased the house to serve as a headquarters for Argyll and Bute District Council, which was formed in 1975. In 1995 local government was reorganised again, although Kilmory remained in use as the headquarters of the new Argyll and Bute unitary authority. An office block extension was built onto the house in 1980-82, to increase the provision of space. Fire damaged the main house the following year, and many interiors had to be refurbished.
The castle is said[by whom?] to be haunted by the ghost of a 'Green Lady'.
Mother Shipton's entry
Comments
Sign in or get an account to comment.