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Amisfield House, Whittingehame Drive, Stable Block

Stable(S) (18th Century)

Site Name Amisfield House, Whittingehame Drive, Stable Block

Classification Stable(S) (18th Century)

Canmore ID 56560

Site Number NT57SW 67

NGR NT 52932 74228

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/56560

Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved.
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Administrative Areas

  • Council East Lothian
  • Parish Haddington
  • Former Region Lothian
  • Former District East Lothian
  • Former County East Lothian

Architecture Notes

Amisfield House

NT57SW 312 NT 52869 74160

NT57SW 312.1 NT 52345 73828 Amisfield Cottage

NT57SW 312.2 NT 52322 73877 West Lodge

NT57SW 312.3 NT 52329 73844 West Gates

NT57SW 312.4 NT 5337 7408 Ha-ha

NT57SW 312.5 NT 53366 74402 East Lodge

NT57SW 312.6 NT 53482 74319 East Gate

NT57NW 68 NT 5264 7538 Farmhouse

NT57NW 69 NT 5267 7544 Home Farm

NT57NW 70 NT 5285 7508 Gothic Cottage

NT57SW 22 NT 53426 74158 Dovecot

NT57SW 67 NT 5292 7423 Stable block

NT57SW 68 NT 5331 7419 Walled Garden

NT57SW 70 NT 5285 7437 Icehouse

NT57SW 71 NT 5340 7384 Gothic Pavilion

NT57SW 72 NT 5308 7437 Rococo Temple

NT57SW 310 NT 5 7 Amisfield Tower

NT57NW 178, 179, 180 NT 5287 7509 Cottages

NT57SW 67

The club house at Haddington Golf Course was formerly the stable block at Amisfield House (NT57SW 312)

Information from RCAHMS (TIC), February 2002

Site Management (30 April 1996)

2-storey U-plan court open to W, with screen-walled outbuildings detached to S. Mostly coursed conglomerate (clinkstone) rubble, with cherrycocking, but ashlar to N frontage. Cornice.

These buildings are in poor condition, but are the chief remnant of the buildings pertaining to Amisfield House, demolished in 1928, designed by Isaac Ware for Colonel Francis Charteris circa 1755, and erected apparently some years afterwards for his successor, the Earl of Wemyss and March. This replaced an earlier Newmilns House and was named after the Charteris family seat in Dumfriesshire. Described by McWilliam as "...the most important building of the orthodox Palladian school in Scotland", it had a principal front of 7 bays in red sandstone, of 4 storeys plus rusticated basement; "piano nobile" with pedimented window, small upper windows beneath cornice and balustrade; central Ionic portico on the arcaded basement; advanced end bays with the basement blind-arcaded to match. (Historic Scotland)

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