fbpx
Wikipedia

Ellisland Farm

Ellisland Farm lies about 6.5 mi/10.4 km northwest of Dumfries near the village of Auldgirth, located in the Parish of Dunscore, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. The complex is a museum in the farm Robert Burns built, lived in and farmed from 1788 until 1791.[1][2] One of the earliest references to the site is in 1465. Cardinal Antonius confirming a Charter by the Monastery of Melrose of the adjoining property of Ellisland to John Kirkpatrick.[3]

Ellisland Farm
Location within Scotland
Established1788
LocationHolywood Road, Auldgirth, Dumfries DG2 0RP, United Kingdom
Websitehttps://www.ellislandfarm.co.uk

Ellisland Farm c. 1900
Ellisland Farm in 2009

History edit

William Roy's map, circa 1747–55, does not show any form of settlement at Ellisland. However William Crawford's 1804 map of Dumfries-shire marks an 'Elliesland' in the expected location, the farm having been built a few years before, however another building is marked closer to Friars' Carse.[4] The name is said to be derived from "Isle's Land", the name of a neighbouring estate.[5] The river may have been less of a barrier to transport than today and a ford is known to have existed nearby.[5] The nearby Old Dunscore Churchyard is the location of 18th century memorials to the Ireland family of Elliesland (sic).

Patrick Miller of Dalswinton wrote of the area in September 1810, saying;

"When I purchased this estate about twenty-five years ago, I had not seen it. It was in the most miserable state of exhaustion, and all the tenants in poverty. .... When I went to view my purchase, I was so much disgusted for eight or ten days, that I then meant to return to this county."[6]

The Poets choice edit

 
Robert Burns by Alexander Nasmyth, 1787

Patrick Miller of Dalswinton had offered Burns a choice of three farms, two on the rich holms of the River Nith's east side; and one, Ellisland, on the west bank, composed of a fertile strip along the river itself and stony fields between the river and the Dumfries road.[7] Burns visited Ellisland on 27 February 1788 with James Tennant of Glenconner, a friend of himself and his father;[8] taking James's advice he agreed to sign up to the seventy-six-year lease from his friend Patrick Miller of Dalswinton,[9] taking up the lease of the farm at Whitsun (25 May) 1788. The lease was divided up into four periods of nineteen years, the rent for the first three years to be £50 per annum, and £70 thereafter.[10]

Robert had written a letter to his friend Patrick Miller, on 20 October 1787:

I want to be a farmer in a small farm, about a plough-gang, in a pleasant country, under the auspices of a good landlord. I have no foolish notion of being a tenant on easier terms than another.

To find a farm where one can live at all is not easy – I only mean living soberly, like an old-style farmer, and joining personal industry.

The banks of the Nith are as sweet poetic ground as any I ever saw; and besides, Sir, 'tis but justice to the feelings of my own heart and the opinion of my best friends, to say that I would wish to call you landlord sooner than any landed gentleman I know…

The Burns family at Ellisland edit

 
The River Nith at Ellisland Farm

Burns did not begin farming work until 11 June 1788. Ellisland had no farmhouse or farm buildings and Patrick Miller provided Burns with £300 to build one, construct the byre, cart shed, etc. and to stock the farm and enclose the fields.[11]

Robert had formally married Jean Armour on 20 March,[12] but Robert, Jean and their two-year-old son Robert would not be able to move into the farm until the following Spring; Robert at first lodged with David and Nance Cullie or Kelly,[6] the previous tenant, in their cottage near the ruin of the Isle Tower.[13] In December Jean came down to Nithsdale and stayed rent free with Robert at the Isle, the country house of David Newall, a Dumfries lawyer.[14]

On 23 June 1788 Robert informed his good friend, the lawyer, Robert Ainslie, that he had arranged a sitting with John Miers, the artist, to produce a profile or silhouette picture and that together with one of Lord Glencairn and one of Dr Blacklock he intended to hang them on his new mantlepiece at Ellisland Farm.[15]

The whole family moved into Ellisland during June 1789, walking the short distance up from the Isle in procession, and to ensure good luck they entered in their best clothes, following a servant-maid, Elizabeth Smith, who carried the family bible on which sat a bowl of salt. As Robert and Jean entered, an oat-cake was broken over the head of the wife and everyone gathered for a drink to the success of the new home; the evening would have been taken up with a 'house warming'; dancing and drinking with friends and neighbours.[16] Mrs Dunlop of Dunlop House had given the couple a four poster bed and they had a selection of furniture made by Ayrshire carpenters.[17]

Jean was said to be a good and prudent housewife, kept everything in neat and tidy order, was well liked by the servants and provided plenty of wholesome food. The maid-servant, Elizabeth, previously mentioned was a cousin.[18] Robert Ainslie was not so complimentary when he visited Ellisland in October 1790.[19]

Burns' sons Francis Wallace and William Nicol were born at Ellisland Farm, and their half-sister Betty (daughter of Helen Anne Park of Dumfries[20]) spent the first months of her life here too.

For a time Robert's youngest brother William lived at Ellisland until he got a job as an apprentice saddler near Carlisle.[21]

The farm and the land edit

 
Ellisland Farm in the time of Robert Burns
 
Ellisland Farm and the River Nith, circa 1800

The house Burns built stood on a gravelly bank above the river and had one storey, with garrets for the servants. In the west end there was a 'company' room, and in the east a sitting-room, with a window in the gable giving fine views of the surroundings. A kitchen and a bedroom formed the middle of the dwelling. Alexander Crombie was the stonemason and Thomas Boyd was the architect, the completion being much delayed and the account not settled until two months before Burns left Ellisland.[17][22] The hearth in the kitchen has apotropaic marks carved onto it to protect against the Devil entering via the chimney and a small window, now blocked up, existed at the fireplace so that the Devil would be sent straight out of the house.

The plan of the present house is practically that of the original and although it is said that Burns's cottage was pulled down in 1812, it is likely that the main portion of the walls stand as they did in 1788.[23] Some of the windows were said in 1840 to carrying the faint traces of the poetic 'glass-scribblings' of which Burns was so fond. A copious spring emptied into a basin, situated down the slope towards the river and this supplied the family.[24]

The 69 hectares / 170 acres of land at Ellisland, rented at £50 per annum for the first three years and seventy for the remainder of the lease,[25] were neglected, stony, infertile, poorly dressed and badly drained. It had an orchard and Burns had 9 or 10 cows, including 3 fine Ayrshire cows; 4 horses and some pet sheep. The Ayrshire dairying system was introduced and cheese including ewe-milk cheese was made and crops such as oats were grown.

The first years' crop was to be his and the first payment of rent was not until Martimass.[25] Burns kept two men and two women servants.

Burns is said to have been the first to introduce Ayrshire cattle to Dumfrieshire and other farmers soon followed his lead once the significantly higher milk yield became apparent.[26]

Departure from Ellisland edit

 
Burns's house in Dumfries

Burns switched from arable farming to dairying and then decided to give up the farm altogether as his career in the Excise looked more remunerative. For two years Burns worked as both a farmer and an exciseman, having received his excise commission on 14 July 1788.[12] He had to ride two hundred miles a week to carry out his excise duties and had also to labour in the fields. In early 1790 the annual rent rose to £90 and Burns decided to give up his lease.

The Ayrshiremen who had advised Burns were little acquainted with the local soils, with the required manures, with the local markets, etc. These friends had estimated his rental at Ayrshire rates, so contrary to his landlord's good intentions, Burns may have ended up paying more rental for Ellisland than Ellisland could produce. By the end of 1790 Burns had decided that Ellisland was 'altogether a ruinous business'.[27]

Burns auctioned his crops, getting a Guinea an acre, on 25 August. At Martinmas, 11 November 1791, the Burns family left Ellisland Farm and moved into the town of Dumfries six miles (10 km) away.[28] About thirty people had attended the auction or roup and the levels of drunkenness led to Burns recording that Such a scene of drunkenness was hardly ever seen in this country.

Ellisland after Burns (1791–1921) edit

Patrick Miller sold the farm outright for £1900 to John Morin of Laggan, the adjacent property.[22][29] In 1805 Morin sold Ellisland to a Mr Taylor who dismantled and remodelled the steading, although the farmhouse is much as it was in Burns's time. The parlour is thought to have remained unchanged. Burns's favourite line from Pope An honest man's the noblest work of God, was engraved on a window pane, although this was vandalised with a piece of flint about March 1876. Ellisland was farmed until 1921.[30]

The Ellisland Poetry, Songs and Letters edit

After meeting and befriending Captain Francis Grose (1731–91) at Friars' Carse, Burns agreed to write a poem in exchange for the author including Kirk Alloway in his new book on Scottish Antiquities. Burns's poem was his self-avowed masterpiece Tam o'Shanter,[31] sent to Francis Grose on 1 December 1790; appearing in The Edinburgh Magazine in March 1791 and in Grose's second volume of his Antiquities a month later.[32]

 
Tam o'Shanter wearing his bonnet and sitting astride his horse Meg

Burns's Auld Lang Syne was written at Ellisland, the first version being sent to Mrs Dunlop on 17 December 1788. Burns said in a letter to Mrs Dunlop: ... is not the Scotch phrase Auld lang syne exceedingly expressive? There is an old song and tune which has often thrilled through my soul. You know I am an enthusiast in old Scotch songs. I shall give you the verses on the other sheet... Light be the turf on the breast of the heaven-inspired poet who composed this glorious fragment! There is more of the fire of native genius in it than in half a dozen of modern English Bacchanalians.[33]

During his relatively short stay at Ellisland, Burns wrote over 130 songs and poems, which amounts to about a quarter of his total output. He was working as an exciseman and a farmer but he also managed to write around 230 letters, his total extant letters amounting to 700 letters.[34] The drinking song Willie Brew'd a Peck o'Maut was written during this time, set to music by Allan Masterton.[35]

William Lorimer was a farmer, living two miles (3 km) away from Ellisland at Kemmishall or Kemys Hall. William's daughter Jean (1775–1808) was a frequent visitor to Ellisland and Burns wrote about twenty-four songs for this lass of the lintwhite locks. These songs were amongst his finest and he often referred to Jean under the poetic monica of Chloris.[19]

In the stack yard Burns composed Mary in Heaven.[1]

Burns wrote many passionate letters to Mrs Agnes Craig McLehose, his 'Clarinda'. Agnes, known as Nancy to her friends, was married and Nancy met Burns at a tea-party in 1787. The pair were instantly attracted to each other and for a time they met frequently, talked and wrote letters to one another using the names 'Clarinda' for Nancy and 'Sylvander' for Burns. The love affair played itself out in letters written between December 1787 and December 1791. Robert's passion for Clarinda inspired one of his most famous love songs, 'Ae Fond Kiss'.[36]

Burns wrote On seeing a Wounded Hare limp by me, which a Fellow had just shot after James Thomson, son of a local farmer, had shot a hare out of season. This was against the established country code and Burns was enraged to the point that the perpetrator felt that he was about to be thrown into the river.[37]

Robert sent his brother-in-law Adam Armour to Ellisland Farm in November 1791 to smash every window in the farm upon which he had inscribed verses by way of revenge upon James Morin, Laird of Laggan who was the new owner. Robert felt cheated over the price paid for a heap of manure, a valuable commodity before artificial fertilisers were available. No record of the verses has survived.[38]

The Hermitage edit

 
The Hermitage, Friar's Carse
 
Burns's Hermitage

Robert Burn's neighbour to his north was Captain Robert Riddell of Glenriddel, who lived at Friar's Carse, and had built a small summer house called the 'Hermitage' in a secluded part of his estate, just a few fields away from Ellisland. Burns often used the building in this idyllic setting for writing poetry, having been given the key and apparently also enjoying drinking sessions with Robert Riddell.[39] Although the original building no longer exists, Mr Nelson of Friars' Carse built another 'Hermitage' on the same site in the 19th century.[40] The building was recently (2009) restored again and now has interpretation boards detailing its history.

Burns had written the lines on the Hermitage window:

"Thou whom chance may hither lead,
Be thou clad in russet weed,
Be thou deckt in silken stole,
Grave these counsels on thy soul.

Life is but a day at most,
Sprung from night – in darkness lost;
Hope not sunshine ev'ry hour,
Fear not clouds will always lour."

The original was preserved and is now in the Ellisland Farm museum. The new building's window had the same lines inscribed upon it, however they are now in the Friars' Carse hotel and the Hermitage's windows have no inscription.[41] Friars' Carse at one time held the original Burns manuscripts The Whistle and Lines Written in the Hermitage.[42] In April 1791 Burns completed a collection of his letters for Robert Riddel's library and these have become known as the Glenriddell Manuscripts.[20]

Micro-history edit

 
Friars' Carse
 
Friars' Carse

The lands of Ellisland had belonged to the Red Comyn and later to Robert the Bruce. To the north was a site reputed to have been an encampment built by the Roman general Agricola. Burns used the pseudonym 'Agricola' for radical poetry he published in the press, the authorship of which, as an exciseman, he obviously wished to keep secret.[43]

On 16 October 1789 at Friar's Carse, Burns was a witness to a famous drinking contest where the participants set out to see who could be the last man able to blow a whistle. The winner was to have an old ebony Whistle as the trophy; the event was immortalised in the poem The Whistle. The winner was able to consume five bottles of claret.[44]

On 14 October 1788 Robert Burns is said to have witnessed the trials of Patrick Miller's paddle driven steamboat on the nearby Dalswinton Loch in the company of Sandy Crombie, who was a local builder working at Ellisland. They were amongst a number of others and were not actually on board.[45] This trial was especially significant, being the first use of power from an engine for human transportation anywhere in the World.[46][47]

 
Memorial to Robert Burness, Burn's uncle, at Stewarton

Robert Burns and Robert Riddell set up the Monkland Friendly Society at Dunscore[44] and organised and censored its library of 150 volumes.[21] Riddell was the President and Burns was the secretary of the society that met on every fourth Saturday.[48]

Patrick Miller was the first to introduce the turnips – Swedes from Sweden to Scotland, as well as the introduction of the threshing mill and the drill plough to Scotland.[49]

Whilst at Ellisland Burns attended the Rev. William Inglis's Church in Dumfries; as he put it "I go to hear Mr Inglis because he preaches what he believes and practices what he preaches".

Cuthbertson records that Robert Burness, the poet's uncle, died at Ellisland in January 1789. His daughter, Fanny Burness was taken care of by Burns and eventually married one of Jean Armour's brothers. Uncle Robert lived in the Kilmaurs and Stewarton area for many years and is commemorated in the churchyard.[50]

Burns apparently left his favourite putting stone at Ellisland and if he saw anyone using it he would call "Bide a wee" and join in the sport, always proving that he was the strongest man there.[51]

In 1791 Janet Little, author of The Poetical Works of Janet Little, The Scotch Milkmaid visited Burns at Ellisland on the day he fell from his horse and broke an arm.

Ellisland Farm Museum edit

Until 1921 Ellisland was farmed, at which point it was purchased by John Wilson, former President of Edinburgh Burns Club, who gave it to the nation.[33] From 1929, Ellisland Farm was maintained by the Ellisland Trustees, with the support of local volunteers known as the Friends of Ellisland.[52] The Robert Burns Ellisland Trust was established in 2020 as an independent charity, replacing the previous 1920s trust, and cares for Ellisland.[53]

Visitors can explore the eighteenth-century farmstead. On display are a number of artefacts relating to the poet and his family, from manuscripts to wife Jean's milking stool.[54] The kitchen contains part of the range used by Jean Burns as well as the Carron oven installed for her by Burns.[30]

The old Granary and other outbuildings were opened in 1979 as a museum of farming life.[55] An audio-visual display is located in the Granary and there are riverside walks which are said to have inspired Burns during his most productive years. A fine collection of vintage agricultural implements and tools, collected from all over Scotland, are located in the various farm buildings. The farm's land is let for grazing.

Views of Ellisland Farm edit

In popular culture edit

A group from the University of Glasgow would recreate Ellisland Farm in Minecraft in collaboration with the Robert Burns Ellisland Trust and the South of Scotland Destination Alliance with funding from the Tourism Leadership and Recovery Fund.[56]

See also edit

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ a b Wilson, Page 9
  2. ^ "Robert Burns Ellisland Museum & Farm". Ellisland Museum & Farm. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
  3. ^ Scotlands Places
  4. ^ NLS Maps – Crawford
  5. ^ a b Hendry, Page 42
  6. ^ a b Hecht, Page 184
  7. ^ Dougal, Page 282 – 3
  8. ^ McQueen, Page 122
  9. ^ Hogg, Page 178
  10. ^ Hecht, Page 181
  11. ^ McQueen, Page 124
  12. ^ a b McQueen, Page 123
  13. ^ Hog, Page 188
  14. ^ McQueen, Page 126
  15. ^ De Lancey Ferguson, J. (1931). The Letters of Robert Burns. Clarendon Press. p. 230 Vol.1.
  16. ^ Dougal, Page 281
  17. ^ a b Hogg, Page 189
  18. ^ Wilson, Page 10
  19. ^ a b McQueen, Page 133
  20. ^ a b McQueen, Page 135
  21. ^ a b McQueen, Page 127
  22. ^ a b Mackay, Page 100
  23. ^ Dougall, Page 283
  24. ^ Wilson, Page 8
  25. ^ a b Wilson, Page 7
  26. ^ Hogg, Page 191
  27. ^ Burns Encyclopedia
  28. ^ Dougal, Page 291
  29. ^ McQueen, Page 136
  30. ^ a b Mackay, Page 103
  31. ^ Dougal, Page 290
  32. ^ McQueen, Page 134
  33. ^ a b The Burns Encyclopedia
  34. ^ McQueen, Page 137
  35. ^ McQueen, Page 129
  36. ^ Scotlands Culture
  37. ^ Hogg, Page 204
  38. ^ Hogg, Page 230
  39. ^ Hall, Page 169
  40. ^ Dougal, Page 285
  41. ^ Dougal, Page 286
  42. ^ Dougal, Page 287
  43. ^ Hogg, Page 185
  44. ^ a b Mackay, Page 104
  45. ^ Ewing, Page 46
  46. ^ McQueen, Page 125
  47. ^ Innes, Page 905
  48. ^ Hogg, Page 221
  49. ^ Hogg, Page 188
  50. ^ Cuthbertson, Page 178
  51. ^ Peel, Page 74
  52. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 October 2009. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  53. ^ "Ellisland Farm: Who we are". Ellisland Museum & Farm. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
  54. ^ "See & Do: Discover the home of Auld Land Syne". Ellisland Museum & Farm.
  55. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 October 2009. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  56. ^ "Mobile phone gamers can explore Scots poet's farm in Minecraft game". Peeblesshire News. 22 January 2024. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
Sources
  1. Cuthbertson, David Cuningham (1945). Autumn in Kyle and the Charm of Cunninghame. London : Jenkins.
  2. Dougall, Charles S. (1911). The Burns Country. London: A & C Black.
  3. Ewing, Elizabeth. (1941). Robert Burns and the first steamboat. Was he present at its trial. Burns Chronicle and Club Directory. 2nd Series : V. XVI.
  4. Hall, Derek (2006). Scottish Monastic Landscapes. Stroud : Tempus. ISBN 0-7524-4012-8.
  5. Hendry, Margaret L. (1966). Ellisland. Burns Chronicle, Third Series : Volume XV.
  6. Hecht, Hans (1936). Robert Burns. The Man and His Work. London : William Hodge & Co.
  7. Hogg, Patrick Scott (2008). Robert Burns. The Patriot Bard. Edinburgh : Mainstream. ISBN 9781845964122.
  8. Mackay, James A. (1988). Burns-Lore of Dumfries and Galloway. Ayr : Alloway Publishing. ISBN 0-907526-36-5.
  9. McQueen, Colin Hunter (1999). Rantin Rovin Robin. Irvine : Irvine Burns Club. ISBN 1-899316-41-8.
  10. Peel, R (1984). Anecdotal Evidence. Burns Chronicle. Fourth Series : Volume IX.
  11. Wilson, Professor and Chambers, R. (1840). The Land of Burns. Glasgow : Blackie and Son.

External links edit

  • Ellisland Museum & Farm
  • The history of Ellisland Farm
  • Video footage of the first ever steam powered vessel
  • Video footage and history of Brownhill Inn
  • Scotlands Culture
  • Gazetteer for Scotland

55°8′15″N 3°40′45″W / 55.13750°N 3.67917°W / 55.13750; -3.67917

ellisland, farm, lies, about, northwest, dumfries, near, village, auldgirth, located, parish, dunscore, dumfries, galloway, scotland, complex, museum, farm, robert, burns, built, lived, farmed, from, 1788, until, 1791, earliest, references, site, 1465, cardina. Ellisland Farm lies about 6 5 mi 10 4 km northwest of Dumfries near the village of Auldgirth located in the Parish of Dunscore Dumfries and Galloway Scotland The complex is a museum in the farm Robert Burns built lived in and farmed from 1788 until 1791 1 2 One of the earliest references to the site is in 1465 Cardinal Antonius confirming a Charter by the Monastery of Melrose of the adjoining property of Ellisland to John Kirkpatrick 3 Ellisland FarmLocation within ScotlandEstablished1788LocationHolywood Road Auldgirth Dumfries DG2 0RP United KingdomWebsitehttps www ellislandfarm co uk Ellisland Farm c 1900Ellisland Farm in 2009 Contents 1 History 1 1 The Poets choice 1 2 The Burns family at Ellisland 1 3 The farm and the land 1 4 Departure from Ellisland 1 5 Ellisland after Burns 1791 1921 2 The Ellisland Poetry Songs and Letters 3 The Hermitage 4 Micro history 5 Ellisland Farm Museum 5 1 Views of Ellisland Farm 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory editWilliam Roy s map circa 1747 55 does not show any form of settlement at Ellisland However William Crawford s 1804 map of Dumfries shire marks an Elliesland in the expected location the farm having been built a few years before however another building is marked closer to Friars Carse 4 The name is said to be derived from Isle s Land the name of a neighbouring estate 5 The river may have been less of a barrier to transport than today and a ford is known to have existed nearby 5 The nearby Old Dunscore Churchyard is the location of 18th century memorials to the Ireland family of Elliesland sic Patrick Miller of Dalswinton wrote of the area in September 1810 saying When I purchased this estate about twenty five years ago I had not seen it It was in the most miserable state of exhaustion and all the tenants in poverty When I went to view my purchase I was so much disgusted for eight or ten days that I then meant to return to this county 6 The Poets choice edit nbsp Robert Burns by Alexander Nasmyth 1787Patrick Miller of Dalswinton had offered Burns a choice of three farms two on the rich holms of the River Nith s east side and one Ellisland on the west bank composed of a fertile strip along the river itself and stony fields between the river and the Dumfries road 7 Burns visited Ellisland on 27 February 1788 with James Tennant of Glenconner a friend of himself and his father 8 taking James s advice he agreed to sign up to the seventy six year lease from his friend Patrick Miller of Dalswinton 9 taking up the lease of the farm at Whitsun 25 May 1788 The lease was divided up into four periods of nineteen years the rent for the first three years to be 50 per annum and 70 thereafter 10 Robert had written a letter to his friend Patrick Miller on 20 October 1787 I want to be a farmer in a small farm about a plough gang in a pleasant country under the auspices of a good landlord I have no foolish notion of being a tenant on easier terms than another To find a farm where one can live at all is not easy I only mean living soberly like an old style farmer and joining personal industry The banks of the Nith are as sweet poetic ground as any I ever saw and besides Sir tis but justice to the feelings of my own heart and the opinion of my best friends to say that I would wish to call you landlord sooner than any landed gentleman I know The Burns family at Ellisland edit nbsp The River Nith at Ellisland FarmBurns did not begin farming work until 11 June 1788 Ellisland had no farmhouse or farm buildings and Patrick Miller provided Burns with 300 to build one construct the byre cart shed etc and to stock the farm and enclose the fields 11 Robert had formally married Jean Armour on 20 March 12 but Robert Jean and their two year old son Robert would not be able to move into the farm until the following Spring Robert at first lodged with David and Nance Cullie or Kelly 6 the previous tenant in their cottage near the ruin of the Isle Tower 13 In December Jean came down to Nithsdale and stayed rent free with Robert at the Isle the country house of David Newall a Dumfries lawyer 14 On 23 June 1788 Robert informed his good friend the lawyer Robert Ainslie that he had arranged a sitting with John Miers the artist to produce a profile or silhouette picture and that together with one of Lord Glencairn and one of Dr Blacklock he intended to hang them on his new mantlepiece at Ellisland Farm 15 The whole family moved into Ellisland during June 1789 walking the short distance up from the Isle in procession and to ensure good luck they entered in their best clothes following a servant maid Elizabeth Smith who carried the family bible on which sat a bowl of salt As Robert and Jean entered an oat cake was broken over the head of the wife and everyone gathered for a drink to the success of the new home the evening would have been taken up with a house warming dancing and drinking with friends and neighbours 16 Mrs Dunlop of Dunlop House had given the couple a four poster bed and they had a selection of furniture made by Ayrshire carpenters 17 Jean was said to be a good and prudent housewife kept everything in neat and tidy order was well liked by the servants and provided plenty of wholesome food The maid servant Elizabeth previously mentioned was a cousin 18 Robert Ainslie was not so complimentary when he visited Ellisland in October 1790 19 Burns sons Francis Wallace and William Nicol were born at Ellisland Farm and their half sister Betty daughter of Helen Anne Park of Dumfries 20 spent the first months of her life here too For a time Robert s youngest brother William lived at Ellisland until he got a job as an apprentice saddler near Carlisle 21 The farm and the land edit nbsp Ellisland Farm in the time of Robert Burns nbsp Ellisland Farm and the River Nith circa 1800The house Burns built stood on a gravelly bank above the river and had one storey with garrets for the servants In the west end there was a company room and in the east a sitting room with a window in the gable giving fine views of the surroundings A kitchen and a bedroom formed the middle of the dwelling Alexander Crombie was the stonemason and Thomas Boyd was the architect the completion being much delayed and the account not settled until two months before Burns left Ellisland 17 22 The hearth in the kitchen has apotropaic marks carved onto it to protect against the Devil entering via the chimney and a small window now blocked up existed at the fireplace so that the Devil would be sent straight out of the house The plan of the present house is practically that of the original and although it is said that Burns s cottage was pulled down in 1812 it is likely that the main portion of the walls stand as they did in 1788 23 Some of the windows were said in 1840 to carrying the faint traces of the poetic glass scribblings of which Burns was so fond A copious spring emptied into a basin situated down the slope towards the river and this supplied the family 24 The 69 hectares 170 acres of land at Ellisland rented at 50 per annum for the first three years and seventy for the remainder of the lease 25 were neglected stony infertile poorly dressed and badly drained It had an orchard and Burns had 9 or 10 cows including 3 fine Ayrshire cows 4 horses and some pet sheep The Ayrshire dairying system was introduced and cheese including ewe milk cheese was made and crops such as oats were grown The first years crop was to be his and the first payment of rent was not until Martimass 25 Burns kept two men and two women servants Burns is said to have been the first to introduce Ayrshire cattle to Dumfrieshire and other farmers soon followed his lead once the significantly higher milk yield became apparent 26 Departure from Ellisland edit nbsp Burns s house in DumfriesBurns switched from arable farming to dairying and then decided to give up the farm altogether as his career in the Excise looked more remunerative For two years Burns worked as both a farmer and an exciseman having received his excise commission on 14 July 1788 12 He had to ride two hundred miles a week to carry out his excise duties and had also to labour in the fields In early 1790 the annual rent rose to 90 and Burns decided to give up his lease The Ayrshiremen who had advised Burns were little acquainted with the local soils with the required manures with the local markets etc These friends had estimated his rental at Ayrshire rates so contrary to his landlord s good intentions Burns may have ended up paying more rental for Ellisland than Ellisland could produce By the end of 1790 Burns had decided that Ellisland was altogether a ruinous business 27 Burns auctioned his crops getting a Guinea an acre on 25 August At Martinmas 11 November 1791 the Burns family left Ellisland Farm and moved into the town of Dumfries six miles 10 km away 28 About thirty people had attended the auction or roup and the levels of drunkenness led to Burns recording that Such a scene of drunkenness was hardly ever seen in this country Ellisland after Burns 1791 1921 edit Patrick Miller sold the farm outright for 1900 to John Morin of Laggan the adjacent property 22 29 In 1805 Morin sold Ellisland to a Mr Taylor who dismantled and remodelled the steading although the farmhouse is much as it was in Burns s time The parlour is thought to have remained unchanged Burns s favourite line from Pope An honest man s the noblest work of God was engraved on a window pane although this was vandalised with a piece of flint about March 1876 Ellisland was farmed until 1921 30 The Ellisland Poetry Songs and Letters editAfter meeting and befriending Captain Francis Grose 1731 91 at Friars Carse Burns agreed to write a poem in exchange for the author including Kirk Alloway in his new book on Scottish Antiquities Burns s poem was his self avowed masterpiece Tam o Shanter 31 sent to Francis Grose on 1 December 1790 appearing in The Edinburgh Magazine in March 1791 and in Grose s second volume of his Antiquities a month later 32 nbsp Tam o Shanter wearing his bonnet and sitting astride his horse MegBurns s Auld Lang Syne was written at Ellisland the first version being sent to Mrs Dunlop on 17 December 1788 Burns said in a letter to Mrs Dunlop is not the Scotch phrase Auld lang syne exceedingly expressive There is an old song and tune which has often thrilled through my soul You know I am an enthusiast in old Scotch songs I shall give you the verses on the other sheet Light be the turf on the breast of the heaven inspired poet who composed this glorious fragment There is more of the fire of native genius in it than in half a dozen of modern English Bacchanalians 33 During his relatively short stay at Ellisland Burns wrote over 130 songs and poems which amounts to about a quarter of his total output He was working as an exciseman and a farmer but he also managed to write around 230 letters his total extant letters amounting to 700 letters 34 The drinking song Willie Brew d a Peck o Maut was written during this time set to music by Allan Masterton 35 William Lorimer was a farmer living two miles 3 km away from Ellisland at Kemmishall or Kemys Hall William s daughter Jean 1775 1808 was a frequent visitor to Ellisland and Burns wrote about twenty four songs for this lass of the lintwhite locks These songs were amongst his finest and he often referred to Jean under the poetic monica of Chloris 19 In the stack yard Burns composed Mary in Heaven 1 Burns wrote many passionate letters to Mrs Agnes Craig McLehose his Clarinda Agnes known as Nancy to her friends was married and Nancy met Burns at a tea party in 1787 The pair were instantly attracted to each other and for a time they met frequently talked and wrote letters to one another using the names Clarinda for Nancy and Sylvander for Burns The love affair played itself out in letters written between December 1787 and December 1791 Robert s passion for Clarinda inspired one of his most famous love songs Ae Fond Kiss 36 Burns wrote On seeing a Wounded Hare limp by me which a Fellow had just shot after James Thomson son of a local farmer had shot a hare out of season This was against the established country code and Burns was enraged to the point that the perpetrator felt that he was about to be thrown into the river 37 Robert sent his brother in law Adam Armour to Ellisland Farm in November 1791 to smash every window in the farm upon which he had inscribed verses by way of revenge upon James Morin Laird of Laggan who was the new owner Robert felt cheated over the price paid for a heap of manure a valuable commodity before artificial fertilisers were available No record of the verses has survived 38 The Hermitage edit nbsp The Hermitage Friar s Carse nbsp Burns s HermitageRobert Burn s neighbour to his north was Captain Robert Riddell of Glenriddel who lived at Friar s Carse and had built a small summer house called the Hermitage in a secluded part of his estate just a few fields away from Ellisland Burns often used the building in this idyllic setting for writing poetry having been given the key and apparently also enjoying drinking sessions with Robert Riddell 39 Although the original building no longer exists Mr Nelson of Friars Carse built another Hermitage on the same site in the 19th century 40 The building was recently 2009 restored again and now has interpretation boards detailing its history Burns had written the lines on the Hermitage window Thou whom chance may hither lead Be thou clad in russet weed Be thou deckt in silken stole Grave these counsels on thy soul Life is but a day at most Sprung from night in darkness lost Hope not sunshine ev ry hour Fear not clouds will always lour The original was preserved and is now in the Ellisland Farm museum The new building s window had the same lines inscribed upon it however they are now in the Friars Carse hotel and the Hermitage s windows have no inscription 41 Friars Carse at one time held the original Burns manuscripts The Whistle and Lines Written in the Hermitage 42 In April 1791 Burns completed a collection of his letters for Robert Riddel s library and these have become known as the Glenriddell Manuscripts 20 Micro history edit nbsp Friars Carse nbsp Friars CarseThe lands of Ellisland had belonged to the Red Comyn and later to Robert the Bruce To the north was a site reputed to have been an encampment built by the Roman general Agricola Burns used the pseudonym Agricola for radical poetry he published in the press the authorship of which as an exciseman he obviously wished to keep secret 43 On 16 October 1789 at Friar s Carse Burns was a witness to a famous drinking contest where the participants set out to see who could be the last man able to blow a whistle The winner was to have an old ebony Whistle as the trophy the event was immortalised in the poem The Whistle The winner was able to consume five bottles of claret 44 On 14 October 1788 Robert Burns is said to have witnessed the trials of Patrick Miller s paddle driven steamboat on the nearby Dalswinton Loch in the company of Sandy Crombie who was a local builder working at Ellisland They were amongst a number of others and were not actually on board 45 This trial was especially significant being the first use of power from an engine for human transportation anywhere in the World 46 47 nbsp Memorial to Robert Burness Burn s uncle at StewartonRobert Burns and Robert Riddell set up the Monkland Friendly Society at Dunscore 44 and organised and censored its library of 150 volumes 21 Riddell was the President and Burns was the secretary of the society that met on every fourth Saturday 48 Patrick Miller was the first to introduce the turnips Swedes from Sweden to Scotland as well as the introduction of the threshing mill and the drill plough to Scotland 49 Whilst at Ellisland Burns attended the Rev William Inglis s Church in Dumfries as he put it I go to hear Mr Inglis because he preaches what he believes and practices what he preaches Cuthbertson records that Robert Burness the poet s uncle died at Ellisland in January 1789 His daughter Fanny Burness was taken care of by Burns and eventually married one of Jean Armour s brothers Uncle Robert lived in the Kilmaurs and Stewarton area for many years and is commemorated in the churchyard 50 Burns apparently left his favourite putting stone at Ellisland and if he saw anyone using it he would call Bide a wee and join in the sport always proving that he was the strongest man there 51 In 1791 Janet Little author of The Poetical Works of Janet Little The Scotch Milkmaid visited Burns at Ellisland on the day he fell from his horse and broke an arm Ellisland Farm Museum editUntil 1921 Ellisland was farmed at which point it was purchased by John Wilson former President of Edinburgh Burns Club who gave it to the nation 33 From 1929 Ellisland Farm was maintained by the Ellisland Trustees with the support of local volunteers known as the Friends of Ellisland 52 The Robert Burns Ellisland Trust was established in 2020 as an independent charity replacing the previous 1920s trust and cares for Ellisland 53 Visitors can explore the eighteenth century farmstead On display are a number of artefacts relating to the poet and his family from manuscripts to wife Jean s milking stool 54 The kitchen contains part of the range used by Jean Burns as well as the Carron oven installed for her by Burns 30 The old Granary and other outbuildings were opened in 1979 as a museum of farming life 55 An audio visual display is located in the Granary and there are riverside walks which are said to have inspired Burns during his most productive years A fine collection of vintage agricultural implements and tools collected from all over Scotland are located in the various farm buildings The farm s land is let for grazing Views of Ellisland Farm edit nbsp The farmhouse nbsp The frontage of the farmhouse nbsp Open shed workshop nbsp The Granary housing the audio visual presentation nbsp A farm museum exhibition area nbsp The orchard nbsp The River Nith and an Ellisland Farm fieldIn popular culture editA group from the University of Glasgow would recreate Ellisland Farm in Minecraft in collaboration with the Robert Burns Ellisland Trust and the South of Scotland Destination Alliance with funding from the Tourism Leadership and Recovery Fund 56 See also editDalgarnock Village Church and Parish Robert Graham of FintryReferences editNotes a b Wilson Page 9 Robert Burns Ellisland Museum amp Farm Ellisland Museum amp Farm Retrieved 26 April 2023 Scotlands Places NLS Maps Crawford a b Hendry Page 42 a b Hecht Page 184 Dougal Page 282 3 McQueen Page 122 Hogg Page 178 Hecht Page 181 McQueen Page 124 a b McQueen Page 123 Hog Page 188 McQueen Page 126 De Lancey Ferguson J 1931 The Letters of Robert Burns Clarendon Press p 230 Vol 1 Dougal Page 281 a b Hogg Page 189 Wilson Page 10 a b McQueen Page 133 a b McQueen Page 135 a b McQueen Page 127 a b Mackay Page 100 Dougall Page 283 Wilson Page 8 a b Wilson Page 7 Hogg Page 191 Burns Encyclopedia Dougal Page 291 McQueen Page 136 a b Mackay Page 103 Dougal Page 290 McQueen Page 134 a b The Burns Encyclopedia McQueen Page 137 McQueen Page 129 Scotlands Culture Hogg Page 204 Hogg Page 230 Hall Page 169 Dougal Page 285 Dougal Page 286 Dougal Page 287 Hogg Page 185 a b Mackay Page 104 Ewing Page 46 McQueen Page 125 Innes Page 905 Hogg Page 221 Hogg Page 188 Cuthbertson Page 178 Peel Page 74 Robert Burns Ellisland was Burns home in Dumfries and Galloway Scotland Archived from the original on 11 October 2009 Retrieved 21 August 2009 Ellisland Farm Who we are Ellisland Museum amp Farm Retrieved 26 April 2023 See amp Do Discover the home of Auld Land Syne Ellisland Museum amp Farm Ellisland Farm Museum Archived from the original on 11 October 2009 Retrieved 21 August 2009 Mobile phone gamers can explore Scots poet s farm in Minecraft game Peeblesshire News 22 January 2024 Retrieved 15 February 2024 SourcesCuthbertson David Cuningham 1945 Autumn in Kyle and the Charm of Cunninghame London Jenkins Dougall Charles S 1911 The Burns Country London A amp C Black Ewing Elizabeth 1941 Robert Burns and the first steamboat Was he present at its trial Burns Chronicle and Club Directory 2nd Series V XVI Hall Derek 2006 Scottish Monastic Landscapes Stroud Tempus ISBN 0 7524 4012 8 Hendry Margaret L 1966 Ellisland Burns Chronicle Third Series Volume XV Hecht Hans 1936 Robert Burns The Man and His Work London William Hodge amp Co Hogg Patrick Scott 2008 Robert Burns The Patriot Bard Edinburgh Mainstream ISBN 9781845964122 Mackay James A 1988 Burns Lore of Dumfries and Galloway Ayr Alloway Publishing ISBN 0 907526 36 5 McQueen Colin Hunter 1999 Rantin Rovin Robin Irvine Irvine Burns Club ISBN 1 899316 41 8 Peel R 1984 Anecdotal Evidence Burns Chronicle Fourth Series Volume IX Wilson Professor and Chambers R 1840 The Land of Burns Glasgow Blackie and Son External links editEllisland Museum amp Farm The history of Ellisland Farm Video footage of the first ever steam powered vessel Video footage and history of Brownhill Inn Scotlands Culture Gazetteer for Scotland Robert Burns World Federation55 8 15 N 3 40 45 W 55 13750 N 3 67917 W 55 13750 3 67917 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ellisland Farm amp oldid 1207912807, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.