The Scotsman

Scots ‘castle’ behind name of Canadian city up for sale

● Calgary Castle on Mull is on the market for offers over £695,000

- By JANE BRADLEY Consumer affairs correspond­ent jane.bradley@scotsman.com

It is believed to have inspired the name of the Canadian city of Calgary after a Mountie was hosted as a guest almost 150 years ago.

Now Calgary Castle on the isle of Mull has been put up for sale for offers over £695,000.

The detached house, which earned the nickname of “castle” due to its gothic windows and angled turrets, is credited with its moniker being copied in the western Canadian city after Colonel James Macleod of the Canadian North West Mounted Police stayed at the house in 1876.

After staying at the castle – and apocryphal­ly falling for the daughter of the house – Colonel Macleod, who had emigrated to Canada with his family from Scotland 30 years earlier, returned home and changed the name of Fort Brisebois in Alberta to Fort Calgary. The then tiny outpost grew into the city of Calgary, which in Gaelic is Cala Ghearraidh and translates to “beach of the meadow”.

It is also understood that the castle, which boasts author John Buchan among its notable guests, was later owned by Major Philip Profumo – the brother of John Profumo, centre of the 1963 sex and espionage scandal that rocked the British establishm­ent. The Profumo affair, which saw cabinet minister John Profumo embroiled in a brief relationsh­ip with Christine Keeler, a 19-year-old would-be model, resulted in the resignatio­n of Prof u mo and soon afterwards, then end of Harold Macmillan’s time as prime minister.

The eight-bedroom castle, which additional­ly offers a self-contained two-bedroom apartment, boasts views over Calgary Bay and across to Coll and Tiree and lies 12 miles from Tobermory.

Built in the 1700s, it was extended in the early 1800’s by Alan Macaskill, a successful merchant navy captain and also includes decorative plasterwor­k added during Profumo’s tenure and a dumb waiter from the dining room to the former staff quarters on the lower ground floor.

The 27.9-acre grounds are a haven for wildlife – golden eagles have been spotted on the lawn – and Mull itself offers abundant opportunit­ies to see golden eagles, sea eagles, basking sharks, minke whales and dolphins.

Malcolm Leslie, head of residentia­l agency for Strutt & Parker in Scotland, said: “Calgary Castle is a wonderful, secluded property, steeped in history. It would make an idyllic home and while it offers the romanticis­m of island life, its proximity to Tobermory makes it a practical option too.”

It is believed that the property will require extensive renovation­s by the new owner.

Denis Broad, chairman of the Mull Museum in Tobermoray, said: “Calgary in Canada was certainly named after Calgary on Mull. James Macleod was connected in some way to the

Mackenzie family from Calgary and I believe he stayed at the house. It is well known on the island, it lies behind Calgary itself, behind the beach.”

He added: “We don’t really have any specific connection­s with Canada these days.”

Calgary in Canada, which lies about 50 miles east of the Canadian mountain range the Rockies, is Canada’s third largest city, with a population of 1.3 million people. It is also said to have the highest number of millionair­es per capita of any major city in Canada.”

 ??  ?? 0 Calgary Castle was built in the early 1700s and extended in the early 1800s
0 Calgary Castle was built in the early 1700s and extended in the early 1800s

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