The Scotsman

Estate founded by duchess who recruited soldiers with a kiss goes on sale for £7.5m

● 9,309-acre Kinrara created by Jane Gordon

- By JANE BRADLEY jane.bradley@scotsman.com

It was a country estate founded by a duchess who recruited nearly 1,000 men to join what would become the historic Gordon Highland regiment in the 18th century.

Now the Kinrara Estate on Speyside is set to become one of Scotland’s priciest properties as it goes on the market for £7.5 million.

The 9,309-acre estate, which boasts grouse moor, stalking, salmon and trout fishing as well as extensive living accommodat­ion, was the home of Jane, Duchess of Gordon in the late 1700s.

A loyalist to the monarchy and said to be popular with King George III, when in 1793 the army was short of recruits, the duchess is reputed to have had a bet with the Prince Regent that she could raise more men than he could.

She toured the villages of Scotland, organising dances and donned a military uniform complement­ed by a large black feathered hat.

Those that danced joined the army and are said to have received the King’ s shilling from between the duchess’s lips when she kissed them. She is reputed to have recruited about 940 men and this is believed to have been the beginning of the famous Gordon Highland regiment.

John Bound, a partner with property firm Galbraith, which is marketing the estate, said :“Kin ra ra offers a rare opportunit­y to own and play a key role in the ongoing stewardshi­p of this stunning landscape, including some of the UK’S most sensitive and important habitats.

“The estate offers very considerab­le afforestat­ion potential and lucrative carbon capture potential and a feature of the estate is the natural and ancient oak woodlands situated on the north side of the A9. The areas of peatland at Kinrara could also be a significan­t asset in the quickly developing carbon economy.

“It is a wonderful, mixed estate, underpinne­d by good housing, farming, significan­t forestry and sporting activities .”

As well as the main six-bed

room house, there are seven houses and cottages on the estate and a variety of outbuildin­gs, including a shoot room and two boathouses on Loch Alvie.

The duchess – who at 16 was so strikingly beautiful that the song Bonnie Jennie of Monreith, the Flower of Galloway was written about her – later spent some of her time in London, where she was renowned for her parties, which she also hosted at her Highlands estate.

In Elizabeth Grant’s Memoirs of a Highland Lady, she

states: “We were often at Kinrara, the duchess having perpetual dances”.

The duchess died in 1812 and she is buried in the grounds of Kin ra ra House, which remained in the family until 1928 when it was bought by renowned former showgirl and philanthro­pist Lady Lucy Houston.

Houston, who is said to have inherited a fortune from her shipping magnate husband, is known as the saviour of the Spitfire engine by giving much needed finance to the government for the project during the Second World War.

She died in 1935 and the estate was bought by a Glasgow businessma­n.

The house and the estate were divided in 2005 when the estate was bought by the current owners.

The other section is owned by billionair­e Danish bu sinessman Anders HolchPovls en, the richest person in Scotland, who bought the property two years ago.

“We were often at Kinrara, the duchess having perpetual dances”

ELIZABETH GRANT

 ??  ?? Kinrara is said to be ‘a wonderful, mixed estate, underpinne­d by good housing, farming, significan­t forestry and sporting activities’
Kinrara is said to be ‘a wonderful, mixed estate, underpinne­d by good housing, farming, significan­t forestry and sporting activities’

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