The Scotsman

Prestigiou­s island house on the market for £3m

◆ Prime ministers and royalty have visited Islay House over the years reports Alison Campsie

- Alison.campsie@scotsman.com

Islay House – arguably the most prestigiou­s building on the island famed for its whisky – has come back on the market with a price tag of £3 million.

The house, which has its origins in the 17th century, has most recently been used as a hotel following its sale in 2014 by the family of retired United States Navy Top Gun, Captain Thomas Friedrich, who lived in the property for 20 years.

Major renovation­s were carried out following the building’s purchase by a group of investors, with the property first opening as a hotel in 2016.

Closed since last year – although with self-catering accommodat­ion still running – the property is now being marketed as a 13-bedroom house with 13 bathrooms and six public rooms. The entire property has been rewired and replumbed.

The new owner will have the option to complete the renovation of 16 further bedrooms at the house, which sits at the head of Loch Indaal and enjoys “unparallel­ed” sunset views across to the Rhinns mountains.

Agent Tom Stewart-moore said: “Islay House is probably the most iconic building on the island full stop. It has had many guises over the years from a private home to a hotel, which our client has run until last year. It offers a multitude of uses to a buyer.

“It could be a large hotel, a corporate or a wedding venue or perhaps someone would like to keep it as a private home again.”

Originally known as Kilarrow House, the building was built for Sir Hugh Campbell of Cawdor around 1677 and has sat at the centre of an evolving Islay ever since.

Author and historian David Caldwell, in his book Islay, The Land of the Lordship, described the house as “considerab­le investment in money and effort”, which “marked the progress of Islay from hostile, undevelope­d territory to a settled estate that paid its way”.

Major changes to the house and landscape in 1760 led to the property becoming known as Islay House, with further improvemen­ts made by Walter Frederick Campbell, who inherited the island in 1916 as a teenager and served as an MP for Argyllshir­e between the 1820s and 1840s.

He expanded Islay House, with architect William Playfair hired to create a Baronial-style wing at the rear, which mainly served as servants quarters.

However, Campbell's own poor financial management twinned with the onset of the potato blight pushed a growing island population into deep poverty. He was declared bankrupt in 1847 with the Campbell’s days at Islay House coming to an end.

The property was sold to English banker and Liberal MP James Morrison in 1853. Harold Macmillan was guest of the Morrison family in 1957, with Margaret Thatcher a guest in 1979. At that time, she was reportedly looking for a holiday home on the island. Queen Elizabeth II visited the following year.

The Morrison family ended their affiliatio­n with Islay House in 1985 with its sale to Captain Friedrich, who served as personal pilot for Ugandan President Idi Amin.

 ?? PICTURE: KNIGHT FRANK ?? Islay House has its origins in the 17th century and has recently been used as a hotel
PICTURE: KNIGHT FRANK Islay House has its origins in the 17th century and has recently been used as a hotel

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