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Inveresk, Inveresk Village Road, Inveresk House

House (17th Century)

Site Name Inveresk, Inveresk Village Road, Inveresk House

Classification House (17th Century)

Alternative Name(s) Musselburgh; Nature Cure Home

Canmore ID 53817

Site Number NT37SW 167

NGR NT 34583 72097

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/53817

Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved.
Canmore Disclaimer. © Copyright and database right 2024.

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Digital Images

Administrative Areas

  • Council East Lothian
  • Parish Inveresk (East Lothian)
  • Former Region Lothian
  • Former District East Lothian
  • Former County Midlothian

Archaeology Notes

NT37SW 167.00 34583 72097 House

NT37SW 167.01 3446 7209 Sundial (Pillar Block)

NT37SW 167.02 34525 72090 Garden

NT37SW 167.03 c. 3455 7210 Sundial (Facet Head)

Two parallel ranges, both altered. The 17th-century E range is partly concealed by a large bow of the mid-19th century. Pediment dated 1643, apparently resited, over the fanlit front door of c.1800. In the mid-18th century the W range was added alongside, and the two contiguous N gables were given rusticated quoins. 1757 is the date inscribed on

the frame of an earlier (1682) armorial stone reset on the W wall. RCAHMS 1929; C McWilliam 1978

Activities

Field Visit (21 May 1928)

Inveresk House.

The house has been entirely modernised, but the walls of the east wing date in part from the late 16th century. Above the present entrance is inserted the pediment of a doorway which bears the date 1643 and in monogram the initials M.O.C. and K.L., for Master Oliver Colt and Katherine Logan, his wife. The lower part of the pediment is inscribed NEMO NISI VERITATIS ET PACIS STUDIOSVS INTRABIT ("None shall enter save those who ensue truth and peace"). On the western wall of the house is an armorial panel dated 1682, and on the moulded border MDCCLVIII. The shield is surmounted by mantling and a helm crested a hand grasping a baton, and is parted per pale and charged with, dexter, a stag's head erased, and, sinister, a chevron between two mullets in chief and an axe in base. On a label above the armorial is the motto TRANSFIGAM, for Colt. On the east side of the house a built drain runs at a depth of 8 feet from the surface. It is some 3 feet in breadth and 3 feet 7 inches in height. In the stable court is a vaulted cellar partly underground. In the landing at the entrance a trap door covers what appears to be a well which has been filled in. The garden contains a fragmentary structure of the Roman period, for which, see NT37SW 13.

HISTORICAL NOTE. The house was built in or soon after 1597 by Adam Colt, minister of the parish, who had bought the estate and died in 1643. He was succeeded as minister and in the estate by his son Oliver, who married Katherine Logan. Genealogical Memoirs of the Families of Colt and Coutts, by Rev. Charles Rogers, pp. 38-40.

RCAHMS 1929, visited 21 May 1928.

OS map: iv S.E. (unnoted).

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