|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
Foreign News: Castle by the Week
"The great houses," mourned Gloomy Dean W. R. Inge of St. Paul's some years ago, "will never again be lived in by their owners. Like the ruined castles and the abbeys . . . they will be the tombs of a social order which has passed away forever."
One of Britain's great houses is vast and dour Buchanan Castle, near Drymen (rhymes with women), Stirlingshire. Back in 1935 James Graham, Sixth Duke of Montrose, decided that Buchanan cost too much to live in. He had already sold the mountainfamed Ben Lomondthat stood in the castle's backyard. He built himself and his Duchess a cosy, eleven-room house on the castle grounds, leased 60,000 acres of shooting land to a Glasgow businessmen's association, and turned the castle itself into a hotel.
In 1938 it closed. During the war the castle took a brief new lease on life when the government used it as a hospital and military training center, but when peace came, there it was back on the Duke's hands, a great, solid, sprawling white elephant, too new (built 1850) to be historic, too old to be livable. The Duke, who has another castle on the Isle of Arran, decided to sell the old family home. He asked $70,000. There were no takers.
Last week in desperation, the Duke of Montrose took an ad in the paper, offered Buchanan, complete with its 40 bedrooms, 16 baths, 40 acres of woodlands, nine acres of gardens and incomparable view of Loch Lomond, for $28 a week to anyone who would keep the place in repair.
Most Popular »
- Why Brittany Murphy Is Worth Remembering
- Sean Goldman: Home by Christmas?
- How Panera Bread Defies the Recession
- Why Obama Has to Worry About Polls
- In Germany, a Disturbing Rise of Right-Wing Violence
- Lindsey Graham: New GOP Maverick in the Senate
- Christmas Shopping: For Retailers, Down to Two Crucial Days
- Israel vs. Hizballah: Drumbeats of War
- The Pentagon Prepares for a Missile Attack from 'Iran'
- The '00s: Goodbye (at Last) to the Decade from Hell
- How Panera Bread Defies the Recession
- In Germany, a Disturbing Rise of Right-Wing Violence
- Holland's Plan to Tax Every Kilometer Driven
- Lindsey Graham: New GOP Maverick in the Senate
- Rehabilitating Joseph Stalin
- Domestic Terror Incidents Hit a Peak in 2009
- Sean Goldman: Home by Christmas?
- In Cleveland, Worker Co-Ops Look to a Spanish Model
- A Pariah No More: Serbia Bids to Join the E.U.
- Will Your Next Car be Made in India?





RSS