Artistic Interest
- Level of interest
- Outstanding
The beauty of design which emphasises the natural beauty of the area has outstanding value as a work of art.
Historical
- Level of interest
- High
The 17th century garden framework around the Old House of May and the 18th- and 19th-century designed landscape give Invermay high historical value.
Horticultural
- Level of interest
- Little
The age of the yew hedge and the early 19th-century woodlands give a little horticultural value.
Architectural
- Level of interest
- Outstanding
The designed landscape contains several Category A listed buildings, giving it outstanding architectural value.
Archaeological
- Level of interest
- Some
Muckersie Chapel, The Old House of Invermay and the yew hedge surviving from the old garden give this site some archaeological value.
Scenic
- Level of interest
- High
The woodland canopy and the natural landscape of Invermay provide variety in the surrounding landscape, especially when seen from the A9. This gives Invermay high scenic value.
Nature Conservation
- Level of interest
- High
The flora in the 19th-century woodland along the Humble Bumble Gorge gives Invermay high nature conservation value.
Site History
Invermay House (Old House of Invermay) was built around a tower on a promontory overlooking the Water of May in 1633 by David Drummond and his wife Elizabeth Abercrombie. A small enclosed garden was created just to the south of the house. This was surrounded by yew, some of which remains today. The Belshes family bought the property around 1740 and began construction of the new house which they completed in 1750. The extensive formal landscape evident on General Roy's 1750 map is likely to have been initiated in the late 17th / early 18th century and further embellished by the Belshes as they built the new house. The Belshes travelled extensively throughout Europe as part of the Grand Tour.
Several account books and factors' reports have survived from the early 19th century and they describe the transformation of the policies between 1800 and 1810 when Colonel Hepburn Belshes laid out the park and garden. Many trees were planted and accounts exist for the supply of trees from Dickson of Perth and others from 1800 to at least 1808. The architect Alexander Laing was involved in preparing designs for several of the buildings constructed at this time including the lodges, a gazebo, a doocot and a game larder. The Walled Garden, the model Dairy and Home Farm were all added around this time. The wall around the policies was built around this time. Sir Walter Scott visited Invermay regularly in the 1820s and particularly admired the spectacular scenery of the Humble Bumble gorge.
Sir John Forbes of Fettercairn succeeded to the estate and his only daughter married Lord Clinton in the 1870s. Lord Clinton owned several estates around Britain and Invermay was sold around 1900 to the Frazers. The house has been recently modernised by the present owners, the Wemyss family.
Landscape Components
Architectural Features
Invermay House, listed category A, was built around 1750 and was remodeled by Robert Burn in 1806. It is a traditional Scottish country house with white harled walls and stone dressings around the windows. The main entrance was moved from the western approach to the present northern one in 1904, when the house was re-aligned. Old House of Invermay, listed category A, contains a tower probably built in the late 16th century and altered during the mid 17th century. A coach house and stables were added in the mid 18th century at around the same time as the new house was built. There were further additions in the 19th century and these buildings have recently been restored.
The octagonal wooden Summerhouse built in the early 19th century is no longer extant. The Ice House, to the east of the house, is egg-shaped and was referred to in the late 18th century account books. Over the Ice House is the early 19th century Game Larder. The Dairy is a single-storey building with a doocot in its eaves, constructed in 1803. The Stables is a classical two-storey building constructed in 1805. The Game Larder, Dairy and Stables were designed by Alexander Laing. The Home Farm was built between 1781-2 and appears in the overseer's account books. The Walled Garden, designed in 1802 by Walter Nicol lies just to the east of the farm buildings. The Green of Invermay Entrance Gates and Piers were built around 1904 and the finials from the West Lodge gatepiers were mounted on top of the circular piers. All the buildings detailed in this paragraph are group listed category B.
Scott's Bridge, over the Water of May, was probably built in the late 17th century and crosses the water just to the south of another 19th-century bridge. Both bridges are group listed category B. West Lodges and Gates were designed by Alexander Laing in 1803 and are listed category B. The pair of single-storey Gothic lodges are now roofless. The park wall, also listed category B, was begun by the Belshes in around 1800 and is more than 2.5km long. The octagonal Doocot at the northern end of the drive was built in the late 18th century and is listed category B. South Lodge lies at the end of the long drive running southeast from the house and Invermay Lodge is located at the northeastern end of the long drive with begins at Scott's Bridge. Muckersie Chapel was first mentioned in the 12th century and was reconstructed c.1840 as the burial place for the Belshes. It is listed category C(S).
Parkland
The Water of May divides the park and policies into two sections. The northern part includes North and South Hallbank which are separated by a woodland strip. It also includes the Eugoffie Parks. In the mid 19th century there were several clumps and specimen trees in them but now most have gone. A woodland shelter belt runs from the Green of Invermay for several miles along the minor road towards Ardargie House Hotel.
The southern section stretches up to Roeglen Wood which is planted on the lower slopes of Clevage Hill. The western side which contains Dovecot Park, Lawnhill Park and Kidhill Park includes the 'picturesque' approach from the West Lodges. In his book 'The Landscape Garden in Scotland', Alan Tait suggests that this is the drive cited by the factor when explaining his quarrel with the designer Walter Nicol to the owner Colonel Belshes over payment for Nicol's services. He wrote 'Mr Nicol staked out an approach to the new lodges, a sunk fence, and some walks through the woods…'.
The 1st edition OS map shows that these parks were designed with many specimen trees in them but now only a few remain. These are mainly oak, sycamore and beech. The policies extended further south and each park was sheltered by woodland plantations. In the mid 19th century ornamental drives ran throughout the policies and woodland, linking all the components of the designed landscape.
Woodland
In 1883, Thomas Hunter in 'The Woods, Forests and Estate of Perthshire' wrote of Invermay, 'all the hardwood trees… especially the oaks, thrive exceedingly well, and the beeches are remarkable for the cleanness of their stems.' He also considered that the Belshes planted most of the woodland after they arrived in the 1740s. By the mid 19th century, the woodlands were extensive and according to Hunter, the trees along the sides of the Water of May were mostly hardwoods including oak, beech, elm and sycamore. The woodlands further south, in particular Roeglen Wood, grew 'very fine' plantations of larch and spruce which had matured in only 70 years. Invermay still has very fine woods which are renowned for their hardwood timber, especially oak. They have been carefully managed over the years and this continues today. Small blocks of faster growing conifers were planted amongst the maturing oaks and beech. Some ornamental conifers such as specimen monkey puzzle, spruce and Douglas fir grow amongst the oak and beech closer to the house. Hybrid rhododendrons, including some R. ponticum varieties were used as ground cover. The elms that were planted on the sides of the Humble Bumble gorge have died through Dutch Elm disease.
Water Features
The Humble Bumble is a natural gorge where the water of May rushes through a narrow gap only 1-metre wide in some places. At its steepest, the cliff-face rises 20-30m. In the early 19th century walks were cut along both sides and a rustic bridge was built to cross the tumbling stream just above and to the east of the narrow gorge. This spectacular scene was a favourite place of Sir Walter Scott and it has hardly changed since his regular visits of the 1820s. Only the elms which contributed much to the character of the planting have been lost.
The Upper Pond lies on the southern edge of a shelterbelt just above Home Farm. It actually consists of two water bodies that almost join together. The Lower Pond lies to the east of the stables on the edge of the woodland. The western drive crosses it and divides it into two ponds.
The Gardens
The garden around the house is mainly lawn. On the west side of the house, a semi-circular beech hedge was planted around 1950 to channel the eye into a short avenue in the centre. At the end of this vista stood the octagonal wooden summerhouse which had been moved from the south side of the walled garden. The summerhouse no longer exists. On the eastern side of the house there is another important vista across the lawns to the rustic Game Larder. The ancient 17th century yew hedge lies between the house and the Old House. The hedge encloses the garden around the Old House and provides protection for the flower and vegetable garden where an attractive herbaceous border lies along the southern wall of the Old House.
Walled Gardens
Walter Nicol designed this garden in 1802. It is shaped like a trapezium with the shortest wall on the north side. A large conservatory stood against this wall and the OS plans indicate that there was a flower garden shaped like a half-oval at the southern end. This garden thrived until World War II but gradually declined after that and today is not in use at all.