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This
day was spent visiting Irvine Country with David
and Caro as our guides. We went to the Bridge of Feugh hoping
to see salmon leaping up the rocks and then along the south
side of the Dee River to the Park Bridge over the Dee where
David told us about the Mid-1300 to Early 1400 feud between
the Keiths and the Irvines that culminated in several Keiths
being drowned in the Dee at Keiths' Pot and their leader being
killed by Irvine arrows on Keiths' Stone.
Then we
went north to Auchronie to a hill to see the Drum Stone, another
part of the Irvine-Keith History. We visited the Irvine Caput,
a portion of Drum land that enables the Barony of Drum to
continue in the Irvine family as it has since 1323. Lunch
was enjoyed at the nearby Irvine Arms resturant.
The afternoon
was spent with David and Caro guiding us to Drum Chapel, through
Drum Castle up to the battlements of the tower and to see
the walled garden. The lands of Drum were received by William
de Irwin as a grant from Robert the Bruce in 1323. The Castle
takes its name from the Gaelic Drum or Druim which means a
ridge or knoll. The oldest part of the castle is the Keep,
a 70 foot massive tower with immensely thick walls. The Keep
is at least 300 years older than the rest of the castle, which
includes an elegant 17th Century Jacobean mansion and additional
late 18th Century alterations.
The Castle
remained in the Irvine family until the 24th Laird Henry Quentin
Irvine entered into an agreement with the National Trust for
Scotland bequeathing Drum and its 411 acres to the Trust.
Quentin was succeeded in 1975 as laird of Drum and Chief of
the Name by his brother Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Francis
Irvine. In 1992, Charles' son David Charles Irvine succeeded
as 26th laird.
We returned
to the Tor-Na-Coille Hotel for the formal Irvine of Drum dinner
for American and Scottish Irvines and that featured cullin
skink, haggis, and salmon.
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