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Ballechin
House
Strathtay,
nearr Dunkeld, Tayside
Ballechin House was built in 1806 on the site of an old manor
house which had been owned by the Stuart Family for over three
centuries. In 1806 Robert Stuart was born in the new house. In
1825, at the age of 19, he went to India to seek his fortune with
the East India Company and returned in 1850 after reaching the
rank of Major, returning to Ballechin, which he had inherited
16 years previously in 1834. As the house had been let to tenants
he lived in a small cottage in the grounds until their lease expired.
The
local population regarded him as a bit of an eccentric. He was
deeply religious but after 25 years service in India had added
various oriental beliefs to his convictions, including the idea
of transmigration of the soul. He vowed that when he died he would
return to Ballechin in the body of his favourite black spaniel.
He scorned the company of humans, preferring dogs, and he had
14 of them in the house. The only person with whom he associated
was Sarah, his housekeeper, who died mysteriously at the age of
27, in 1873. It was not lost to local gossip that she had died
in his bed, as opposed to the servants' quarters, where housekeepers
normally slept. It was this master bedroom that was to become
the most haunted room in the house.
Major
Stuart died in 1874 and was buried at Logierait churchyard in
the grave next to Sarah. His nephew, John Stuart, who took over
Ballechin House, shot all the dogs, starting with the black spaniel,
almost certainly to forestall Robert Stuart in his declared intention
of returning to the house after his death. John Stuart was a devout
Roman Catholic. His first task was to convert the cottage in the
grounds into a retreat for nuns. Robert Stuart's sister, Isabella,
had become a nun, taking the name of Sister Frances Helen. She
died at a convent on 23rd February, 1880, and was to become a
regular visitor to the house after her death.
The
first sign of a haunting occurred shortly after Robert Stuart's
death. John Stuart's wife, having just moved into Ballechin, was
busy in the Major's old study one day when she noticed a strong
smell of dogs in the room. Whilst she was opening the window to
get rids of the "foul smell" she felt a nudge on her
leg. Looking down she could see no animal but she described it
as if an invisible dog had rubbed itself against her. This was
to be followed a few days later by the sounds of knocking and
also the distinct sound of a gun being fired. Quarrelling was
to be heard later but the words were indistinct.
By
the end of the 1870's the situation had become that bad that the
Stuart's governess left. A Jesuit priest, Father Hayden, who often
stayed at Ballechin, heard the sounds on many occasions, including
the sounds of screams. On one occasion he heard the sound of what
appeared to be a dog banging on his bedroom door but when he opened
the door to investigate there was nothing there. Later on Father
Hayden was to meet the former governess, purely by chance, and
upon discussing Ballechin learned that he had slept in the two
worst rooms of the house.
In
January, 1895, John Stuart was in the Major's old study one day,
talking to his agent about estate business, when they were disturbed
by three loud thudding sounds which were heard coming from inside
the room. This must have been an omen because a short while later
John Stuart died in London after being run over by a cab.
In
1896 the house was leased to a family for a period of twelve months,
the successor to John Stuart being an Army captain and having
no real interest in the estate. The family were to live there
for a mere 11 weeks before being driven out, willingly forfeiting
over nine months paid rent, having heard the knockings, thumping
and quarrelling. Various members of the family were to experience
the sight of a ghost, dressed in a silk dress, and hear the sounds
of a silky dress proceeding down the corridors. Bedclothes were
pulled off beds and the whole family were awakened several times
by loud banging noises. One of the daughters of the family was
terrified one night when she heard the sound of limping footsteps
walking round her bed. Her screams brought several other members
of the family to her room and they too were able to verify that
there was "something" there in the room. The girl was
occupying the room in which the young housekeeper had died so
mysteriously in 1873. It is interesting to note that Major Stuart
had returned from India with a permanent leg injury as a result
of wounds sustained during his active service.
In
1896 the Marquis of Bute, a keen student of psychic phenomena,
rented Ballechin House and asked two psychic investigators, Colonel
Lemesurier Taylor and Miss Goodrich-Speer, to carry out the investigation.
The couple moved into Ballechin on 3rd February, 1897, with a
total group of 35 people. On the first morning after their arrival
they reported "a loud clanging noise" which had been
heard throughout the house at frequent intervals over a period
of two hours. The muffled sound of voices had been heard and also
the sound of somebody walking in locked and empty rooms. Also
reported were the sounds of something being dragged along the
floor and of a gun being fired. The next morning several of the
group were to report that they had also heard the sound of a priest
conducting a service.
During
the period of investigation two nuns were seen by a frozen stream
near the house. One nun was kneeling and appeared to be crying
whilst the other appeared to be comforting her. The crying nun
is thought to have been Isabella, sister of Robert Stuart, who
had died in 1880.
Several
of the group were active Spiritualists and they brought a Ouija
board into the investigation. During the course of a seance a
person giving the name of "Ishbel" came through and
asked the investigators to go to the frozen stream where the two
nuns had been seen. On reaching the spot the investigators saw
the figure of a nun, quite clearly visible, wearing a black habit
against a white snowy background, slowly walking up a glen until
she suddenly vanished under a tree. The same nun was to be seen
many times by the group before they finished their investigations.
Finally,
in 1932 the house was totally uninhabitable and remained empty
until 1963 when it was finally demolished.
If
you would like to visit this area as part of a highly personalized
small group tour of my native Scotland please e-mail me:
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