when did the queen visit falkirk

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On this day 15 years ago, The Falkirk Wheel was opened by The Queen

The Queen tours and officially opens the site of the Falkirk Wheel (Ben Curtis WPA/Rota)

IT was 15 years ago today that the Queen opened The Falkirk Wheel.

The project was designed to be both a visitor attraction and a functional canal link.

Architect Tony Kettle was responsible for the design.

The wheel cost £17 million and was part of an £85m project to link Scotland’s Forth and Clyde Union canals.

It quickly became a top tourist attraction and last year, was the 15th most-popular destination for visitors to Scotland.

The boat lift is 35m high and its structure was created with Kettle’s artistic flair.

Aerial view of the Falkirk Wheel

The adjoining aqueduct was surprisingly inspired by the spine of a fish skeleton.

Completing the wheel wasn’t without its problems.

It was meant to open to the public on May Day, but was damaged by vandals. They opened a lock on the aqueduct which sent millions of gallons of water over the structure and almost destroyed the visitor centre.

There were thousands of people at the official opening of the wheel on May 24. They cheered as the Queen arrived with Prince Phillip and then Scottish First Minister Jack McConnell.

Along with the Kelpies, which were completed in 2013, the wheel has boosted tourism in the area.

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Hm the queen visits the kelpies.

The Queen and Prince Phillip disembark The Wooden Spoon Seagull in front of the Kelpies.

The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh made a Royal entrance on-board the Seagull Trust barge ‘The Wooden Spoon Seagull’ to officially open, and name, the Queen Elizabeth II Canal.

The royal couple completed the last stretch of their journey to the Kelpies sculptures in Falkirk by barge, and formally opened the new canal section in the process.

The Queen Elizabeth II Canal forms the eastern gateway to the Forth and Clyde Canal and leads to the acclaimed sculptures.

The Queen meets the Clydesdales horses, the inspiration behind the Kelpies.

The Queen and Prince Philip met Kelpies’ creator, Andy Scott. They then toured the inside of the “head down” Kelpie to view the engineering work involved and unveiled a plaque to open the canal section.

Inspiration for The Kelpies came from the heavy horses which pulled boats and cargo along the towpaths of the Forth & Clyde and Union Canals in their heyday. The transport arteries of the Industrial Revolution, the canals and the horses that walked them played a huge role in the development of the area. The sculptures’ name was derived from the mythical Celtic water horses which could transform their shape, and which were reputed to have the strength of 10 horses and the endurance of many more.

A heart drawn in the sky to mark the special occasion.

Originally envisioned as a moving boat lift, during the early design process the notion of The Kelpies changed to monumental sculptures symbolising the industrial past of both the canal and the communities that line its banks. Glasgow-based artist Andy Scott – Scotland’s best-known equine sculptor – transformed The Kelpies from idea to reality, imagining a colossal gateway towering either side of the canal to welcome weary sailors and visitors to the nation’s hospitable shores.

You can find up-coming events for the Kelpies here .

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The forth and clyde canal, falkirk wheel and kelpies: the modern joints of a 258-year-old idea.

  • Culture & Tradition
  • Natural Heritage

A story of how our the Forth and Clyde Canal survived near-bankruptcy and modernised transport, and how it will thrive for years to come, thanks to its modern features.

How it all began.

The Forth and Clyde Canal began in 1763, when engineer John Smeaton surveyed the route for its development (Canals 2001). In 1768, work started on building Scotland’s first canal. It was, at that time, the largest engineering project in Scotland (History of the Canal). The canal was first officially recognized by parliament in 1768, when an act of Parliament was released which allowed the work to begin. This was:

“An Act for making and maintaining a navigable Cut or Canal from the Firth or River of Forth, at or near the Mouth of the River of Carron, in the County of Stirling, to the Firth or River of Clyde, at or near a Place called Dalmuir Burnfoot, in the County of Dumbarton; and also a collateral Cut from the same to the City of Glasgow; and for making a navigable Cut or Canal of Communication from the Port and Harbour of Borrowstounness, to join the said Canal at or near the Place where it will fall into the Firth of Forth.” (Priestly 1831)

The canal moved along what is considered the narrowest part of the lowlands but stopped short of Glasgow due to a lack of funds. However, in 1777, the city merchants raised the funds to complete the canal, in 1785, the government offered aid from Jacobite estates, and in 1790 the canal was able to open (Canals 2021).

Changing Hands

The canal was soon knocked off its podium by the development of the railway. The management and maintenance of the canal was given to the Caledonian Railway Company after being sold in 1867, 104 years after it began (Canals 2021). The canal changed hands again in 1923 when Caledonian Railway Company was absorbed into London Midland and Scottish Railway (Canals 2021). In 1948, the canal was nationalized and became the property of the British Transport Commission, but then was transferred to the British Waterway board in 1962. The canal’s time ended with its closure a year later. However, as the story goes, the Scottish people were too stubborn to let go of what was once called the Great Canal. With help from the National Lottery, the Millennium Project bought as much of the canal back as possible, with a modern spin on things. In 2001 the canal was reopened and one year later the Queen opened the Falkirk Wheel. In 2014 the Kelpies opened and the canal was complete.

Long ago, the Forth and Clyde Canal was connected to the Union Canal through a series of eleven locks (pictured above). However, with commercial traffic on the Union canal ceasing, the decision was made to cut the link between the two canals in 1933, with the removal and redevelopment of the lock system. Both canals closed, 30 and 32 years later, respectively. The canals were separated, but as part of the Millennium Project the canals were not just to be reborn, they were reconnected like they used to be, just not using an eleven-lock system that took a day to pass through!

The Falkirk Wheel

The idea was to build the world’s first and only rotating boat lift that is said to be inspired by the local area and culture. The idea board was established in 1994. Many great and bizarre sounding proposals were considered, such as rolling eggs, tilting tanks, a seesaw, and overhead monorails, but the wheel rolled to the finish line and the work began. The inspiration for the wheel’s design has been attributed to many things, whether man-made, like a Celtic spear or a ship’s propellor, or natural, like a whale’s ribcage or a fish’s spine. Either way the Falkirk wheel is one of a kind.

In 1998, work began, and the Falkirk wheel was opened by the Queen on the 24 th of May 2002.  The wheel is an engineering marvel: it is 35 meters high, and each gondola (the rotating ends) weighs around 600 tons and holds around 500,000 liters of water, but can move with the power 8 household kettles. Now that is a wonder of the engineering world.

The Falkirk wheel uses a complex gear system along with many principles, like that of the Archimedes principle in which, “any body completely or partially submerged in a fluid…at rest is…equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the body” (2020). These systems and principles combine to allow the wheel to turn both clockwise and anti-clockwise. To find out more about the functioning of the wheel please click here . The Falkirk Wheel now serves as a link between both the Union Canal and the Forth and Clyde Canal. It does not provide a link to the River Forth like the canal originally did – that job belongs to the Queen Elizabeth II Canal which is guarded by not one but two Kelpies.

The Kelpies

The Kelpies are the guards of the Queen Elizabeth II Canal and will do anything to protect it, even if that means drawing the world’s attention. The Kelpies are 30-meter-tall sculptures based on the Scottish Myth of water horses and the Clydesdales that worked the canal that these horses watch over. They are the world’s largest equine statues, and that is not all they are… The Kelpies would tower over the Angel of the North and cast shadows over the Moai of Easter Island. They would make the Great Sphinx of Giza look like a house cat and not the big cat that it is. To the Kelpies we are mice, looking up at them, trying not to get trampled.

The Kelpies were designed by Andy Scott, a Scottish sculptor that has completed many works around Scotland, like the Arria in Cumbernauld and the Canter in Edinburgh. The Kelpies are made of steel with a skeleton (that looks a bit like a rollercoaster) and plates that make up the skin of the beasts. (To find out more about their construction click here ). The Kelpies statues depict  the heads of the horses, portrayed as if from the myth in which they are water horses who can transform into dark or white ponies and trick people onto their backs, take them to the water and eat them (2015). The Kelpies of Falkirk are unlikely to do so, as they are trapped in cement, with only their heads above ground. A drawing by Andy Scott demonstrates how the Kelpies are connected to the myth, showing what we see above ground and the rest of their bodies below ground. It is as though the Kelpies are rising out of the water for their next gallop among us. The kelpies were competed in 2014 and opened to the public that same year. Although they have not been with us long, they are estimated to be here for over 120 years and will be appreciated for generations to come (Canals 2021).

The Forth and Clyde canal started as a way to move goods and ships from east to west and back again, but through the advancement of travel (and the rise of the railway) it became obsolete until the turn of the Millennium. Then it was transformed into something new, with the canal of centuries past being pieced back together and paired with one-of-a-kind monuments that say, “Don’t touch OUR canal again! ‘Cause No ma’er whit you say the Forth and Clyde Canal is here to stay, an’ we’re no letting go!” Without the Falkirk Wheel or the Kelpies the Forth and Clyde canal may have stayed closed forever. May the wheel keep on turning and may the Kelpies keep on guarding it.

By Emily Robertson, Hidden Heritage: Falkirk Travels Through Time volunteer.

Bo’ness Greenways: The Fight to Save the Last Colliery in Kinneil

The changing roles of children in the mines.

  • References & Bibliography
  • Cover Photo: 'Falkirk Wheel at Night' (c) Jim Huntsman
  • “ History of the canal ”. Scottish Canals Online. 
  • Joseph Priestley. Historical Account of the Navigable Rivers, Canals, and Railways, of Great Britain: As a Reference to Nichols, Priestley & Walker's New Map of Inland Navigation (1831).
  • Header image: Falkirk Wheel. Public Domain. Wikimedia Commons.
  • Photograph: “Junction Locks.” c.1930. P11357. Telfer Drummond. Falkirk Archive. From Falkirk Council, collection managed by Falkirk Community Trust.  
  • Photographs of the Kelpies and related information courtesy of The Helix.co.uk .

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Falkirk Local History Society

Callendar House – A History

when did the queen visit falkirk

The substantial history of the owners of Callendar House and estate is admirably covered by a number of authors and so only an overview is included here.  Chief amongst the earlier writers was Edwin Livingston who documents in considerable detail the doings of the Livingston family .  He was particularly fascinated by the events of the mid 15 th century and the sudden downfall of their power base in 1449, followed by its immediate resurrection – so much so that he wrote a novel about the events called “The Captain of Stirling Castle” in which Callendar House gets a chapter to itself.  This format was particularly useful in being able to provide a social setting to the period in which family alliances were more important than the national good.  It is, however, his useful summary chronology of the family that is reproduced as interspersed text here.

John Reid has augmented Burns’ short account of the Callendars of Callendar to give us fresh insights into the early history and Ian Scott has provided a lively summary of all of these things in his authoritative history of Falkirk.  For detail we can go to papers published in Calatria , the invaluable journal of the Falkirk Local History Society, such as Ian’s account of the relationship between the Livingstons and Mary Queen of Scots .  Other articles have included the religious persecution of Eleanor Hay (1593-1627), James Livingston founding Falkirk Hospital (1640), the siege of Callendar House (1651), the theft of the Livingston silver (1651), the Militia Riots (1797), the sale of Callendar House (1783), the visit of Queen Victoria (1842) and the last Earl of Callendar (1853).  These will be reproduced on this website.

Given this plethora of material it has been decided here to deal in more detail with specific episodes which are intimately connected with Callendar House, such as the period of the family’s associations with Mary Queen of Scots, the guardianship of Princess Elizabeth, and career of the First Earl of Callendar.  Curiously, the major gap in the story of Callendar House has been a history of the Forbes family and so this is dealt with in more detail than some of the other sections.

The Callendars

Callendar is derived from ‘Calatria’ for which the earliest surviving reference dates to 1072.  It appears in various references as Caleteria , Kaletiro, Calathir and Calentyr and may stem from the Gaelic word “callaid” meaning a partition, fence or ditch barrier (Reid 1991).  As the area of Calatria occupied the land between the rivers Carron and Avon this must refer to the Antonine Wall which runs like a spine along the territory and which formed the main line of communication across the Forth-Clyde isthmus.

The early high-ranking officials who administered Calatria or Callendar were called thanes and these originally appear to have been stewards of a royal estate.  It is not known when the office was first introduced but it must have been long before the earliest surviving mention of a thane at Callendar which was during the reign of David I (1124-1153) when he granted a saltwork in “kalentyr” to Newbattle Abbey.  The Christian names of the Callendars suggest that they stemmed from the native nobility of earlier centuries.

  • c1135  Thane Duncan
  • c1190  Thane Malcolm
  • 1200    Thane Alwyn
  • 1226    Thane Patrick

As the feudal system changed so too did their role and in the reign of David II many thanages were converted into baronies, including that at Callendar sometime around 1230.  At that time the Abbey of Holyrood received a substantial part of the former thanage, but the Callendar family remained at its caput – Callendar.  After Thane Patrick we have:

  • c1252  Alwyn
  • c1289  John
  • c1300  Alwyn
  • c1340  John
  • c1346  Patrick
  • c1350  Christian

Sir John de Calentir must originally have espoused the Scottish side in the Wars of Independence, but in 1296 he signed the Ragman Roll swearing fealty to Edward I of England and had his lands restored.  Thereafter he probably fought on the English side but was captured at around the time of the Battle of Falkirk and in 1299 was involved in a prisoner exchange.  Normally Callendar had an annual value of forty pounds in peacetime but was then worth only eight pounds six shillings and eight pence – a sign of the ravages caused by this long war.  Around 1346 Patrick de Callendar forfeited his title, allegedly for supporting the Balliol cause against the Bruces.  Despite this his daughter Christian married the new possessor, Sir William Livingston.

The Livingstons

In 1436 Alexander Livingston of Callendar secured possession of the young King James II and became the Great Chamberlain.  This moment saw the family move to the centre of Scottish power – a position that they were to hold for over a century. 

  • 1346    William Livingston
  • 1364    John Livingston (son – killed at Battle of Homildon Hill)
  • 1402    Alexander Livingston (son)
  • 1450    James Livingston (son)
  • 1467    James Livingston (son)
  • 1497    James Livingston (nephew)
  • c1503  William Livingston (son)
  • 1517    Alexander Livingston (son)

A chronology of the most notable events in the history of the Livingstons of Callendar :

The Livingstons of Callendar & Mary Queen of Scots

Alexander, 5 th Lord Livingston, accompanied James V to France in 1537 to celebrate the king’s brief marriage to Princess Magdalene.  When the King died in 1542 the care of his infant daughter, Mary (Queen of Scots) was entrusted to eight nobles, one of whom was Sir Alexander Livingston.  The Earl of Arran was made regent and through the Treaty of Greenwich favoured a marriage between Mary and Henry VIII’s son Edward.  This was opposed by a section of the Scottish nobles including Alexander Livingston, and by the Catholic Church led by the Earl of Moray and Cardinal Beaton.  On 4 September 1543 they met at Callendar House and agreed to reject the proposed marriage.  Concerned about Mary’s security, lest those who stuck to the Treaty attempted to wrest control from them, the young queen was placed in the care of Lord Livingston and Lord Erskine.  On 5 June 1546 the Privy Council recorded that these two were exempted from military service because “ the Lordis Erskine and Levingstown chosin to be of Secret Counsel… of the keeping of our Soverane Ladis person .”

This was obviously a great honour and placed the men in a position of considerable influence as well as a payment of £80 a month from November 1545 until February 1548.  Whilst this was a large sum of money for those days, it was an expensive business looking after the monarch.  The ruling Scottish families looked around for another matrimonial match for Mary and concluded that Francis, the son of the French king, was the most suitable.  For arranging this Regent Arran was awarded, or bribed, with the Dukedom of Chatelherault.  Henry VIII was furious and the so-called Rough Wooing ensued.  The Scots were roundly defeated at Pinkie on 10 September 1547 and amongst the dead were John, Master of Livingston, and many of the family’s vassals from Falkirk.  The Queen’s person was under increased threat and she sailed for France in August 1548 in the company of Lord Livingston and her Four Maries.  The latter were the daughters of noble families – Mary Fleming, Mary Seton, Mary Beaton and the daughter of her guardian, Mary Livingston.  They were about the same age as the Queen and became her constant companions.  Lord Livingston was already ill as they sailed around Ireland to avoid the English fleet.

when did the queen visit falkirk

In France Lord Livingston married his third wife, a young French woman called Jeanne de Pedefer, but died shortly thereafter, c1550.  It is unlikely that his body was brought back to Falkirk, but a commemorative slab was placed in the parish church there.  It reads: ALEX[ander]/ ADOLESCENTIAM IN BEL—/ PROVECTAM AE/TATEM IN AVLA/ REGVM GALLIE/ INTER PRA-IC/ –OS- 17 A SC/ — ANNI-/ —T TPO—“  (Alexander — his youth in war and his maturity in the court of the Kings of France, among — 17 — years —).  Above this is a shield in relief – parted per pale and charged: dexter, dimidiated, 1 st and 4 th for Livingston, 2 nd and 3 rd for Callendar, the 2 nd and 4 th quarters being elided by the dimidiation; sinister, a fess or chief charged with three stars accompanied by a rose or gillyflower in base, a three-point label in chief.  The sinister charges are probably for Douglas – the label indicates that she was the daughter of an heir apparent.  Above the shield is a clumsy carving which appears to be meant to represent an early Scottish type of earl’s coronet.  Agnes Douglas was the daughter of John, second Earl of Morton, and it therefore seems probable that the gravestone was initially executed on her death around 1540 and that the inscription was added later.

Lord Alexander Livingston was succeeded by his second son, Lord William, who embraced the new Protestant faith but remained faithful to Queen Mary.  Mary had married the dauphin who for a few months became King of France.  After his death she had little role in France and Lord William Livingston was amongst the Scottish nobles who journeyed to France in 1561 to invite her to return to Scotland where she was still the queen.  In August that year she returned and the Livingstons remained close friends and allies.  When Magdalen Livingston, Mary’s younger sister, married Arthur Erskine of Blackgrange, the Queen’s favourite equerry, on 7 January 1562, the Queen presented her with a vasquin (outer petticoat) bordered with a small fringe of gold.  When Mary Livingston married John Sempill on 6 March 1565 it took place at Holyrood, probably because she was the first of the Four Maries to marry.  The Queen gifted the couple the crown lands of Auchtermuchty and the island of Little Cumbrae, a wedding dress and a bed.  A few months later, on 1 July 1565, Queen Mary attended the baptism of one of Lord William’s children in Callendar House.  The ceremony was performed according to Protestant rites and Mary listened to the service “ to show him in that favour that she had not done to any before ” and even John Knox wrote that her presence “ was reckoned a great matter .”  Indeed, the Queen had been warned of an intended ambush as she and her fiancé, Lord Darnley, took the route from Perth to get to Callendar House.  Consequently she had left Perth at 5 o’clock escorted by 300 spearmen moving rapidly.  Mary remained at Callendar House until the 4 July.  The room in which she is reputed to have stayed lies in the top north-west corner of the old tower house and its memory was preserved by generations of the house’s owners.

Lord Livingston was often at court and on 9 March 1566 was in attendance at Holyrood Palace when Riccio was murdered.  The deed having been done and the loyal attendants of the Queen finding themselves outnumbered, they made a diplomatic exit.  Queen Mary was pregnant at the time and fearing that she might die in childbirth she drew up a will and marked on an inventory which of her jewels were to go to which person.  Mary Sempill, formerly Livingston, as the lady of honour in charge of the queen’s jewels, drew up the inventory.    Included in the bequests were Lady Agnes Livingston (the Queen’s cousin), Mary Livingston or Sempill, and her younger sister Magdalen Livingston.  Mary Sempill was to receive, amongst other articles of jewellery, a watch ornamented with twelve rubies and twelve large sapphires with a pearl pendant at the end.

Both mother and child survived and on 17 December 1566 the infant prince (afterwards James VI) was baptised at Stirling Castle.  Lord Livingston was one of few Scottish lords to assist in an official capacity, most refusing to attend a Catholic ceremony.  The following month Queen Mary stayed at Callendar House on 13 January with her son journeying from Stirling to Edinburgh.  She returned eleven days later on the 24 th on her way to visit Darnley who was ill with the smallpox in Glasgow.  On the return trip she was accompanied by Darnley and the couple stopped overnight in Callendar House on the 27 th .

Shortly thereafter, on 10 February 1567, Darnley was murdered by Bothwell.  Incredibly Bothwell then took Queen Mary as a captive on 24 April and married her according to Protestant rites at Holyrood at 4 o’clock in the morning of the 15 May.  Among the few nobles present was Lord Livingston.  It was not a good omen and before long Mary surrendered to the Confederate Lords.  As she was led on foot through the streets of Edinburgh she was supported by Mary Sempill and Mary Seton.  She was taken to imprisonment at Loch Leven.  The Queen’s loyal supporters, including Lord Livingston, were surprised by the speed of events and convened at Dumbarton on 29 June 1567 to condemn the action as an act of treason.  Meanwhile the Queen had been forced to abdicate and her son was crowned as James VI with the Earl of Moray as regent.  Regent Moray met a delegation consisting of the Earl of Argyll, Lord Boyd, Lord Livingston and the Commendator of Kilwinning on 10 September but refused to release Mary.  Somehow Mary managed to escape on 2 May 1568 and made her way to Hamilton where her supporters rallied.  Lord Livingston and his Falkirk men rushed to the scene.  However, they were no match for the Earl of Moray’s experienced forces and were routed at the Battle of Langside on 13 May.  Mary was hurried from the field by Lords Herries, Fleming and Livingston and made their way into exile in England.  Amongst the few who arrived in Carlisle with her on 18 May were Lord Livingston and his wife.  They were to spend much of the next few years in attendance on Queen Mary in various English castles.  In their absence the “ castell, tour, and fortalice of the Callendar ” was seized by Regent Moray.  It was often called “The Callendar.”

Lord Livingston was actively attempting to obtain Queen Mary’s release.  In September 1568 he attended a conference at York as one of her commissioners and met the English commissioners and her enemies from Scotland.  From York the meeting was moved to Westminster and then to Hampton Court before being summarily dismissed by Queen Elizabeth.  He rejoined Queen Mary and his wife at Tutbury Castle where, on 26 February 1569, Nicholas White wrote to William Cecil that “ the greatest personadge in house abowte hir if the lord of Levenston [the English pronunciation of Livingston] and the lady his wife, which is a fayre gentilwoman; and it was told me both Protestants .”  Over the next few months Lady Livingston and Lady Seton often did needlework with the Queen.

The following year Lord Livingston was sent to Scotland by Queen Mary to speak to her adherents there.  A passport was obtained from Queen Elizabeth and he duly set out on 12 June, only to be delayed at Berwick on Tweed where its verity was checked.  In Scotland he rallied support and spoke to a great many supporters with the result that he was delegated to be one of three commissioners to treat with Queen Elizabeth for Mary’s release.  It was 3 January by the time that he reached Sheffield where Mary was then being held to report to her.  Meanwhile, despite the season, his wife had recently left to carry private letters from Mary to Scotland.  She was back by 4 May 1571 when a roll of Queen Mary’s household was taken.  There were 39 in total and the first name on the list was “ My Lady Levinston, dame of honour to the Queen’s Majesty .”  Shortly afterwards Lord Livingston returned only to find that Queen Elizabeth had decided to reduce the number of attendants to sixteen.  Elizabeth may have been aware of their use as messengers.  Lord and Lady Livingston were not on the list of those who were allowed to remain.  Lady Livingston was too ill to travel.

As soon as Lady Livingston was well enough she returned to Scotland and was allowed to live at Callendar House which was restored to her for her own use as long as she and her household pursued “ their lawful business ,” according to the terms of the ‘Declaration of Allegiance.’  The new regent, the Earl of Mar, was a close friend of the Livingstons and this helps to explain the privileged treatment they received.  Even so, sureties for adherence to the condition had to be provided on 4 April 1572 by her two brothers-in-law, Thomas Livingston of Haining and Sir Alexander Bruce of Airth , under the penalty of £10,000 Scots that the castle would not be used as a place of refuge for any “ rebels or declared traitors .”  Furthermore, the two men were bound to hand the castle over to the Regent if Lord Livingston, on his return, did not also comply with these conditions.

Despite her bond, Lady Livingston continued to act on behalf of Queen Mary.  She and her son, Alexander, conducted secret correspondence with the Marian adherents in Scotland, including those at Edinburgh Castle which still held out for her.  Eventually this net of intrigue was discovered by Regent Morton, who had replaced Mar upon his death in October 1572.  In 1573 Lady Livingston was imprisoned in Dalkeith Castle but refused to provide any information.  She had been very careful in her dealings and when Callendar House was searched nothing incriminating was found.  On 6 April Regent Morton took the English ambassador with him when he went to question her in person.  The latter subsequently wrote to Lord Burghley “ although things were so evident that she could not deny them, she would confess nothing but by tears and silence .”  She was released.  Meanwhile, Lord Livingston was in France lobbying for support.  Here he had an audience with Catherine de Medicis, the queen-mother, and was able to hand over a letter to Charles IX.  Apart from a promise of 10,000 livres and permission to raise 300 men in France, he was unable to secure any further support.  Then he witnessed the Massacre of St Bartholomew and realised the futility of his mission.  He was back in London in March 1573 where he was detained at Regent Morton’s request.  It was only after the surrender of Edinburgh Castle that Morton felt confident enough to allow Lord Livingston back into Scotland and on 3 July 1573 he returned and submitted to the government of James VI.  Consequently on 23 March 1574 the Privy Council relieved his family of all bonds made on behalf of him, his wife and their eldest son.  Lord Livingston slowly re-entered Scottish life and in 1575 was even allowed to become a member of the Privy Council. 

Master Alexander Livingston became good friends with Esme Stewart the Earl of Lennox who was governing Scotland with the Earl of Arran.  Lennox had Alexander appointed as one of the gentlemen of the King’s chamber in 1580. The following year Lennox was also responsible for the prosecution of the Earl of Morton for the murder of Darnley.  Master Alexander Livingston was on the assize at the trial and Morton was duly executed.  Then, unexpectedly, the Earl of Gowrie and a number of other nobles kidnapped the King on 22 August 1582 in an event known as the “Ruthven Raid”.  The Earl of Gowrie was now in control of the King and state.

1549    William Livingston (son)

Earl of Linlithgow

In 1582 the Earl of Gowrie had the Duke of Lennox banished from Scotland.  So the Duke spent the night of 3 December at Callendar House and was then accompanied to his exile by Master Alexander Livingston.  Alexander stayed with him until the following May when he returned home to inform James VI of the Duke’s ill health and to make a request to allow him to return to die.  He was well received, but the Duke had died before Alexander reached his native shores.  The English ambassador wrote “ The home-coming of the master of Livingstone at this time and upon the King’s remove to Faulkland, doth greatly increase the fear and suspicion generally conceived here of some sudden alteration to be wrought in this court and real m.”  He seems to have had good reason as inevitably Arran assembled a force of 12,000 men and regained power in July 1583 and the Ruthven Raiders and their followers were banished to England.  Shortly afterwards, the King sent Master Alexander Livingston back to France to bring back the Duke of Lennox’s widow and son and they landed at Leith on 14 November 1583.  For this service he was rewarded with a third share of the benefice of Cambuskenneth Abbey.  With Lennox’s family was Master Patrick Gray who quickly rose to a position of prominence at court. 

In amongst all this turmoil Master Alexander finally married his fiancé, Helenor Hay, in January 1584.  Lord William Livingston himself served on the assize at the trial of the Earl of Gowrie who was condemned to death for his share in the Raid of Ruthven.  Lennox had been avenged.  Lord Livingston then went down to London to demand the return of Gowrie’s co-conspirators, the disaffected lords.  Elizabeth refused to hand them over. 

Before long Master Patrick Gray and Master Alexander Livingstone were growing concerned about the growing power of Arran and the manner in which he was using it.  They invited the disaffected lords back from England and in October 1585 the disaffected lords moved towards Scotland and the king decided to send an army to intercept them.  The lords moved faster than anyone had anticipated; concentrating their whole troops at Falkirk on 31 October, they marched on Stirling with 8,000 men.  Arran fled and was declared a traitor in the king’s name at the market place.  The exiles were pardoned and had their lands restored.

Lord William Livingston died in 1592 and Alexander took his place in the parliament and as a Privy Councillor.  He was now the 7 th Lord Livingston and on very good terms with James VI.  He had the honour of carrying the towel at the baptism of the King’s eldest son in 1594.  His wife, Helonor Livingston, was a firm friend of the King’s wife, Anne of Denmark.  Helonor was a Catholic and as a consequence we know odd details of her time at Callendar House.  She accommodated a Jesuit named Robert Dickson “ in ye plaice of Callendar besyd Falkirk quhair he remainit ane lang spaice expres contrar ye act of parliament .”  She also held a bonfire “ besyd ye plaice of Callendar on midsomer evin ” which was considered to be “ to ye dishoner of god and eveil exampill to all the cuntrie .”  She was accused of having dealings with midsummer fairies!  Finally, Lord Livingston was asked to “ remove that monument of idolatrie To wit, the piktar of ye crucifix at ye ruif of his ladis bed .”

Despite her papacy the Livingstons continued to enjoy the society of other members of the aristocracy.  In August 1596 the King was at Callendar House to attend a banquet at the marriage of the Earl of Orkney.  Whilst there he heard word that his wife had given birth to a daughter at Dunfermline.  It was an auspicious circumstance and in November the King decided to entrust his daughter’s upbringing to Lord Alexander Livingston.  On 28 November Princes Elizabeth was christened and on 3 December

“ in presence of his Majestie and Lordis of Secreit Counsaill, the Lord Levingstoun oblist himselff to find sic cautioun for doing of his dewitie in keiping of the Princesse as my Lord of Mar hes found for keiping of the Prince, and that sa sone as he salbe requirit be his Majestie and Lordis of Co unsaill.  The quhilk day, his Majestie, with avise foirsaid, hes gevin full pouer to the said Lord Levingstoun to putt oute and ressave in all servandis necessair to the said Princeis, and that nane salbe ressavit to hir service nor remane thairin by {aside from, or without} his lordshippis plane consent and advise, becaus his Majestie hes concredited the keiping of hir to the said Lord, to be brocht up be him in his house and company.”

The Livingstons were given the usage of Linlithgow Palace in order to bring the Princess Elizabeth up in the style to which she was entitled.  To help Lord Livingston to afford this new life, and because he was conveniently on the spot, he was appointed Baillie of all the king’s lands in the county of Linlithgow.  There was now a large retinue there – Lady Mary Ochiltree had been appointed as an assistant to Lady Livingston. There was also a wet nurse, Alison Hay; Lady Dunkerrant, became the mistress nurse; and Elizabeth Hay was ‘keeper of the coffers’ , looking after the princess’s wardrobe.  Treasury accounts for this period are full of references to items of clothing for Elizabeth, and on several occasions to “ Babies to play her with “, these being dolls.  Her doting parents wanted her to have a happy childhood.

1597 was an eventful year for the Livingstons.  In March Lady Heloner was excommunicated by the Presbytery of Glasgow and in October her mother in law, Lady Agnes Livingston who had spent so much time with Mary Queen of Scots, appears to have been murdered by Alexander the Master of Elphinstone.  These events passed most people unobserved.  That September a fresh outbreak of the plague in the east coast ports sent everyone scur­rying for refuge.  The Scottish court was scattered as the attendants tried to avoid the larger towns.  Robert Bowes considered returning to Berwick, to be safe on English soil.  For a while he had contemplated the haven of Linlithgow again but “ For the Lady Livingstone is so fearful for the Princess in Linlithgow as she mislikes my settling there as I had provided and as the King once well liked “. 

The King and Queen must have been quite happy with the manner in which Princess Elizabeth was being brought up by her Livingston guardians, for she was joined by her sister Margaret, born on 24 December 1598 and baptised on 15 April next.  In recognition of the extra burden placed upon him, Lord Livingston was made Keeper of Blackness Castle and of Linlithgow Palace that February. On the 28th May Livingston and his retainers were exempted from attending wars and gatherings on account of “ his magestie having pleased to burden Alexander, Lord Levingstoun, with the keiping, educatioun, and upbringing of the Princessis, his Heynes darrest dochters.”  He was also excused “ from all appearance at, or passing upon, assizes or inquests, during the time foresaid .”

Further rewards followed for the Livingstons. The most important for the people of Falkirk was the grant of a crown charter on 13 March 1600, given…

“in consideration of the great care, extreme diligence and solicitude of his trusty cousin and councillor, Alexander, Lord Livingston, and Lady Helenor Hay, his spouse, for several years bygone, in undertaking the education of the King’s two lawful daughters still in their society, and understanding that he (King James VI) was justly indebted to them for the support and education of his said daughters in the sum of £10,000 (Scots), and seeing no method of recompensing the same that would be of less prejudice to his patrimony, than by granting the present infeftment; therefore, infull satisfaction of the said debt, and for long and honourable service done to the King and his progenitors by Lord Livingston and his predecessors, against all enemies, foreign and domestic, the King erects all Lord Livingston’s lands and baronies into one whole and free barony, to be called the Barony of Callendar, and the town of Falkirk into a free burgh of barony, with all the rights thereof, in favour of the said lord; and also erects the whole foresaid lands and burgh into a free regality for ever, for one pair of gilt spurs to be rendered at the Castle of Callendar every year on Whitsunday in name of blench ferme.”

Then in December Lord Livingston was elevated to the Earldom of Linlithgow, and Helenor became a countess.  However, Princess Margaret died in 1601 and there were moves to remove Elizabeth but they came to nought.  Lord and Lady Livingston continued to inhabit Linlithgow Palace along with their five children and Princess Elizabeth.

On the accession of James VI to the English throne the Princess Elizabeth was removed from the charge of the Earl and Countess of Linlithgow.  By a warrant of the Privy Council, dated at Windsor 5th July 1603, these loyal guardians were discharged “ of the upbringing of the Princess and of thair dewtifull caire and service in that behalf ”’.  The couple escorted the little princess to Berwick, where there was a sad parting with the Countess of Linlithgow.  Elizabeth is said to have declared, between sobs to her mother, that “ nothing can ever make me forget one I so tenderly loved ” and “ in whose house she had her first breeding .”  The Earl of Linlithgow saw his consort to London where he placed her into the king’s own custody.  The link between the princess and the Livingston family was not to be broken so easily.  Anna Livingston, Alexander and Helenor’s eldest daughter, stayed with the royal court as a lady of the queen’s bedchamber.  In later years, as the Electress Palatine and Queen of Bohemia , Elizabeth always showed special favour to them; in particular to their third son, James, who entered her employ as a professional soldier and later became the first Earl of Callendar.

  • 1592    Alexander Livingston (son)
  • 1622    Alexander Livingston (son)

Earl of Callendar

Alexander Livingston, the 1 st Earl of Linlithgow, died at Callendar House on 24 December 1621 and was buried in the family vault at Falkirk Parish Church .  He was succeeded by his second son, Alexander, who became the 2 nd Earl of Linlithgow.  On 17 February 1624 he was sworn in as a member of the Scottish Privy Council and in January 1627 commissioned as Lord High Admiral of Scotland.  That year he was also appointed as Keeper of the royal palace at Linlithgow, which became a hereditary appointment.  Linlithgow and Midhope were now his principal residences.  His younger brother, James Livingston of Brighouse, had entered the military and served in Bohemia, Holland and Germany in both the armies of the English and the United Netherlands.  His childhood friend at Linlithgow Palace had been Princess Elizabeth who was now the Queen of Bohemia and she kept a careful eye on his career.  He gained a knighthood and rose to the rank of colonel with a reputation as a competent soldier.  He also accumulated land and titles at home.  On 17 March 1626 he received a charter of the barony of Livingstone, with the village and peel, which his brother had resigned in his favour, and he became known as Sir James Livingston of Livingstone.  Then, on 19 June 1633, he was created a peer and took the title of Lord Livingston of Almond .  By then his brother was in financial trouble and so the following month James gave up the barony of Livingstone in order to fund the acquisition of the barony of Callendar in which he was confirmed on 12 July 1634.  In November 1637 he also became the proprietor of the barony of Falkirk which too was purchased from Alexander.  Some of the money for these purchases may have come from his wife, Margaret Hay, whom he had married in 1633.  She was the widow of the 1 st Earl of Dunfermline who had been High Chancellor of Scotland.  As Lady Almond she was allowed to retain her place at the royal court.

Before long, however, both brothers became embroiled in the disputes between Charles I and the Covenanters.  Although in religious leanings Alexander was inclined towards the cause of the latter and signed the first National Covenant, he took the side of the monarch and suffered as a result.  On the other hand, James was offered the position of second-in-command of the Scottish Army of the National Covenant under General Leslie in 1639.  He had to decline due to ill-health, but when the offer was repeated the following year he accepted it.  He led the vanguard of the army which invaded England and marched on and captured Newcastle.  After this brief campaign James Livingston was able to return home where the political manoeuvering continued.  Prompted by Montrose he signed the Cumbernauld Bond, named after the house of his relative the Earl of Wigtoun.  It was not long before he divulged the existence of the bond to the Earl of Argyll when he visited Callendar House and Montrose was imprisoned.  James Livingston continued to prosper, playing an increasingly active role in the Scottish parliament.  A hospital for the support of four aged and infirm persons was founded in the High Street at Falkirk and endowed in 1640 by Lord Livingston of Almond and Callendar; this deed confirmed in 1668 after he had been created Earl of Callendar.  He was one of the reception committee when Charles I visited Edinburgh in 1641 and during the visit was created the Earl of Callendar.

1643 saw the start of the English Civil War (Wars of the Three Kingdoms) in which both the Parliamentarians and Charles I sought the support of the Scots.  James Livingston was again offered his former post of Lieutenant-General of the Scottish army that marched into England and again refused, though he did take command of the new levies being raised to defend Scotland.  This force had to act to block a potential invasion by an English force under Montrose.  Livingston was then empowered to enter England with his 5,000 strong army and preceded to Carlisle and then Newcastle which he besieged.  Here he was joined by the main Scottish force and eventually the city fell to them.  According to a contemporary account Livingston entered at the Sandgate and marched along the Quay “ with flyeing colours and roaring Drummes .”  In June 1645 Carlisle capitulated.

After various actions and incidents Charles I surrendered to the Scottish army at Newark on 5 May 1646 and was taken by them to Newcastle.  This gave James Livingston plenty of opportunity to converse with the King and on 22 July he was granted a fresh charter erecting his whole estates, including the recently acquired baronies of Dunipace, Haining and Dalderse into “ one whole free regality ” to be called the Regality of Callendar with Falkirk as a free burgh of regality.  It was January 1647 before Charles I was finally handed over to the English Parliamentarians.  Perversely, after further negotiations the Duke of Hamilton raised yet another Scottish army to march to the King’s aid.  Callendar was appointed as the second in command when the ill-equipped and ill-trained force entered England and relieved Carlisle in July 1648 at the start of the so-called “Engagement.”  Callendar was appointed as the nominal role of governor of the city and Sir William Livingston of Westquarter as deputy-governor, the latter remaining at Carlisle when the army proceeded south.  The Scottish army was soundly defeated by Cromwell in Lancashire.  Facing disaster Callendar and his immediate retainers cut their way through the enemy lines and he was able to escape to Holland; Hamilton was captured and subsequently tried and executed.  For those Falkirk men who managed to return home there was the censure of the local church to face and its insistence upon public humiliation.  Likewise, Callendar was forbidden from ever holding any public office in Scotland.

The execution of Charles I led to yet another twist in the story.  The Scots now formed an agreement with his son that led to his returning to Scotland in June 1650.  The Earl of Callendar was, however, still excluded, and it was only after the Scottish army was defeated by Cromwell at Dunbar on 3 September that he was allowed to enter the country.  Cromwell quickly advanced on to Falkirk.  Callendar House was asked to surrender on 16 September but the garrison refused to do so unless Stirling was taken.  Cromwell then consolidated his hold on the area by taking the fortified houses at Kinneil and Haining (Almond) and leaving a garrison at Linlithgow before advancing on Glasgow.  Blackness Castle also remained in Scottish hands.  In the following January a Scottish counterattack on Linlithgow failed to dislodge the English garrison.  The Earl of Callendar decided to remove his valuables from Callendar House and they were taken north under escort. 

The Scots again withdrew to Stirling and in March Cromwell’s forces were able to enter Callendar House unopposed.  Then on 1 April 1651 Blackness Castle was overrun.  However, the balance of military power changed in May when the Scots received a large number of reinforcements from the north in preparation for the campaigning season.  The English abandoned Callendar House in order to brigade their troops together and at the end of June the Scottish army moved down to fortify the north bank of the River Carron.  Detachments entered Falkirk and reoccupied Callendar House.  On hearing this Cromwell quickly brought his army from Edinburgh in the hope of an open battle but the Scots withdrew from Falkirk leaving only the garrison at Callendar House.  His army probed the Scottish defences along the river frontage but to no advantage.  They therefore marched to Glasgow, returning on 14 July forcing a scouting party from the town of Falkirk and on their way to Linlithgow were shot at from Callendar House.  The small garrison of this castle had taken an aggressive stance sending out sorties to pick off small parties of the enemy.  One English soldier complained that the house “ hath devoured many of our men .”

when did the queen visit falkirk

Illus 3: The First Earl of Callendar

Cromwell decided to take action against the castle in the hope of drawing the Scottish army across the River Carron.  Twice the garrison refused to surrender and so just before sunset on 15 July 1651 a detachment of some 260 of the Coldstream Guard under General Monck stormed Callendar House, killing 62 of the garrison and injuring another 13.  Among the dead was Lieutenant Galbraith of the King’s army who had been acting as the governor of the castle in the absence of the Earl of Callendar (Bailey 1992).  They were buried in the remains of the demolished barbican gatehouse.  It is said that Cromwell stayed at the house the following day.

The war moved to the north and the Earl of Callendar, who had been side-lined throughout the period, decided that it was time to bring back his possessions that were being held in Inverness.  His illegitimate son, Sir Alexander Livingston of Dalderse, and a party of retainers went to escort them back.  As they were returning they got as far as the Braes of Mar when they encountered a detachment of Camerons and a fierce skirmish ensued in which Alexander Livingston was injured.  The baggage train was taken and is said to have included “ a vast dale of Silver plates, Gold Jewels and other Valuable things .”  .

Other accounts mention “ a good deale of plate, cloaths, papers and other moveables ” (Bailey 1994).  Added to his other woes this incident led to the Earl of Callendar surrendering himself to General Monck in November 1651 and he was allowed to return to Callendar House.  His activities were carefully monitored by the Cromwellians and in February 1653 he was taken in for questioning, but released due to lack of evidence of any involvement in plots.  He was arrested again in April 1654 upon information that he was about to join the rebels and imprisoned in Burntisland Castle before being transferred to Edinburgh Castle.  The Coldstream Guards reoccupied Callendar House.  Callendar was consequently excluded from the pardons granted that May and his property was placed in trust to be disposed of.  After six months’ confinement Callendar was liberated on parole and the following year Monck allowed him to travel to London to petition Cromwell for the restoration of his estates.  He had an audience with Cromwell and after a long and protracted bureaucratic process was told that his estates would be restored.  He finally left London in January 1656 after accruing huge debts.  It was April 1657 before his pardon came through and his estates were released.  They were in a poor condition – the house had been pilfered by the enemy troops and local population; the coal works were flooded; and the cost of the garrison at Callendar House had been taken from the remaining income of the estate.  Indeed, the troops were still there and remained until the Restoration of Charles II in 1660 and Callendar could begin the process of reconstruction.

  • 1634    James Livingston (1 st Earl of Callendar) (sold to his brother)
  • 1674    Alexander Livingston (2 nd Earl of Callendar) (nephew)
  • 1685    Alexander Livingston (3 rd Earl of Callendar) (nephew)
  • 1692    James Livingston (4 th Earl of Callendar) (son)
  • 1716    Callendar forfeited

In 1715 James Livingston, the 4 th Earl of Callendar, backed Lord Mar in his support of the Old Pretender and raised 300 retainers for the cause.  They were present at the Battle of Sheriffmuir on 13 November.  Brigadier-General James Livingston commanded a squadron of Stirlingshire horse at that indecisive battle.  By the end of March 1716 Livingston was on the run in Uist where he took ship to France.  The Callendar estates were sequestered in 1716 and in 1720 they were acquired by the Governor and Company of Undertakers for raising the Thames Water in York Buildings and were subsequently let for 29 years to Andrew Glen of Longcroft and Alexander Hamilton of Dechmont who were acting as Trustees for Lady Anne Livingston, the only daughter of the last Earl.  Anne married the Earl of Kilmarnock and the lease was subsequently extended for another 30 years, meaning that it was due to expire at the end of 1779.

The York Buildings Company fell into financial difficulties and so in 1735 some of its creditors raised an action of ranking and sale to recover the debts owed to them.  The action was defended by the Company and dragged on slowly through the procedures of the courts.  In 1763 it took an Act of Parliament to force the sale of four of the forfeited estates owned by the York Buildings Company.  These were the Marischal, Panmure, Southesk and Pitcairn estates and were repurchased by the families from whom they had been seized with no one bidding against them.

With the end of the lease of the Callendar estate in 1780 the time was ripe for the creditors to push for its sale.  Even so it was 8 August 1783 before the sale actually took place.  The Earl of Errol, the great-great grandson of the last Earl of Linlithgow and Callendar who had been attainted in 1716, was living at Callendar House as the tenant of the York Buildings Company at the time for an annual rent of £870.  He arranged for what he thought was a suitable sum of money to be available and sent his representatives to the sale in Parliament House in Edinburgh.  The sale was well attended.  The barony of Callendar and Falkirk was exposed in one lot at £30,708 5s 3d and was bought by an outsider for £66,500.  Then the barony of Almond and Haining was put up for £8,179 5s 3d and was sold to the same bidder for £16,600.  Even though the price offered was twice the upset price it was still considered to be well below the true value.  The spectators were astonished that anyone had usurped the Earl of Errol and looked to the unknown bidder.  The Articles of Roup, that is to say the conditions of sale, stipulated that the successful bidder was obliged to grant a bond for the price offered within a few days of the auction.  The purchaser, William Forbes of Aberdeen, was not known in Edinburgh and it was thought that he would have difficulty in fulfilling this condition.  He produced a promissory note from the Bank of England for £100,000 and asked for his change.  None of the banks in Edinburgh were willing to hold such a valuable note and he was allowed to pay the sum by instalments.

William Forbes had set up business in London as a coppersmith where his business thrived.  By cornering the acquisition of the raw materials he was able to dominate the market and won the Admiralty contracts to sheath its wooden warships in copper.  This not only prevented wood boring creatures from eating holes in the wood, but it also made the vessels faster which was a crucial factor in the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805.  As a result of these contracts William Forbes earned a fortune and the nickname of “Copperbottom.”

William Forbes (I)

William Forbes is reputed to have claimed that the growing timber alone was worth the asking price for the whole estate.  The local population in Falkirk was aghast at the presumption of Copperbottom and he generally received a cool reception in the town.  He renovated the entire house, adding a new wing and re-constructing the interior.  It was completely refurnished and the grounds improved.

After acquiring the estate William Forbes set about improving the properties.  He embarked upon a huge programme of enclosure and introduced liming to the fields.  Existing tenants were removed and the farms were laid out afresh with new steadings built before being let on long term leases at much higher prices than before.  He took the same approach with the coal works, closing them before leasing them separately to new tenants.

when did the queen visit falkirk

The investment in the land was huge and whilst the contractors profited the old social order was torn asunder.  As the largest landowner in Stirlingshire, William Forbes was appointed as a Deputy Lieutenant.  It was unfortunate timing for him and before long he was asked to implement the new Militia Acts (Bailey & Young 2013).  The enforcement of this Act led to “Militia Riots.” across Scotland.  In Falkirk these manifested as a demonstration by the colliers who marched around Callendar House beating a drum on 23 August 1797.  William Forbes and his brothers were so alarmed that they fled the house by the back door and glancing back from Callendar Wood observed flames coming from the direction of the house.  Reaching Linlithgow they sent for the military and a troop of Lancashire Dragoons was despatched to Falkirk where they remained for several months.  In fact the red flickering light that Forbes had seen from the wood was the top of the blast furnaces at Carron Works in the distance.

In 1787, William married Margaret McAdam, daughter of John McAdam of Craigengillan.  She died childless in 1801 and so in 1806 William re-married.  His second wife was Agnes Chalmers, daughter of John Chalmers of Westfield, Old Machar, Aberdeen.  A son and heir was born at Callendar House on 27 October 1806 and named William.

The 19 th Century

Rev McCall of Muiravonside was always punctual in his attendance at Callendar House to receive his stipend on the usual rent-day.  “Ah, Mr M’Call, M’Call,” cried the Laird on one occasion seeing him amongst the tenantry whilst drawing his rents.  “There are no stipends in Heaven.”  “Nor rents either, Mr Forbes; nor rents either, “ exclaimed the minister.

William Forbes (I) died at Edinburgh on the 21 June 1815 leaving two sons and three daughters (a sixth child died in infancy) by his second wife, Agnes Chalmers.  His eldest son, William, was only nine years old and so the estate was administered by a Trust, nominally headed by William (I)’s brother, David, but in fact his widow did most of the administration.  It was she who commissioned the construction of the mausoleum in Callendar Wood. 

In 1817 the Trustees paid the sum of £40 to the Stintmasters of Falkirk , who, with the approval of the inhabitants, had agreed to surrender the right which the burgh had until then enjoyed of obtaining water from Callendar Wood.  The supply procurable there was insufficient and the town resorted to using the underground reservoirs in the old coal workings under Prospect Hill.  As a result the Callendar grounds became more private.

In 1818 the backers of the Edinburgh and Glasgow Union Canal proposed a deviation from the approved line of the navigation.  Instead of passing over the east shoulder of Prospect Hill, requiring a number of locks, they sought for permission to take it on a lower contour which cut across the Glen Brae a little above the Shieldhill Lodge and passed through Callendar Wood about 400yds south of Callendar House before exiting the grounds near their south-east corner.  This deviation was vigorously contested by the Trustees who commissioned Alexander Nasmyth to produce two paintings, one showing the scene as it was and the other with the canal cutting across the strike of the hill.  They were successful and as a consequence a long tunnel was dug through Prospect Hill.

William Forbes (II) came of age in 1824 and succeeded to the entailed property.  Locals celebrated the event with bonfires and parties, especially in nearby villages such as Laurieston .  Unlike his father he was born into privilege and went to study at Oxford.  He was then able to spend time on the Continent doing the Grand Tour.  It was 1829 before he returned to Falkirk and the town bells were rung in his honour.  As the largest landowner in the area he was expected to play a significant role in the local community, particularly when it came to security, or the promotion of the economy, and contributing financially to good causes.  He soon became the commander of the Falkirk Troop of Yeomanry.  In 1830 he gave £100 towards the erection of a grain market in what consequently became Newmarket Street in Falkirk.  The following year he chaired meetings of the local committee established to prevent the spread of cholera, subscribing £20 to the fund.  As the population and prosperity of the area grew there was an increased demand for land and William Forbes II occasionally gifted small parcels to worthy projects, such as the new church building at Camelon to which he also donated £300.  Looking after the poor was still considered to be a joint effort between the church and the local laird and, like his parents, William annually gave coal to the poor in the winter months.  Money and clothing were distributed by the bailies on his behalf.  At the same time he resisted having to pay a large sum for the reconstruction of the parish church in Falkirk when he thought that it could be achieved at a lower cost.  Part of the problem was that he was an Episcopalian and his children were baptised in its church at Haddington.

William Forbes (II) married into the aristocracy – a sign that the family had achieved the great social standing that his father had hoped for.  On 14 August 1832 he married Lady Louisa Antionette Charteris, second daughter of Francis the 8 th Earl of Wemyss.  Their first child, William, was born 3 July 1833, Margaret in 1834 and Agnes in 1837.  Francis, Louisa and Charlotte followed.

In the mid-1830s Callendar House seemed to suffer from a spate of minor crimes common to many country houses.  Early in 1835 plate went missing.  Then in October that year an inside job was suspected when a 15yd long web of linen went missing after it had been left bleaching behind the laundry.  The thief climbed a wall behind the stables where he then found a ladder which he used to reach the green.  The pilfering of grapes in the greenhouse was also taken seriously and after a careful watch was kept by the gardeners it was discovered that the culprit in that case was a female fox which was soon despatched.  It is possible that the other crimes were committed by a someone then working on the new alignment of Callendar Road from the end of Falkirk High Street to the end of the avenue opposite the main entrance to Callendar House which cut off the dangerous hill at Claddens Brae (see Callendar Park ).

William Forbes (II) entered politics and first stood for parliament as a Conservative after the passing of the Reform Bill when he opposed Admiral Fleming and was defeated by a considerable majority.  The second time, in 1835, he beat Fleming and became the Member of Parliament for Stirlingshire.  Just two years later, at the next election, he was opposed by Colonel George Abercromby and carried the election by a single vote, but was unseated on petition in consequence of at least one vote having been wrongly ascribed.  At the following election of 1841 Abercromby stood down and Forbes was opposed by Sir Michael Bruce of Stenhouse, whom he defeated by a majority of 124.  He then sat in the House of Commons unopposed for 14 years until his death.  He is said to have been assiduous in his parliamentary duties, though seldom appeared as a speaker.

On 13 September 1842 Queen Victoria passed through the Falkirk district on her way south.  She was met at the Lecropt near the Bridge of Allan by William Forbes who accompanied her on horseback all the way to Linlithgow Bridge.  The royal carriage travelled by way of Torwood, Larbert Cross, Camelon and so up the High Street of Falkirk.  Entering the grounds of Callendar House at the wester lodge on Callendar Road the Queen halted for four minutes at the entrance to the house – just long enough to change the horses.  At the time the finishing touches were being put to the new grand entrance hall and port cochѐre and the Queen’s carriage was able to use the latter.  The smaller courts in front of the house were also being infilled with single storey extensions (see the Building ).  Unusually, the grounds had been thrown open to the public and a large and animated crowd cheered loudly.  They were supposed to be kept at a slight distance from the drives by 120 of the Callendar tenants on foot and 60 mounted, but these few were soon overwhelmed by the 15,000 or so people who flooded in.  The 66 th Foot Regiment were the guard of honour at the house.  Leaving by the east drive Albert remarked on the fine lime avenue beside the loch (Bailey 1993).  The journey continued via Laurieston and Polmont .

On 28 October 1843 Callendar House welcomed another royal visitor.  This time it was the Duke of Bordeaux who was entitled to the title of “Royal Highness.”  Much seems to have been made of his tour of Scotland and the Morning Post noted that he was

“ accompanied by a brilliant escort of nobles and gentry of ancient descent, all of who appeared anxious to testify their respect for the representative of the illustrious house of Bourbon.  On the 28th inst. his Royal Highness proceeded to Callendar House, the residence of the Hon. Mr Forbes, where were assembled the Duke and Duchess of Montrose, Lord William Graham, Lord and lady Belhaven, and several other persons of rank and distinction.  His Royal Highness passed the following day at Callendar House, and inspected the ruins of the fortifications which were thrown up in the neighbourhood by the Romans against the inroads of the Picts… ” (Morning Post 8 November 1843).

On 3 June 1845 Lady Louisa gave birth to her fourth daughter, but never seems to have fully recovered.  No expense was spared in trying to cure her and Professor Simpson of Edinburgh was paid £210, another £325 going to three other doctors who attended her.   However, she died at Callendar House on 2 July.  There were four mourning coaches at her funeral and William paid for 36 pairs of men’s black kid gloves and 48 yards of black crepe for the household.  She was laid to rest in the family mausoleum in “ A very strong Spanish Mahogany coffin covered with rich black velvet and best solid brass gilt mountings”.

William Forbes (II) was very interested in agriculture and introduced the latest innovations to his farms.  In 1846 the first signs of potato blight appeared in Stirlingshire and in April it was noted that the shaws at Callendar only reached about a foot high and then began to wither and die.  The result for poorer farms was devastating but at Callendar a diverse range of crops was grown and resistant strains eventually became available.  The country was rapidly changing and in the early 1840s the railways came to Falkirk.  A branch to Stirling from Polmont cut through the north-east corner of the policies and a new drive had to be constructed, during which human skeletons were discovered.

As an Oxford man it is not surprising that William Forbes (II) was a keen cricketer and the lawn in front of Callendar House was used for the occasional match.  Cricket was passed down the family and several subsequent generations played and the lawn was used intermittently over many decades.  In January 1854 local curlers were given permission to use Callendar Loch for their winter sport.

William Forbes (III) attained his majority (21 years old) in August 1854 and in celebration his father entertained the tenantry on the Callendar estates and a few guests to dinner, which was served in a large hall in Callendar House, in which 200 sat down to table.  Before long the young man inherited the estate; William Forbes (II) died at midnight on 10 February 1855 aged 48.  Lady Louisa had predeceased him and he left a family of two sons and four daughters.

William Forbes (III) spent much of the year on his other estates and only came to Callendar in the summer months.  This allowed him to become the playing President of the Stirling County Cricket Club.  Despite his long absences he was a Justice of the Peace for Stirlingshire as well as a member of the Police Committee and the Stirling District Lunacy Board, and a Commissioner under the Property and Income Tax.  The intermittent occupation of Callendar House by the Forbes family meant that they permitted the grounds to be visited by organisations which they supported.  It provided a fit destination for the annual outings of many local clubs at a time when travel was still rather restricted.  In August 1859, for example, hundreds of members of the Carronshore, Carron, Bainsford and Grahamston Total Abstinence Societies processed through the west gate and rested on the esplanade in front of Callendar House where they were served with bread, tarts, ginger beer, &c.  Speeches were made and then the party formed into marching line and proceeded along the walks of the walled garden.  Upon returning to the front lawn they played games.

The Falkirk Volunteers were also permitted the use of the Park for parades and the occasional exercise.  In September 1860 troops from outside of Falkirk concealed themselves in Callendar Wood in order to launch a pretend attack upon the House and town.  The Falkirk Volunteers were called upon to dislodge them.  These Volunteers numbered a little over seventy and that December had a parade and inspection in front of Callendar House.

Over the winter months only a skeleton staff remained at Callendar House and each May it would be prepared for the arrival of the family.  At the end of May 1865 all was bustle at the house when it was reported that there was a possible gas leak in one of the rooms of Mrs Forbes’ apartments.  The butler, Mr Sergeant, and under butler, Alexander Wight, went to investigate.  It was 11am on a gloomy day and not being able to see the source of the leakage Wight naturally struck a match!  The accumulated gas in the room immediately ignited and his clothes were burned from his body, his skin was fearfully scorched and in many places the raw flesh made visible.  Mr Sergeant endeavoured to save his assistant and was much burned about the hands and arms.  The curtains and furniture of the room took fire, but as there was a great number of servants in the house at the time parties were formed to carry buckets of water to the scene and it was extinguished before it had chance to spread.  Dr Hamilton was called and attended Wight, a native of Huntly, who was 24 years old.  He died the following day.  Sergeant survived but was evidently badly injured and he was replaced as the butler by Stewart Lindsay of Kirriemuir.  Lindsay had entered service at Cortachy at an early age as a hall-boy.  From Callendar House he moved with the family to Herbertshire Castle before retiring in 1879 and returning to his native town.

William Forbes (III) married Rose O’Hara from the County of Galway on 23 June 1859 and they had two sons.  However, she died in Dublin in January 1866.  The body was brought back to Callendar House by train in three nested coffins and accompanied by the family from the station to the mausoleum in Callendar Park whilst the town bell tolled.  The service at the family vault was Episcopalian.

William remarried two years later and this union produced another three sons and two daughters.  In this latter year, 1868, a major programme of remodelling of Callendar House took place (see The Building ) which led to the French Chateau style house we know today.

East Stirlingshire Cricket Club secured the tenancy of the field adjoining Callendar Road nearly opposite Callendar House in 1870 and levelled and preparing it for playing.  William Forbes (III) often joined the team there.  Special matches were permitted on the lawn in front of the house.   He also continued to allow the Falkirk Volunteers to use the Callendar Policies and became a Lieutenant in the corps.  His other major hobby was breeding horses and he travelled to many events to show them.

In September 1897 William (III)’s eldest son, Charles William Forbes, married Jean Hotham, only daughter of Vice-Admiral Sir Charles and Lady Hotham, at the parish church of Norham.  Their son and heir, William Dudley Henry Charles Forbes, was born at Callendar House on 12 July 1902 and christened there the following month.

To a large extent the operation of the feudal system had ended with the major disruptions at Falkirk in the 18 th century.  However, even as late as 1907 an action was raised in the Court of Session by Mr A. Ainslie Brown of Manuel House against William Forbes (III) to have it declared that the old Barony of Almond was still thirled to the Mill of Manuel, and that all farmers in the barony were bound to take the grain they required to be ground to that mill.  The action failed.

William Forbes (III) died at Buxton on 21 July 1914, aged 81 years, and was interred in the family mausoleum.  He left, in addition to real estate comprising some 60,000 acres, a personal estate in the United Kingdom valued for probate at £704,603.  Individual bequests included £2,000 to the endowment of Christ Church Episcopal Chapel in Falkirk; an annuity of £50 to his faithful servant Mary Ann O’Keefe; one year’s wages or six months’ wages to servants of three years’ service; £500 each to his butler David Patterson and his valet Edwin Smith.  Charles William Forbes, the fourth of Callendar, became the head of the family.

when did the queen visit falkirk

First World War

Illus 5: Roll of Honour.

Life at Falkirk carried on as close to normal as was possible during the First World War.  In June 1916 a joint parade of the Falkirk and Polmont Volunteer Training Corps took place at Callendar House on a Sunday afternoon. The weather was fine, and there was a good muster from each corps.   A number of estate workers were away fighting on the Western Front

Callendar House played its small part.  The west wing was used as the administrative headquarters of the district battalion and the clatter of typewriters became familiar.  The grounds were used as a venue for various activities such as the Falkirk Red Cross Campaign and after the war a huge drumhead service was held there reminding people of the earlier military glories connected with the house.

The Inter-War Years

Charles Forbes’ eldest daughter, Marion Edith Georgina Forbes, took a very active role in the Falkirk community.  She had been the youngest Red Cross nurse in the town and was appointed as the district commissioner for Girl Guide companies at Grangemouth, Polmont and Laurieston Girl Guides.  In this role she was able to give them permission to host hockey games on the beautiful lawn in front of Callendar House – with tea to follow.  In March 1923 she married Captain Alistair Richardson of the King’s Dragoon Guards and had the distinction of being the first bride to go forth from Callendar House in wedding raiment since the Callendar policies and mansion-house came into the possession of the Forbes family.  The following year, in January 1924, the coming of age of her brother, William Forbes, was celebrated at Callendar House.  He had followed the family tradition of being educated at Eton and Sandhurst, before entering the Coldstream Guards in 1922.

The involvement in youth movements was shared by most members of the family and the Girl Guides kept an association with the ladies of Callendar House for another three decades.  A feature of Stirlingshire’s share in the activities of Scottish Boy Scout Week in June 1924 was a monster rally in Callendar Park when the boys were inspected by Lord Glentanar, Assistant Commissioner for Scotland.  Between 700 and 800 Boy Scouts from all parts of Stirlingshire were on parade and the county flag and badges were presented to the 1 st Stirlingshire Troop as being the best in the county.  The 2 nd Torwood Scouts were runners up.

The 1920s also saw a revival in public interest in heritage and a number of groups sought and obtained permission to visit Callendar House, including the Falkirk Archaeological & Natural History Society and the Sons of the Rock.  The public at large got what was considered a unique opportunity to see the inside of the house in June 1926 when it was opened as part of the amazing drive to raise funds for Falkirk Infirmary .  What made the visit more unusual was that at the time the house was fully furnished and contained a large number of decorations and valuable antiques.  Mrs Forbes personally conducted parties round the house and she and her staff and volunteers served teas.  There was, however, a charge of 5s each for the full tour and tea.  A booklet was prepared for the occasion.  Then on 20 June the grounds were thrown open for a grand fete.  Promoted by the Falkirk Herald and blessed with glorious weather it attracted 10,000 people and was the biggest event in the area for many a year.  Mrs Forbes conducted a “dames’ finishing school” in the dining room of Callendar House, whilst character reading and crystal gazing took place in the drawing room and morning room.  Tours through the walled garden led by Mr Bingham, the head gardener, were popular.  On the lawn in front of the house a putting green had been set up along with a miniature golf course with obstacles and clock golf.  Skirting the semi-circle were the stalls – a hoopla stall, one entitled “The House that Jack Built”, a shooting gallery, a china breaking stall, the balloon buster, penny in the plate booths, a fancy goods area, a cake and candy stall, and penalty football.    Off to one side was an enclosure for athletics, including five a side football and motor bicycle football match promoted by the Falkirk and District Motor Club.  Tug of war contests between navy teams and all comers, flat races, tossing the caber, throwing the hammer, wrestling, were also held.  For the children there was a roundabout and six donkeys worked hard giving rides.  On the other side of the lawn was a dancing enclosure where exhibitions of dancing by pupils of Johnny Doak occurred in the afternoon with music provided by E Smith’s “Elite” orchestra.  The Military Band of the British Legion and the Wallacestone Pipe Band were also present.  In the evening there was dancing on the green.  A novel feature was “surf-riding” on the lawn.  Entrants sat on a surf board which was trailed over the grass at the rear of a motor car.  The idea was to remain seated as long as possible.  It was remarked that even the girls were keen to have a go!  A large and high class café as well as ices and iced drinks stall were very busy.  Not surprisingly the event raised a record amount in excess of £700.

Mrs Forbes continued to work on raising money for the hospital, selling produce from the walled garden, including sweet peas which had been planted for that purpose.  She was also on many other committees in the town, such as the Women Citizens.  This often brought with it the privilege of using the Callendar grounds as a venue for events.  Like his predecessors, Charles W Forbes was a very keen huntsman and the Linlithgowshire and Stirlingshire Hunt often met at Callendar House.  The Callendar estates were extensive and provided good riding.  As the name suggests, the Fox Covert at Kilbean was a favourite location.  Like all of the Forbes of Callendar he was made a Deputy Lieutenant of Stirlingshire.

Charles W Forbes and his wife also played an active part in the Unionist Association and for a decade starting in 1927 held the Stirlingshire Unionist Fete in the grounds of Callendar House.  Again there were stalls and games and the entrance fee of 6d helped to support the local party.

when did the queen visit falkirk

Illus 7: Sir John Gilmour, Minister of Agriculture, purchasing a buttonhole at the Unionist Garden Fete in the Callendar House grounds (Scotsman 13 June 1932, 12).

The meetings also had a serious side and a number of key speeches were made at the foot of the stairs to the rear of the house.  Speakers included Colonel AD McInnes Shaw MP in 1927; Ernest Brown, the Minister of Mines, and JSC Reid MP in 1934; J Scrymgeour Wedderburn MP in 1936; and Walter E Elliot, Secretary of State for Scotland, in 1937.  Walter Elliot stayed overnight in the room which, according to custom, was occupied by Maitland of Lethington in 1565 – he had been the last Secretary of State to stay at Callendar House.  Mrs Elliot had the use of the room where Mary Queen of Scots slept on her last visit.  Lady Stirling of Glorat occupied the Cromwell Room.

Captain William Forbes of the Coldstream Guards married Elizabeth Vesey, elder daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel Osbert Vesey, in March 1931 at the Guards Chapel near St James Park in London.  Later that year the same venue was used by his younger brother, David, when he was wed to Diana Henderson.

Support continued for the Episcopal Church in Falkirk and in June 1933 another successful garden fete was held at Callendar Park under its auspices.

when did the queen visit falkirk

Illus 8: The platform party at the Episcopal Church Garden Fete with Anna Buchan making the address.  The Bishop of Edinburgh is seen at the table (Falkirk Herald 21 June 1933).

By the mid 1930s Charles and Mrs Forbes were spending more and more time at their other properties. The big event of 1937 was the coronation and it seemed apt that Callendar Park should host a Coronation Thanksgiving Service on Sunday 30th May to which all of the youth organisations and clubs of East Stirlingshire were invited.  This was a large affair, but it was eclipsed in June the following year by another fundraiser for the local hospital.  The main hospital had been successfully opened but its exponential growth meant that living accommodation was required for the nurses.  It was with great difficulty that Mrs Forbes and a team of volunteers put together a committee to organise the event but by dint of careful planning they pulled off an amazing achievement.  Learning from previous experience, a large marquee was erected in case the weather proved inclement and this held seven stalls, each run by one of the district committees into which East Stirlingshire had been divided.  Farm produce was on sale at a stall run by the good folk of Slamannan and Avonbridge district; china and pottery on a stall by Falkirk district; flowers and fruit by Polmont and Laurieston; cake, candy and baskets –by Larbert and Airth ; toys, dolls, fancy goods and baby garments by Denny, Bonnybridge and Dennyloanhead; a pound stall by Grangemouth; a white elephant stall also by Polmont and Laurieston.  Competition between the districts was keen and added to a vibrant atmosphere.  Refreshments were available from a café run by the Falkirk district; the Milk Bar had equipment provided by the Scottish Milk Marketing Board.  A platform on the lawn in front of Callendar House was used for dancing displays by pupils of St Margaret’s School and John Doak; as well as performances by the Falkirk and District Co-operative Minstrel Troupe and the Romanians Concert Party.  The afternoon and evening saw sessions for public dancing with music provided by the “Elite” and “Orphean” Dance bands.  East of the main lawn was an amusement park which included booths for hoopla, tumbling tanks, touch ‘em skittles, a dart board, wheel-in penny boat game, coconut shies, aunt sally deck quoits, a wheel of fortune, a shooting range, cup reading, crystal gazing, fortune telling by cards, and palmistry – all superintended by Toc H members.

when did the queen visit falkirk

Second World War

The Second World War temporarily put an end to all such activities.  The Forbes family had not lived in Callendar House for some years and a large part of the house was not in use when the war began.  Dust sheets were spread over the furniture and these rooms were not cleaned.  At first there had been a cook, kitchen maid, housemaid and a house keeper, but these slowly left to take up work elsewhere.  The housemaid found work in another large house in Penicuik.  On 24 July 1943 the following advertisement appeared in the Falkirk Herald:

“ COUPLE Wanted to act as caretakers in Callendar House, Falkirk, for the duration of the war.  Husband with knowledge of general estate work, preferred, and wife with experience in domestic service.  Grown up family not objected to.  Apply by letter only, with references to Callendar estate office, Falkirk .”

Callendar Wood was still private, though many of the local boys enjoyed making incursions.  In the summer of 1939 a couple of them supposedly entered in order to retrieve their football, only to find a suitcase full of jewellery and a case of watches, as well as an automatic pistol.  Clearly the robbers had not expected anyone to be passing that way.  Its seclusion made it useful for military exercises and the Home Guard was given full liberty to use it for training purposes.  The Laurieston Home Guard platoon set up a .22 rifle range against a hill in the Howlet Haugh at the east end of the policy.  To get there the men marched the short distance from their headquarters at Laurieston School along the old Redding Road and under a railway bridge.  Residents at the west end of the village reported the odd projectile landing in their back gardens!  Towards the end of the war the town of Falkirk was designated a nodal point to be defended to the last bullet and the last man.  Part of the ring of defences manned by the Home Guard included a machine gun post on the heights above Callendar Wood at Woodend Farm.

when did the queen visit falkirk

From 1940 the Coleraine anti-aircraft battery from Northern Ireland was stationed in Grangemouth under Lieutenant Brian Clark who was a shooting man.  He was invited to take part in a pheasant shoot on the Callendar estate with his batman who loaded his guns.  At the end of the cold day the gamekeepers, Smith and Bennet, invited them back to the Saddle Room for a drop of Scotch and the housekeeper, Miss Haddow, then took them on a tour of Callendar House.

Towards the end of 1940 the 52 nd Divisional Petrol Company of the Royal Army Service Corps moved into Callendar House, taking over the petrol station on the opposite side of Callendar Road.  Petrol cans were stored at the Stables and Nissen huts were erected nearby under the trees bordering the lawn so that they would not be picked up by enemy reconnaissance aircraft.  The RASC moved out in April 1942 and within a month were replaced by a Polish Engineering train of 40 or so men who were billeted in Callendar House.  The Stables were now used for storing ammunition.  Bullets were still relatively scarce and two members of the Grangemouth Home Guard stole 308 rounds in order to get some practice in.  In 1944 the 11 th Polish Signal Corps also occupied the house under Sergeant-Major Albin Kedgeierski.  This was a specialised team whose task was to communicate with the resistance in Poland and in 1945 they were joined by the 12 th Signal Corps.

The Callendar Estate also helped the war effort in other ways.  In 1940 various plots of land were leased to the Town Council for the duration of the war for use as allotments, including the area to west of the old cricket ground at Callendar Road at £2 per acre.  During the war John M Millar, who had the Ford dealership in Callendar Road, developed a small agricultural contracting business.  One of his team was Jimmy Quinn from Airth who had a wooden leg.  He got the job of ploughing the policy grassland adjacent to Callendar Road in order to increase the home-grown production of food.  Having cut one furrow he turned the tractor round to make the next furrow only to see a large hole in the stretch that he had just done – an old mine working had collapsed.    Over at the Callendar House dairy Miss Jane Scott had been employed as a dairymaid since around 1905 and should have retired.  She continued on until almost the end of the war, retiring at Whitsunday 1945 with the intention of returning to live in her native Ayrshire.  Unfortunately she died within months.

Labour was hard to obtain and the gardeners were called away for other duties.  Inevitably the large walled garden declined and in 1944 it was decided to let it out as a market garden.  The vineries were to be sacrificed for growing tomatoes.

“TO LET as a MARKET GARDEN, with entry at Martinmas 1944, or as may be arranged, CALLENDAR HOUSE GARDENS, FALKIRK, situated near the public road about 1 mile to the east of Falkirk and about the same distance from Falkirk Grahamston Station.  The gardens, which extend to approximately 10 acres, are at present in the hands of the proprietor.  There is a large range of glass, consisting of 4 vineries, 2 peach houses, and 11 other greenhouses, suitable for tomato growing, and a number of frames. There is a good DWELLING-HOUSE, consisting of 4 rooms, scullery, and bathroom. Further particulars may be obtained on application to T. DOUGLAS WALLACE, Callendar Estate Office, Falkirk, with whom written offers should be lodged.”  (The Scotsman 19 October 1944).

The labour situation did not improve for some time and in June 1945 the following advertisement appeared in the Falkirk Herald

“ ODD Man for  Callendar House , Falkirk, to keep lawns and footpath in order.  Must have experience of scythe work and cutting short grass.  Ex-Serviceman or elderly man might suit.  No house available.  Apply to T Douglas Wallace, Callendar Estate Office .” 

Wallace died a month later and after lying in Callendar House was carried the short distance to the private burial ground in the walled garden.

During the war Janet Finlay drove a post office van and while delivering letters to the Polish Camp at Callendar Estate she met her future husband Mr Loska.  They married in 1945 and in December they left for Poland with their three-month old son Robert.  At Katowice the food was very expensive and unsuitable for their baby and he died.  The couple wanted to return to Britain, but her husband could not get a visa from the Polish government.

The war was also catastrophic for the Forbes family.  Captain St John Forbes of the Coldstream Guards was killed at Dunkirk and his twin brother, Lieutenant-Colonel Dudley WAW Forbes MC, also of the Coldstream Guards, died of wounds in Italy.  The surviving son, William, served continuously with the same regiment until the fall of Torbruk in 1942 when he was taken prisoner.  He was liberated in 1945.

  • 1783    William Forbes I (purchase)    
  • 1815    Trustees
  • 1823    William Forbes II MP (son)
  • 1855    William Forbes III (son)
  • 1914    Charles William Forbes IV (son)
  • 1948    Lt-Col William Dudley Henry Charles Forbes (son)
  • 1963    Falkirk Town Council -Callendar House & policies
  • 1977    Captain William Frederick Eustace Forbes – estate (son)

Falkirk Council

In 1963 Falkirk Town Council used a Compulsory Purchase order to acquire Callendar House and the northern part of its policy with the intention of building council housing in the grounds.  Surveys showed that much of the area was undermined by a network of underground coal workings and as a consequence high density buildings in the form of high rise flats were built on one of the few stable areas.  The landscaped grounds were turned into a pleasure park with the introduction of benches, a miniature golf course, a kiosk serving snacks and toilets.  Meanwhile insufficient funds were available to do anything with the house and it was mothballed.  Many in the Labour-controlled Council thought that as a symbol of the aristocracy it ought to be demolished.  The leisure services department used it to store, and indeed to paint, its equipment.  The only resident was an unauthorised one – a tramp who discovered that he could gain entry by the shaft used to deliver coal.  In the early 1980s the roof was repaired and made watertight and a large amount of infected wood was removed leaving gaping holes in the floors.  Later that decade growing public pressure and a political will to show off the heritage of the area led to a scheme of renovation.  The economic climate was right and of the £3.7 million that the work cost, some £2.4 million came from external grants.  It started in 1990 when the Architects Department did a structural survey and then worked on the project throughout.  It took eight years and five phases of work to complete the conversion of the decaying abandoned building into a museum and visitor attraction and it opened fully in May 1998.  It incorporated the headquarters of the museum, the archives, and exhibition rooms with interpretive areas for “living history.”  The latter included a watchmaker’s shop, a printing shop, a grocer’s shop and a working kitchen.  The latter was the large kitchen from the late 18 th century.  The drawing room was converted into a conference room, retaining the period appearance.

In 2011 the Falkirk Community Trust was established to take over the running of the heritage assets of Falkirk Council at a time when budgets were beginning to be squeezed.  The museum teashop, which until then had been located in the old dairy, was moved into the morning room of the house providing a warmer atmosphere.

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When Did The Queen Visit Falkirk?

Her first visit was back in 1955, and her most recent was in 2017 when she, and the late Prince Philip, officially opened the Queen Elizabeth II Canal and visited the Kelpies.

When was the Queen in Falkirk?

Most Popular. Her last visit to Falkirk was in July 2017 when she opened the Queen Elizabeth II Canal – the missing part of the Millennium Link, the reopened waterway which runs across Central Scotland.

Where did the Queen visit in Scotland?

At the Palace of Holyroodhouse , Their Majesties were welcomed by a Guard of Honour, formed by the Royal Regiment of Scotland.

When did the Queen open the Falkirk Wheel?

May 2002 Both the Queen and Prince Philip were back in May 2002 , for the opening of the Falkirk Wheel. Crowds gathered under dark, looming clouds for the occasion, which saw the special visitors embark in MV The Caledonian and travel around the Basin before opening the Falkirk Wheel and viewing the attraction’s visitor centre.

When did the Queen visit Higham Ferrers?

9 July 1965 On 9 July 1965 , the day of their trip to Higham Ferrers, Queen and Duke also managed to fit in visits to Kettering, Wellingborough, Northampton and a reception at Althorp House, the home of the Spencer family, before flying back to London Airport.

Did the Queen visit Falkirk?

Following the death of Her Majesty the Queen, we take a look back through our archives at her visits to the Falkirk district. In the last seven decades The Queen came to the region on no fewer than six occasions . Each time she was met by crowds of locals, keen to catch a glimpse of the royal.

When was the last Big in Falkirk?

Big in Falkirk was canceled in 2010 .

When did Queen Elizabeth visit Scotland?

She visited General Register House three times: first on 27 June 1952 during her first official visit to Scotland as Queen, secondly to mark the bicentenary of the building on 2 July 1974, and latterly to open the ScotlandsPeople Centre on 4 July 2008. The Queen visiting General Register House in 2008.

How often did the Queen visit Scotland?

Following the Queen’s death at age 96, we look back to June, when she made her last official visit to Edinburgh. Traditionally, the monarch makes an annual trip to Scotland every year at the beginning of summer for what is known as ‘Holyrood Week’ – an annual celebration of Scottish people and Scottish culture.

Where did the Queen Mother go in Scotland?

The Castle of Mey The Queen Mother spent three weeks in August at the castle , returning for about ten days in October each year. The Castle of Mey, when purchased in 1952, was surrounded by only 30 acres of parkland or, as they are sometimes called, policies.

When did the Queen open the Kelpies?

July 2017 The world-famous Kelpies were given the royal seal of approval in July 2017 when they were visited by HM The Queen. Accompanied by The Duke of Edinburgh, the royal visitors were in the Falkirk area to officially open a new section of the Forth & Clyde Canal.

What did Gordon Ramsay say about Falkirk?

Ramsay called the town a “s***hole” when a contestant suggested Falkirk might be of the “five cities in Scotland”. He responded saying: “ I was born in Scotland. Falkirk is not a city. It’s a s***hole, I swear to God.”

Why did the Scots lose the Battle of Falkirk?

However, the English army was too strong for the Scots . The English cavalry drove the Scottish cavalry from the battlefield and was then able to defeat the Scottish archers. Without the protection of either cavalry or archers, the Scottish schiltrons were vulnerable.

Where did the Queen visit in 1985?

On the 3rd May 1985, HM Queen Elizabeth II, in her role as the Duke of Lancaster, and accompanied by HRH Prince Philip, The Duke of Edinburgh, visited a number of Duchy of Lancaster tenants in East Northamptonshire, including farmer Graham Hill of Duchy Farm, Bidwell lane, Caldecott .

Did the Queen visit Durrington High School?

Throughout her 70 year reign as monarch, she unswervingly demonstrated our values of kindness, aspiration, perseverance and pride. A true inspiration and role model to so many of us. We will always be honoured by her visit to Durrington High School in 1999 – pictured below.

Why is Higham Ferrers called Higham Ferrers?

The town’s name means ‘High homestead/village’ . The Ferrers family are mentioned in connection with the town in 1166. The hundred is named after Higham Ferrers, but the site of the meeting-place is unknown.

What’s Falkirk famous for?

The area boasts some outstanding attractions, including The Kelpies, The Helix, The Falkirk Wheel, Bo’ness and Kinneil Railway, the Antonine Wall, and The John Muir Way to name but a few.

Who betrayed Wallace at Falkirk?

Sir John Menteith He was generally unseen and unknown by the rest of Britain for the next 6 years, and in 1305 , he was betrayed by a minor noble named Sir John Menteith , who knew Wallace, and arranged for Wallace’s capture while he was sleeping. Menteith captured Wallace, (not Robert Bruce), and took him to England to be executed.

Did Gordon Ramsay live in Falkirk?

He said: “ I have lived in Falkirk for 18 years and it has an incredible community. It’s quiet and safe, a great place to raise a family. “This is an amazing wee town.

What do you call someone from Falkirk?

Those who live in Falkirk are known as ‘ the Bairns ‘: this was after the 18th century when the well known motto ‘better meddle with the deil than the bairns of Falkirk’ became commonly used.

What is Falkirk nickname?

The Bairns The club’s nickname is “ The Bairns “, a Scots word meaning sons or daughters, which is given to natives of the town of Falkirk. This is reflected in the Falkirk Burgh motto: “Better meddle wi’ the de’il than the Bairns o’ Fa’kirk”.

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A royal visit to Falkland Palace in the spring of 1562

In the palace of Falkland everything was in a state of turmoil, and had been since the Court had arrived from St Andrews a few days before. Queen Mary had come to Falkland to relax and join in the hunt for stags and wild boar, and the servants were hurriedly carrying out their duties in preparation for her return from the day’s sport.

To the royal household the young queen was still something of a novelty – only 7 months had passed since she had landed at Leith. Many loved her youthful beauty and were captivated by her gay laughter, but there were others who doubted the sincerity of her intentions. Although Mary had been crowned Queen of Scots at the age of 9 months, she had been brought up in the French Court and had reigned as Queen Consort of that country.

One who did not doubt his young queen was James Merschall, who was in charge of the royal larder. He had heard all the arguments of the reformers, who feared that a Catholic queen would endeavour to destroy the newly established religion. James detested the reformers and most especially their chief spokesman, John Knox. But he knew Mary Stuart would never follow the same course that her cousin Mary Tudor had followed in England, for nothing could be gained by burning the reformers at the stake. He felt that his fair Scots queen would continue to follow the teachings of her own church; he also knew that her promise not to interfere with an individual’s right to follow their conscience was a genuine one. As far as James was concerned, the fire-breathing Knox could sleep peacefully in his bed, for no martyr’s blood would be spilt in Scotland.

So it was with a keen sense of devotion to his young mistress that James turned his attention to the task of organising the provisions for the queen’s supper table. His first visit was to the palace kitchen, situated next to the turnpike stair in the east range, where fine French cuisine was already being prepared for the evening meal.

Everything in the great kitchen was as usual that day. The large open fire was filled with iron pots hanging on tripods blackened by the heat of the burning coals. Two large salmon were boiling in a huge pot in preparation for the servant’s meal. Salmon was commonly found in Scotland and James had often heard the servants complain about the number of times they had to eat it every week. The cook told James that the queen had ordered a supper which consisted of soup a la reine, followed by friars’ fish, then venison soaked in claret. The meal was to be rounded off with a confection of pears and apples mixed with the best French wine.

A haunch of venison had been sent to the kitchen the previous night as it had to be soaked in the claret for at least 6 hours before cooking. But James still had to supply the kitchen with veal, fowl and herbs – the main ingredients of the rich white soup, which Mary, Queen of Scots’ mother, Marie of Guise, had introduced to Scotland from France. He sent his young assistant down to the stank, or fish pond, to the west of the palace stables, to get the finest red trout for the dish known as friars’ fish, which also contained herbs, spices, lemon, anchovies and Rhenish wine.

As they were returning to the larder through the palace courtyard, James and the boy heard the blast of the hunting horn coming from far off in the great oaks of Falkland Wood. James could picture the scene as the young queen and her retinue gave chase to the stags. It would not be long until the royal party returned, ravenous for fine French cuisine. The horn was also heard in the royal apartments, where Mary Beaton, one of the queen’s ladies-in-waiting, was sitting by an open window. She was embroidering a small decorative panel which incorporated the royal emblems of Scotland, England and France – the thistle, the rose and the fleur-de-lys.

She gazed out of the window at the lush greenery – how she loved Falkland! Of course, her family had special associations with the place, as her father and his father before him had been hereditary keepers of the palace. How well she remembered playing hide-and-seek as a child with her mother, a Frenchwoman who had come to Scotland with Marie of Guise. So it was no surprise that Mary was picked to accompany the young Mary, Queen of Scots to France.

Mary Beaton had liked living in France but she sorely missed her native Scotland. Certainly, the little palace at Falkland could not compare with the grand French hunting palace of Fontainbleau, but the beauty of its architecture and its homely comforts endeared it more to her than the spacious elegance of any French chateau.

She put down her embroidery and rose to summon the ladies of the queen’s chamber, who would help her arrange the clothes which the queen would wear at supper that night.

They entered the room chattering excitedly of the news they had heard from one of the pages. Apparently the queen had killed three stags that day and the hunt was now nearly at an end. Mary quickly organised the girls in their work; the queen would soon return and would want to change from her fur-lined riding habit into a more suitable court dress.

Mary picked a black camlet (mohair) dress from the queen’s cabinet and laid it on the four poster bed, which was draped in velvet of the queen’s favourite green. The neck of the dress was stiffened with buckram, a coarse linen fabric, and mounted with white lace and ribbons. A little white ruff embroidered with pearls, a black velvet heart-shaped cap and a white gossamer veil were also laid out on the bed. From the queen’s jewellery chest, they chose a necklace of rubies and pearls with a belt to match and, finally, a little gold crucifix was laid on top of the veil.

As the last touches were being put to this arrangement by the three bright-eyed girls, horses could be heard galloping towards the palace. The hunt was over and the queen, delighted with her success, would soon be with them.

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10 amazing ways to experience the Falkirk area

  • June 9, 2022
  • By Visit Falkirk

when did the queen visit falkirk

Planning a holiday which will give you a perfect mix of outdoor and indoor activities. There’s no better place than Falkirk and its surronding areas, voted Britain’s Best Walking Neighbourhood   by Ramblers due to its extensive network of walking and cycling paths to explore.

Visiting the the Falkirk area in the Spring and Summer has to be one of the best times of year, not just to explore our main attractions but also to discover our many hidden gems.

Here are our 10 ideas on how to experience the best of Falkirk.

1. Hop on an electric bike

Falkirk is home to Scotland’s largest electric bike share scheme with Forth Bikes. E-bikes give as little or as much assistance as you need, making them great for people new to cycling or those who are used to getting in the saddle. You can find e-bike stations at The Falkirk Wheel and the Helix Park:Home of the Kelpies, meaning they are the ideal way to enjoy a leisurely ride along the Forth & Clyde Canal – it should take between 30-40 minutes to cycle between the two. E-bikes are also now available in Falkirk town centre .  Fancy more of a challenge? Hit the  Helix Around Town Tour  route, which connects the area’s cycle networks for a complete circular tour of Falkirk’s many attractions. With e-bike rides starting at just £2.40, there’s no reason not to give them a try! The Falkirk area is great for cyclists of all abilities check out our Cycling for Fun video here.

2.Unearth fantastic trails at Callendar Estate

There are trails to suit the whole family at  Callendar Estate . Unearth the fascinating history of the Estate on one of its great  heritage walking trails , including the Battle of Falkirk Trail which takes you back to 1746. The Estate is also home to family-friendly  mountain bike trails , with routes to suit all abilities. No bike? No problem!  Greenrig Cycles  on the Estate provide quality mountain bikes for hire. Once you’ve worked up an appetite, finish your trip with a well-earned meal at  The Cafe at Canada Wood .

3. Get canal side

No trip to the Falkirk area is complete without taking in a canal or two! With the Union and Forth & Clyde Canals meeting at The Falkirk Wheel, there are miles of scenic traffic-free paths to explore many of which area accessible for both buggies and wheelchairs. Take in the Falkirk Tunnel, which carries the Union Canal beneath Prospect Park in Falkirk. Did you know that Burke and Hare moved to Scotland in a bid to be involved in the tunnel’s creation? There’s 350 hectares to explore at the Helix, with The Kelpies and Forth & Clyde Canal at its heart. Discover the Charlotte Dundas Heritage Trail, which tells the story of the pioneering steam boat, its creator, and the importance of canals and associated industries to the area.

4. Follow in John Muir’s footsteps

A large section of the John Muir Way can be found in the Falkirk area. A must for walkers and cyclists, the route takes in spots including Callendar House and Park, Bantaskine Estate Park, Falkirk town centre, the Antonine Wall and Avon Aqueduct. You can also use the new  John Muir Way Passport  to mark your progress on the route. The passport is available to buy at The Falkirk Wheel. Did you know that the  Bo’ness Community Bus  will take you from the heart of Edinburgh to Bo’ness so you can start your walk there?

5. Step back to the Roman times

Built by the Romans almost 1900 years ago, the Antonine Wall, marked the north west frontier of their empire. Today, its remains are a UNESCO World Heritage Site and major sections of the wall run through the Falkirk area. Roam like the Romans and discover sections in Callendar Park, Kinneil Estate, Tamfourhill and Bridgeness or visit Rough Castle in Bonnybridge. The best-preserved fort on the wall, it offers amazing views of the surviving remains.

6. Combine heritage and nature in a country park

You won’t be short of ways to enjoy the great outdoors in Muiravonside Country Park. Explore 170 acres of woodland and parkland, with a sculpture trail, river gorge, and stunning panoramic views over the area. Kids will also love the Newparks Farm , with Highland cattle, llamas, Shetland ponies and more! Follow the River Avon Heritage Trail to see the historic Avon Aqueduct, Scotland’s longest and tallest, which carries the Union Canal over the River Avon.

7. Go bird-watching

Kinneil Estate is filled with acres of woodlands and ponds, which provide the perfect place to spot birds including coots, buzzards, and swans. The park is also home to many great attractions including Kinneil Museum, James Watt’s Cottage and Kinneil House, the historic home of the Dukes of Hamilton. With guided tours of the house on selected days throughout the year, you might even be able to spot another resident of the park their ghost!

8. Get on two wheels with a difference!

Experience some of Falkirk’s most scenic areas on a tour with the Scottish Segway Centre. Their expert guides will teach you all the skills you need before you embark on a tour that takes in many of the area’s best-known attractions. Travel through woodlands and hidden paths to discover breathtaking views, including the top of The Falkirk Wheel and the remains of the Antonine Wall. 

9. Uncover historic hidden gems

Discover amazing historical sites on the Falkirk Town Heritage Trail. Starting at the Falkirk Steeple, the trail links 25 sites including the Old Burgh Halls, Falkirk Old Parish Church, the Tattie Kirk, and the old Barr’s site.

The Steeple Heritage Centre (Opening soon) will be free to get in and will have displays telling Falkirk’s story and the history of the present and earlier buildings, along with access to the 19th century prison cells.

Make sure to visit some of the great shops and eateries the town has to offer while on your walk. A short walk from the town centre you will find Dollar Park a beautiful area of mature parkland, with walled garden and cafe.

10. Take a walk on the wild side

Nestled in the heart of Grangemouth, the Jupiter Urban Wildlife Centre is a real wildlife haven. Filled with birds, butterflies, and wildflowers, it’s the perfect place to slow down and relax. Enjoy their great events throughout autumn, including learning about super slimers, hedgehog hibernation, and how to become a nature detective.

If you’re out exploring don’t forget to share your amazing images with us by using #VisitFalkirk!

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IMAGES

  1. On this day 15 years ago, The Falkirk Wheel was opened by The Queen

    when did the queen visit falkirk

  2. Queen Elizabeth II: Her Majesty's visits to Falkirk district in pictures

    when did the queen visit falkirk

  3. (Queen Mother) Elizabeth

    when did the queen visit falkirk

  4. 38 The Queen Duke Of Edinburgh Visit Stirling And Falkirk Stock Photos

    when did the queen visit falkirk

  5. The Queen Duke Of Edinburgh Visit Stirling And Falkirk Photos and

    when did the queen visit falkirk

  6. Royal visit to Linlithgow

    when did the queen visit falkirk

COMMENTS

  1. Queen Elizabeth II: Her Majesty's visits to Falkirk ...

    The monarch's next visit to Falkirk wasn't until 1985 when, despite heavy rain, people turned out in their hundreds when she officially opened the new Mariner Sports Centre in Camelon. Both the Queen and Prince Philip were back in May 2002, for the opening of the Falkirk Wheel. Crowds gathered under dark, looming clouds for the occasion ...

  2. Queen's Platinum Jubilee: Her Majesty's visits to Falkirk district in

    As the Queen celebrates her 70 year reign, we take a look back through our archives at her visits to the Falkirk district.

  3. Queen's Platinum Jubilee: Her Majesty's visits to Falkirk district over

    The monarch's next visit to Falkirk wasn't until 1985 when, despite heavy rain, people turned out in their hundreds when she officially opened the new Mariner Sports Centre in Camelon. Both the Queen and Prince Philip were back in May 2002, for the opening of the Falkirk Wheel. Crowds gathered under dark, looming clouds for the occasion ...

  4. The opening of the Mariner Centre, Falkirk by HRH Queen ...

    The opening of the Mariner Centre, Falkirk by HRH Queen Elizabeth II on 5th July 1985, full official video, VHS copy to digital

  5. The Queen opens new canal before visiting Kelpies sculptures

    The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh travel along the new 'Queen Elizabeth II Canal' in Falkirk and visit the iconic Kelpies sculptures as their visit to Scotland continues.

  6. On this day 15 years ago, The Falkirk Wheel was opened by The Queen

    IT was 15 years ago today that the Queen opened The Falkirk Wheel. The project was designed to be both a visitor attraction and a functional canal link. Architect Tony Kettle was responsible for ...

  7. HM The Queen visits the Kelpies

    A royal arrival at the Kelpies. The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh made a Royal entrance on-board the Seagull Trust barge 'The Wooden Spoon Seagull' to officially open, and name, the Queen Elizabeth II Canal. The royal couple completed the last stretch of their journey to the Kelpies sculptures in Falkirk by barge, and…

  8. The Forth and Clyde Canal, Falkirk Wheel and ...

    The inspiration for the wheel's design has been attributed to many things, whether man-made, like a Celtic spear or a ship's propellor, or natural, like a whale's ribcage or a fish's spine. Either way the Falkirk wheel is one of a kind. In 1998, work began, and the Falkirk wheel was opened by the Queen on the 24th of May 2002.

  9. Falkland Palace

    Falkland Palace, 'South Quarter' from the Courtyard. Falkland Palace, in Falkland, Fife, Scotland, is a royal palace of the Scottish Kings. It was one of the favourite places of Mary, Queen of Scots, who took refuge there from political and religious turmoil of her times.

  10. Did The Queen Visit Falkirk?

    Following the death of Her Majesty the Queen, we take a look back through our archives at her visits to the Falkirk district. In the last seven decades The Queen came to the region on no fewer than six occasions. Each time she was met by crowds of locals, keen to catch a glimpse of … Did The Queen Visit Falkirk? Read More »

  11. 38 The Queen Duke Of Edinburgh Visit Stirling And Falkirk

    Browse 38 the queen duke of edinburgh visit stirling and falkirk photos and images available, or start a new search to explore more photos and images.

  12. Callendar House

    Other articles have included the religious persecution of Eleanor Hay (1593-1627), James Livingston founding Falkirk Hospital (1640), the siege of Callendar House (1651), the theft of the Livingston silver (1651), the Militia Riots (1797), the sale of Callendar House (1783), the visit of Queen Victoria (1842) and the last Earl of Callendar (1853).

  13. Queen Elizabeth II: Her Majesty's visits to Falkirk district remembered

    Her last visit to Falkirk was in July 2017 when she opened the Queen Elizabeth II Canal - the missing part of the Millennium Link, the reopened waterway which runs across Central Scotland.

  14. The Heart Of Falkirk

    The Heart Of Falkirk. Leave the car behind and take this gentle, 10-mile circular route to discover Falkirk's most iconic and best-loved landmarks. This scenic bike and walking trail includes the majestic Kelpies and mesmerising Falkirk Wheel, plus the newly restored Rosebank Distillery and stately grandeur of Callendar House.

  15. A Journey Through Time

    The house has also had some remarkable visitors, including Mary, Queen of Scots, Bonnie Prince Charlie, and Queen Victoria. Explore exhibitions offering insights into Falkirk's pivotal role in shaping Scotland's past. Stop 3 - Bonnie Prince Charlie & the Battle of Falkirk Muir From Callendar Park, head to The Falkirk Wheel.

  16. Highlights Of Falkirk

    The house has also had some remarkable visitors, including Mary, Queen of Scots, Bonnie Prince Charlie, and Queen Victoria. Explore exhibitions offering insights into Falkirk's pivotal role in shaping Scotland's past. There's also a Roman themed play area, nature play trail and a Cycle Hub with challenging mountain bike tracks.

  17. Falkland Palace

    Falkland Palace & Garden provides a unique opportunity to explore a royal 'pleasure palace' with a Victorian twist. Inspired by the grand châteaux of France, successive Stuart royals transformed this favoured retreat into the Balmoral of its day, now one of the finest surviving examples of Renaissance architecture in Scotland.

  18. In pictures: The Queen's visits to Falkirk

    Her first visit as Queen was in 1955 when she carried out a Scottish tour that took her across the country and made her first visit to Falkirk. She inspected troops in Newmarket Street and met with the Provost and other dignitaries in the former Burgh Buildings, now the registrar's office.

  19. When Did The Queen Visit Falkirk?

    Her first visit was back in 1955, and her most recent was in 2017 when she, and the late Prince Philip, officially opened the Queen Elizabeth II Canal and visited the Kelpies. Contents show 1 When was the Queen in Falkirk? 2 Where did the Queen visit in Scotland? 3 When did the Queen open … When Did The Queen Visit Falkirk? Read More »

  20. A royal visit to Falkland Palace in the spring of 1562

    In the palace of Falkland everything was in a state of turmoil, and had been since the Court had arrived from St Andrews a few days before. Queen Mary had come to Falkland to relax and join in the hunt for stags and wild boar, and the servants were hurriedly carrying out their duties in preparation for her return from the day's sport.

  21. The Falkirk Area

    The Falkirk area boasts two of Scotland's newest and most unique attractions. The modern wonders of The Falkirk Wheel, the world's only rotating boat lift, and The majestic Kelpies, the largest equine sculptures in the world, celebrate Falkirk's industrial heritage. Both are must-see destinations for hundreds of thousands of visitors to ...

  22. 10 amazing ways to experience the Falkirk area

    Take in the Falkirk Tunnel, which carries the Union Canal beneath Prospect Park in Falkirk. Did you know that Burke and Hare moved to Scotland in a bid to be involved in the tunnel's creation? There's 350 hectares to explore at the Helix, with The Kelpies and Forth & Clyde Canal at its heart.

  23. Young Queen's visit to Linlithgow

    Her Majesty the Queen is pictured in Linlithgow during a tour of West Lothian some time in the 1950s or 1960s. The picture was found during a search of the picture archive of The Scotsman, but there are no other details. No doubt older readers will recall the circumstances of the Queen's visit. The Journal and Gazette welcomes old photographs ...