The
West Lothian lands of Winchburgh, or Wynchelburgh, were granted to
Philip de Setoun by King William in one of the original Charters
granted to the Seton family in 1169. It is one of the oldest
Scottish Charters to exist, now held by the Earl of Eglinton and
Winton. The contruction
of Niddry Castle as we know it was begun on the hereditary lands of Winchburgh, in
the late 15th century by George, 5th Lord Seton, a great favourite
of his King. The 5th Lord was held in high esteem by James IV,
but he was not able to oversee the completion of the Castle, falling
with his sovereign on the fatal field of Flodden in 1513. He left a
widow, eldest daughter of the first Earl of Both-well, who survived
him for a period of nearly half a century. It was to his wife and
son, the 6th Lord Seton, who oversaw the completion of
the Castle in the early 16th century.
Niddry came to the forefront in history
in the mid-16th century when George, 7th Lord Seton came to the
rescue of Queen Mary Stuart. Lord Seton was Provost of both
Edinburgh and Elgin, and held the office of Grand Master of Queen
Mary’s household, and was concerned in not a few of the most
momentous events in her history. The night after the murder of
Rizzio, when Mary fled from Holyrood, her first halting-place was
Seton House, where Lord Seton was in readiness at the head of two
hundred horsemen to escort his sovereign to the strong castle of
Dunbar. A few days after the murder of Darnley, Mary repaired to
Seton House, where she was entertained by its owner in person, and
spent her time in hunting and shooting.
On the Queen’s escape from Douglas
imprisonment at Lochleven, Lord Seton was waiting in the vicinity of
the lake with fifty of his retainers and 200 lances, and attended
her in her rapid flight to his castle of Niddry, on his Winchburgh
estate in West Lothian, where she first drew bridle. Having crossed
the Forth at Queensferry, it is here at Niddry Castle that on the
2nd of May 1568, she gave instructions for the raising of her
adherents and then rapidly moved on to Cadzow Castle in Lanarkshire,
pausing at Craignethan Castle along the way. He fought on her
side and was taken prisoner at the battle of Lang-side, in 1568,
which ruined her cause in Scotland. Sadly, on 13th May her
army was defeated at Langside by the better-led army of her
half-brother, the Earl of Moray. Fleeing southwards and staying at
the house of a friend each consecutive night, Mary arrived at
Dundrennan Abbey on 15th May, on the shores of the Solway Firth.
From there, she sailed to England, never to set foot in Scotland
again.
Later at Niddry, Lord Seton
celebrated the marriage of his daughter Margaret to Claud Hamilton
in 1574, the famed Politician
and Commendator of Paisley Abbey, the fourth son of James Hamilton
(1516-75), 2nd Earl of Arran and 1st Duke Châtelherault and younger
brother of the 3rd Earl of Arran. Hamilton was created the 1st
Baron Paisley in 1587, and their son became the 1st Earl of
Abercorn.
Niddry Castle is situated in a quiet
and open location, right opposite the more modern village of Winchburgh and
flanked by a golf course. The former castle village which was
situated beside, is infortunately long gone. The Reid Family,
Hereditary Keepers of Niddry Castle, and it's grounds gardeners,
left after the castle was sold to the Hope's and later settled in
Ulster, Northern Ireland, and intermarried with the descendants of
the Seton's of Meldrum who had also settled there after the
beginning of the Jacobite troubles.
Niddry is now privately owned and not open to
the public but one can get a good view by walking all around the
building.