Sir Alexander
Seton, Lord Pitmeddon founded the Great Garden.
The garden, with its pavilions and fountains and manicured look,
was established by Sir Alexander Seton in 1675, with it's magnificent
Formal
geometric garden within a walled square and divided into four. One of the
quarters has a floral saltire and thistle, and the coat-of-arms of the Setons,
Lairds of Pitmedden. Another has a sundial and floral depiction of
the well-known Latin dictum, tempus fugit. One of the notable features is the eastern half
of the square modelled on the Charles II garden at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in
Edinburgh.
The house
itself had been badly damaged by fire in 1818 but was rebuilt
during the 1860's. Today, only the north wing contains visible
fragments of the 17th century grand dwelling. It has been well
documented that the fire caused the destruction of family
portraits, papers and the, all important, plans of the original
layout of the Garden. Indeed, the Trust is still keen to discover
references to, or sketches of Seton's Great Garden in its earlier
years.
The Keith family bought the Pitmedden Estate at auction in 1894.
Major James Keith CBE (1879 - 1953) was one of the country's most
influential agricultural improvers of his time, with a desire to
combine traditional farming methods with the increasing
sophistication of mechanical engineering. A shrewd businessman,
keen to increase productivity, Keith successfully evolved his own
style of farming. His expectations of his Garden would surely have
matched those of his many farms so it is of no surprise that what
the Trust inherited in 1952 was a magnificent working market
garden producing fruit and vegetables in abundance
Major Keith, in a single act of munificence in 1952, presented to
the National Trust for Scotland the Pitmedden Estate comprising
the house, the walled garden, ancillary buildings, 100 acres of
woodland and farmland, together with an endowment fund to provide
for its upkeep. In 1978 the Trustees of William Cook of Little
Meldrum, Tarves presented to the Trust the extensive collection of
agricultural and domestic artifacts which Mr. Cook had amassed in
his lifetime.
The Great
Garden of Pitmedden has been celebrating fifty years in the care
of the National Trust for Scotland in 2002. Pitmedden is situated
in the heart of rural North-East Aberdeenshire, 15 miles north of
the "granite city" Aberdeen. It is no coincidence therefore, that
this magnificent Grade A listed Walled Garden was created using
the finest granite. The
Garden has been lovingly restored by the National Trust. Pitmedden
House also has a museum of family life, a collection of farming
tools and domestic utensils, and there are woodland walks on the
100 acre estate, as well as an exhibition on Formal gardens.