Record

Reference NoDD21
Accession No Acc 21
TitleRecords of the Gardens of Troup
DescriptionDD21/1 Garden of Troup: Deeds and Legal papers
DD21/1/1 Garden of Troup: Writs and Bonds
DD21/1/2 Garden of Troup: Inventories
DD21/1/3 Garden of Troup: Executry papers
DD21/1/4 Garden of Troup: Trustee, guardian and curatorship records
DD21/1/5 Garden of Troup: Papers relating to case Garden v. Garden Campbell
DD21/1/6 Garden of Troup: Bundles relating to various legal cases
DD21/1/7 Garden of Troup: Legal correspondence and accounts
DD21/1/8 Garden of Troup: Francis, Lord Gardenstone's, financial, legal and executry papers

DD21/2 Garden of Troup: Troup Estate records
DD21/2/1 Garden of Troup: Troup Estate Rent Collection Books
DD21/2/2 Garden of Troup: Troup Estate Rentals and Factor's Accounts
DD21/2/3 Garden of Troup: Estate Plans
DD21/2/4 Garden of Troup: Troup Estate leases
DD21/2/5 Garden of Troup: Estate correspondence
DD21/2/6 Garden of Troup: Records relating to Herring Fishing concern at Gardenstown
DD21/2/7 Garden of Troup: Estate Management Books
DD21/2/8 Garden of Troup: Fishing Rents

DD21/3 Garden of Troup: Glenlyon Estate, Perthshire, records

DD21/4 Garden of Troup: Family Personal Papers

DD21/5 Garden of Troup: Gardenstown (Gamrie) Harbour records
DD21/5/1 Garden of Troup: Register of vessels entering Gardenstown Harbour
DD21/5/2 Garden of Troup: Gardenstown Harbour Financial Records
DD21/5/3 Garden of Troup: Papers relating to Gardenstown Harbour
DD21/5/4 Garden of Troup: Gardenstown Harbour Orders
DD21/5/5 Garden of Troup: Gardenstown Harbour Rules and Notices

DD21/6 Garden of Troup: Pitsligo Estate records

DD21/7 Garden of Troup: Miscellaneous items

Additional information in descriptions taken from the "Knipe analysis" document.
Date1653-1950
Related MaterialAS/Klrk/5/1 Laurencekirk Burgh: Memoranda Book with Rental and Account Records: contains a Rental account for Johnstown and Blackcokmuir (Blackiemuir) and the accounts for Johnstown for 1751 - 1757 , and Estate Memoranda of Lord Gardenstone (i.e. notes on the running of his estates in the Laurencekirk area) from May 1781 to 24 September 1790.

National Records of Scotland hold records of Messrs Burnett and Reid, Advocates, Aberdeen (reference GD57) which includes: records of Garden of Troup and Glenlyon, in sheriffdoms of Aberdeen, Banff and Perth, 1518-1886, references GD57/1/133-337 (Burnett and Reid were Factors for the estate). Collection includes deeds, writs and legal papers relating to the Troups land, rentals for the Troup and Glenlyon estates, and papers relating to the service of Major Alexander Garden with the Swedish Army (1635-1653).

For records of Francis Garden, Lord Gardenstone, see https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/c/F66677.
CreatorGarden family of Troup
Extent5 linear metres (105 bundles, 43 volumes, 38 documents, 1 photographs)
​Open or Restricted AccessOpen
Access ConditionsOpen for consultation at Old Aberdeen House, open Mon-Wed 9:30-12:30 and 13:30-16:30. It is advisable to make an appointment.
Documents dating after 1930 to be produced only with consent of depositor.
Administrative HistoryThe Garden family seems to have acquired the lands of Troup in Banffshire in the mid-17th century. They were concerned not only with their estates but also with the fishing industry, and Alexander Garden of Troup founded Gardenstown in Banffshire in 1720 as a fishing port. Troup House was build c.1770 by the 4th Baron Troup.

Francis Garden, Lord Gardenstone of Troup (1721-1793), developed Laurencekirk in Kincardineshire from the 1760s and in 1779 had it raised a burgh of barony to be a small manufacturing town. Like several other family members he chose the law as his profession, and was called to the Scottish Bar in 1744. In 1764 he was appointed as a judge of the Court of Session, and in 1776 became a lord of justiciary. He owned considerable property in the newly-fashionable Edinburgh suburb of Morningside and bought Morningside House in 1789: in the same year he had a wellhouse built by Alexander Nasmyth for St. Bernard’s Well by the Water of Leith. He was regarded as somewhat eccentric, and died unmarried in 1793.

He was succeeded in the lands of Troup by his nephew Francis, the son of Peter Garden who (on marrying Katherine, the heiress of the Campbells of Glenlyon) assumed the additional surname Campbell. Francis Garden Campbell inherited the estates of Glenlyon in Perthshire, Johnston, Elrick & Delgaty. The latter had to be sold in 1815. Peter Garden was a a Captain, then Colonel in the 5th Regiment of Foot.

Thereafter there were a number of short-lived heads of the family, and in the late nineteenth century there were several legal disputes between the Gardens and Garden Campbells for the estate. The Gardens were owners again by the turn of the twentieth century, at which point Troup House was rebuilt (1897) and renovated and another Francis Garden was claiming treasury grants for its upkeep. Gardens continued to own the estate of Troup well into the twentieth century.

1st Baron of Troup to 1663 Major Alexander Garden 1594-1663
2nd Baron of Troup 1663-1712 Alexander Garden 1657-1712
3rd Baron of Troup 1712-1740 Peter Alexander Garden 1685-1740
4th Baron of Troup 1740-1785 Alexander Garden 1714-1785
5th Baron of Troup 1785-1793 Francis Garden, Lord Gardenstown 1721-1793
6th Baron of Troup 1793-1815 Francis Garden Campbell 1768-1815
7th Baron of Troup 1815-1826 Francis Garden Campbell 1793-1826
8th Baron of Troup 1826-1848 Francis Garden Campbell 1818-1848
9th Baron of Troup 1848-1895 Francis William Garden Campbell 1840-1895
10th Baron of Troup1895-1913 Francis Alexander Garden 1869-1913 (son of Archibald Garden, younger brother of the 9th Baron)
11th Baron of Troup 1913-1984 Alexander Garden 1905-1984

Visa relaterade Persons poster.

Persons
CodePersonNameDates
NA8063Garden; family; of Troup1650-1950
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