Kinneil House

Venue details
About the venue

Kinneil House dates back to the 15th century and was once a popular home for the Dukes of Hamilton.

The building was re-modelled in the 1540s and transformed into a stately home in the 1660s.

Demolition was halted in 1936 when Renaissance wall paintings – said to be amongst the finest in Scotland – were discovered and the property was put into the care of the Ministry of Works, now Historic Scotland.

Since the 1980s, access to the house has been limited. You can view the exterior of Kinneil House - and tour the grounds - all year. However, you can only see inside Kinneil House during special open days organised by Historic Scotland and The Friends of Kinneil.

The neighbouring Kinneil Museum – run by Falkirk Community Trust – is open throughout the year, usually Mondays to Saturdays from 12.30 p.m. to 4 p.m., plus any Sunday Kinneil House open days.

The museum provides an audio visual show on the history of Kinneil House and the surrounding Kinneil Estate, which also features a medieval church, a Roman fortlet and a cottage used by inventor James Watt.

Kinneil House Ghost

Kinneil House is said to be haunted by the ghost of Lady Alice Lilbourne, who fell to her death from one of the building’s top-floor windows.

“Lady Lilbourne was the wife of a Cromwellian General who was stationed at Kinneil House in the mid 17th century," explains the Friends of Kinneil. "The story goes that the marriage was not a happy one, and Lady Alice was locked into an attic room overlooking the rocky ravine and burn below."

“Apparently, she managed to escape in a white nightgown, but was quickly recaptured. In desperation she flung herself out of the window to her death on the rocks almost 200 feet below. Ever since, the White Lady has been said to haunt the house and its grounds.”

The writer Maria Edgeworth visited Kinneil and the last occupants of the house – the philosopher Dugald Stewart and his wife – in June 1823.

She wrote: “Mrs. Stewart told us this morning that there were plenty of ghosts at our service belonging to Kinneil House. One in particular, Lady Lilburn (sic), who is often seen all in white, as a ghost should be, and with white wings, fluttering on the top of the castle, from whence she leaps into the sea – a prodigious leap of three or four hundred yards, nothing for a well-bred ghost. At other times she wears boots, and stumps up and down stairs in them, and across passages, and through bedchambers, frightening ladies’ maids and others.”