Nisbet House

Nisbet House is a substantial baronial style mansion in Nisbet, Berwickshire. It was built in about 1630 by Sir Alexander Nisbet. Architectural evidence suggests that the building incorporates, at its eastern end, the square pele tower that was the former Nisbet Castle. Sir Alexander Nisbet overextended his finances in supporting Charles I in the Civil War, and was forced to sell the property to John Ker in 1652. A square tower in the classical style of William Adam was added to the west end in 1774. The house remained with Ker descendants (latterly in the person of Lord Sinclair) until the 1950s, when the estate were sold to Lord Brockett. After partial modernisation, the house was sold again in the mid-1960s to a local farmer, and remained unoccupied until its recent and comprehensive restoration as a private residence. The Society asks readers not to visit the House or to contact its current owner.

Nisbet House, 1933
Photograph by Walter Elliot, depute Sheriff of Berwickshire

Further reading (PDF files)

Extract from MacGibbon and Ross (1881) The Castellated and Domestic Architecture of Scotland

Extract from The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland (1915) Inventory of Monuments... in Berwickshire

Sales Particulars (1985)

[Home] [News] [Gathering 2009] [Members only] [Joining] [Chief] [Clan history and places] [Berwickshire] [Nisbet House] [East Lothian] [Edinburgh] [Nisbet families] [DNA] [Heraldry] [Tartan] [Gatherings] [Research resources] [Shopping] [Links] [North America] [Australasia] [Guestbook] [Contact us]