Compare Landmarks by visiting each property's Price and Availability page, select an available start date, and click "Add to comparison".
To view your saved comparison, please Login.
Get ideas for:
Sign up to receive news
The Handbook
Availability list
Browse our Price List
Staying in Landmarks
Staying on Lundy
Contact the Booking Office
Landmark Trust USA
Terms and Conditions
Login
Ascog House, Ascog
Isle of Bute, Argyll and Bute
Bute has been called the Scottish Isle of Wight, and certainly Rothesay, its capital, with its Winter Garden and decorative ironwork, is reminiscent of the South Coast. Ascog lies on the sheltered east coast of the island. Trees (especially beech) and shrubs (Charles Rennie Mackintosh drew fuchsias here) grow lushly in its mild climate. It has been gently developed as a superior resort since the 1840s, with a scattering of respectable houses above the bay. Building on the shoreline was wisely forbidden. One such house stands in the large and secluded grounds of the old mansion house of Ascog, once home to a branch of the Stewarts. We have acquired both buildings, which stand a few hundred yards apart, each looking over its own, rather different, garden. Ascog House once belonged to a branch of the Stewarts and is a typical seventeenth-century laird’s house. Our restoration rescued it from dereliction, removing clumsy Victorian additions to reveal the true proportions and dignified character of stair turret, dormer windows and crow-stepped gables. An impressive Edwardian stair turret has been kept as a free-standing structure, to house a romantic extra bedroom and bathroom. Modern visitors will appreciate the views of the grounds, through windows helpfully enlarged in the eighteenth century, with the best view of all from the cap house, a perfect little bedroom tucked at the top of the stair turret. Seen from the front, the House’s main rooms are on the first floor, reached by a wide turnpike stair. Go round behind and the rise of the ground brings them level with the garden. Inside, the arrangement of the rooms is new, but there are old fireplaces, including in the kitchen a noble fragment of a magnificent carved chimney piece from an early stage in the building’s history. View our history sheet for this Landmark.
Sleeps: 7+2
Beds: S 3T D
Features
Other Landmarks at Ascog:
Meikle Ascog