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His son, George Pringle of Torwoodlee, was at the battle of Pinkie in 1547. In 1568 he was murdered by a party of Liddesdale reivers, to the number of 300, consisting of Elliots, Armstrongs, and other clans from the west border, under John Elliot of Copshaw, who had attacked, plundered and burnt the house of Torwoodlee. Torwoodlee Tower was built in 1601 by George Pringle to replace an earlier stronghold, and reflects the aspirations of the family as well as their expectation of more settled times in the new century. Power and money could guarantee security more effectively than the old cramped tower-house so recently demolished. Torwoodlee Tower stands in ruins now, abandoned in its turn when the Pringles built a fine Georgian mansion in the eighteenth century. The remains of the older building stand on an extensive terrace above the valley of the Gala Water about a mile above Galashiels. The prominent feature of the ruins is the stair tower which, though an empty shell, still rises to its full height. Though the tower was not designed as a defensible building there is still a hint of the need for security in the loopholed parapet of a fragment of courtyard wall. Torwoodlee Tower is still owned by the Pringle family. It is no longer just a tower and lands, a Georgian mansion was added in 1783, with later additions in Victorian times. Map of Torwoodlee (Multimap.com) Meaning of the place name Torwoodlee : Tor = Hill; Wood = Wood; Lee = Shade, shelterThe lineage of the Pringles of Torwoodlee: This family are a branch of the ancient stock of the Pringles of Galashiels and Smailholm.
Please visit: www.torwoodlee.com for further information. Also : www.wildlifeshadows.co.uk |
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| Torwoodlee House Tour:The House was built in 1783 with the front facing a fine view. However, in 1861 Balnakiel was built across the valley by a rich man who was in trade! The then Laird was so disgusted that he had the house altered so that it faced the other way, thus turning his back on the upstart!
Looking at the house from the back, the left-hand wing has an upstairs room that is sometimes used for lunches and other functions, whilst downstairs is a workshop. The right hand wing was built to contain the butler’s living room, the knife sharpening room and the shoe cleaning room among other recondite uses and, as the Laird now had no use for these functions and did not need the space, this wing was currently closed. Ascending the steps into the beautiful main sitting room with its lovely wallpaper and curtains, its Steinway grand piano which had come from the S.S. Orontes, a 20,000 ton liner that had mainly sailed the Bombay to England voyage. Next the dining room which has now been taken over as the children’s play room. This contained the family ancestor portraits. The first recorded mention of the name Hoppringle was in 1208. This may have come from the Old Norse "Hop" meaning a safe place, "Ring" being a circle or "surrounded by" and "hill", so giving Hoppringle, "a safe place surrounded by hills". The family seat was at Smailholm Tower until the 1450s. Until then they had been Squires to the Douglases but when that Clan became too powerful, James II moved against them and the Hoppringles wisely changed their allegiance to the king who gave them a great deal of land around Galashiels. Hoppringle dropped the "Hop" to become Pringle, Laird of Gala. He had five sons and the Laird gave each of them a quantity of land on which each family later built a tower house including Whitbank, Buckholm (1582), Langshaw and the one in the grounds of the present house (1601) from which the Braw Lad of Gala takes a stone annually to be part of the Braw Lad’s Ceremonial Gathering. The lands extended right up to Borthwick where the ruling family was too powerful to overcome so the Pringles married into it. The Scotts got involved when the Pringles became crippled by debt and a daughter Pringle married the wealthy Hugh Scott to revive the family fortunes. One of the portraits is of George Pringle who, being a king’s man, found it prudent to flee to Holland during Oliver Cromwell’s Commonwealth and in fact did not feel it safe to return until the accession of William III and Mary in 1689. Next there are some very nice portraits on the stairs including the present Laird’s grandmother, Ada Pringle, whose claim to fame was that she had her drawing room packed with stuffed animals from the museum so that she would not have live people billeted on her during the war, and ones of James, the present Laird’s father and George, his uncle, both as boys. At the head of the stairs were two excellent paintings by Dick Smelly, one of the present Laird, James, and one of his wife, Alice. Exit the house via the front stairs between two St. James gas lamp holders on the banister posts to the front drive. Afterwards, walk down part of the drive, turn right at the Wellingtonia that was planted by Dorothy, the Laird’s mother, and walk up to the 1601 tower. |
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© 2005-10 James Pringle. All rights reserved. |
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