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His son, James Ogilvy (1750-1811), inherited the Cullen estate as well as the titles of 7th Earl of Findlater and 4th Earl of Seafield upon his death. James was an amateur architect, landscape architect and philanthropist. He married Christina Teresa Murray (1755-1813) in 1779 but shortly after ceased to live with her, residing instead with his companion, Mr Wilson. He had a room for Mr Wilson included in a design for Findlater Castle by Robert Adam. He spent a lot of time living on the Continent, as recorded in The Gentleman’s Magazine. After acquiring a number of vineyards in the Loschwitz district of Dresden, Findlater began the construction of an extensive country house residence overlooking the River Elbe. The house, which later formed the core for Schloss Albrechtsberg, was nearing completion when the Earl died on 5 October 1811. He was succeeded by his cousin Lewis Alexander Grant (later Grant-Ogilvy), but only in the Earldom of Seafield. Upon his death, the Earldom of Findlater and Lordships of Deskford and Ogilvy became dormant. A number of properties, including that in Dresden, had been bequeathed to Findlater’s then companion, Johann Georg Fischer. Findlater was buried in a tomb at Loschwitz Church, where some years later at the age of 87, Fischer was also interred.
Cullen House dates from at least the sixteenth century and has been added to in the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries to form an irregularly shaped, sprawling house. The Adam family has been involved with the Cullen estate since the mid-eighteenth century when William Adam senior made designs for a single-arch bridge which was executed in 1744.
In 1767, the Adam office made designs for the 6th Earl for an entrance screen facing onto the principal road leading to the main house. This was executed and there are two surviving drawings for the screen, one in the Soane Collection and one in a private collection which is signed by James Adam and dated 1767. Colvin states that there are also letters between John Adam and the Earl of Seafield discussing James’s designs for the screen. In the same year, the Adam office also made designs for the internal decoration of Cullen House including wall elevations and ceiling plans for the hall, staircase, library, and a vestibule, but these designs were not carried out.
The remaining drawings in the collection relate to a series of later schemes designed by the Adam office for the 7th Earl which were not executed. These include designs for a town or gardener's house in c.1775, for a chimneypiece, commode and two glass frames for the drawing room in 1781, for a banqueting house in 1783, and another gateway and lodge in the same year. In Robert and James’s bills, there is an item for designs and surveys of Cullen House on 24 July 1779 which Binney suggests are related to Findlater Castle. The 7th Earl was an amateur architect himself, and Rowan suggests that the eccentric nature and extravagance of some of the designs produced for the Earl were a result of Robert Adam altering schemes to incorporate his client's own ideas.
The drawing SM Adam volume 36/61 is not included in this scheme despite having inscriptions relating to the Earl of Findlater on it because the drawing itself is for a boathouse at Burghley House and is catalogued within that scheme. Similarly, Bolton suggests that the drawing SM Adam volume 1/206 is related to the proposed banqueting house, however, this drawing does not appear to show any similarity with any of the designs and has been left out of this scheme.
In 1789, the Adam office made designs for a new castle, called Findlater Castle, along with stables and offices for the 7th Earl. These were initially thought to be on site of the existing Findlater ruin, roughly two miles east of Cullen, however, a 1789 plan of the Cullen grounds by the landscape gardener Thomas White suggests that Adam’s plans were intended to replace the existing Cullen House (Binney, p.2040). For further information on this scheme see: Findlater Castle, Moray.
See also: Lodges for the Earl of Findlater, unknown location; and Designs for a town house, possibly Portland Place.
Literature:
A.T. Bolton, The Architecture of Robert and James Adam, Volume II, Index, 1922, pp.8, 71; A. Tait, Robert Adam and Scotland, The Picturesque Drawings, 1972, pp. 12-13; M. Binney, ‘Cullen House, Banffshire – I’, Country Life, 15 December 1985, pp. 1970-4; M. Binney, ‘Cullen House, Banffshire – II’, Country Life, 26 December 1985, pp. 2038-42; A. Rowan, Designs for Castles and Country Villas by Robert and James Adam, 1985, p. 138; A. Tait, ‘Lord Findlater, Architect’, The Burlington Magazine, October 1986, pp. 737-41; A. Tait, Robert Adam, The Creative Mind: from the sketch to the finished drawing, 1996, p. 29; D. King, The Complete Works of Robert & James Adam and Unbuilt Adam, Volume 1, 2001, p. 330; Volume 2, 2001, pp. 54, 179, 207-8, 217, 257; H. Colvin, A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600-1840, 2008, p. 41; A. McAlaney, ‘Earl of Findlater, designs for a town house for an unknown location, possibly Portland Place, London’, Sir John Soane’s Museum Collections Online, 2019, [accessed 01 February 2024]; D. King, Adam Ceilings: A Geometric Study, 2020, pp. 90, 141, 193, 244
Louisa Catt, 2024
Sir John Soane's collection includes some 30,000 architectural, design and topographical drawings which is a very important resource for scholars worldwide. His was the first architect’s collection to attempt to preserve the best in design for the architectural profession in the future, and it did so by assembling as exemplars surviving drawings by great Renaissance masters and by the leading architects in Britain in the 17th and 18th centuries and his near contemporaries such as Sir William Chambers, Robert Adam and George Dance the Younger. These drawings sit side by side with 9,000 drawings in Soane’s own hand or those of the pupils in his office, covering his early work as a student, his time in Italy and the drawings produced in the course of his architectural practice from 1780 until the 1830s.
Browse (via the vertical menu to the left) and search results for Drawings include a mixture of Concise catalogue records – drawn from an outline list of the collection – and fuller records where drawings have been catalogued in more detail (an ongoing process).
Contents of Cullen House, Moray: designs for the interior decoration of Cullen House and an entrance screen for James Ogilvy, 6th Earl of Findlater and 3rd Earl of Seafield, and designs for a chimney piece and furniture for the drawing room at Cullen House, along with a tea pavilion, town house or gardener’s house, and a gated lodge for James Ogilvy, 7th Earl of Findlater and 4th Earl of Seafield, 1767-83, executed in part (26)
- Design for an entrance screen for the 6th Earl of Findlater, 1767, executed to a variant design (1)
- Designs for the library, staircase, hall and vestibule for the 6th Earl of Findlater, 1767, unexecuted (4)
- Preliminary design and record drawings for ceilings for the hall, staircase, vestibule and library for the 6th Earl of Findlater, 1767, unexecuted (5)
- Preliminary drawings and designs for a town house or garderners house for the 7th Earl of Findlater, c.1775, unexecuted (4)
- Preliminary drawings and designs for mirror frames, a commode and a chimneypiece in the drawing room for the 7th Earl of Findlater, 1781, unexecuted (4)
- Preliminary drawings and designs for a banqueting house for the 7th Earl of Findlater, 1783, unexecuted (6)
- Designs for a gateway and lodge for the 7th Earl of Findlater, 1783, unexecuted (2)