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Burns' Cottage Ellisland Farm Dumfries Home

Postcard of a colour tinted photograph of Ellisland, Dumfries c 1905

"Burns House Ellisland near Dumfries". A coloured lithographic postcard of the farmhouse where Robert Burns and his family lived

Robert Burns took on the lease of Ellisland Farm from Patrick Miller of Dalswinton from Whitsunday 1788 for a rent of £50 per year. It was a small unimproved holding of 170 acres situated on the bank of the River Nith about 5 miles north of the town of Dumfries.

Miller gave Burns £300 with which to build a farm house and enclose the fields. In January 1790 Burns wrote to his brother Gilbert, "it is a ruinous affair ... let it go to hell". By this time his career in the Excise was becoming established, and he finally quit the farm at the end of 1791, selling off his farming stock by public roup, or auction.

The five bedroomed farmhouse which was built to Burns' instructions was designed by Thomas Boyd, a Dumfries architect. It is still as it was in Burns' time, although the steadings have been much remodelled. In 1929 the farm was presented to the nation by John Wilson Williamson. It is now a museum. This postcard was published by a local printer, Kempsell of Dumfries.

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