Home > Moat Brae > Save Moat Brae

Save Moat Brae

Moat Brae, Dumfries

Moat Brae, Dumfries

Welcome to the new website and blog for Moat Brae House, an exceptionally fine Georgian townhouse in Dumfries, Scotland.

Moat Brae was designed in 1823 by the architect Walter Newall, for Robert Threshie of Barnbarroch. The interior of the house has a particular charm and theatricality about it, arranged as it is around a circular gallery and top-lit dome over the central saloon. Newall was born in New Abbey, and spent most of his working life in Dumfries. The range and quality of his work is becoming more widely appreciated since the archive of his records was acquired by Dumfries & Galloway Council and is now in the care of the Dumfries Archive Centre.

Many will know of the house because of its connection with the story of Peter Pan. In 1873, on his first day as a pupil at Dumfries Academy, the author JM Barrie befriended the Gordon boys, sons of a local solicitor whose family were then living at Moat Brae. Stuart Gordon shared Barrie’s appetite for high adventure, and invited him to join his pirate crew… “…when the shades of night began to fall, certain young mathematicians shed their triangles, crept up walls and down trees, and became pirates in a sort of Odyssey that was long afterwards to become the play of Peter Pan. For our escapades in a certain Dumfries Garden, which is enchanted land to me, were certainly the genesis of that nefarious work.” (JM Barrie, Speech on being awarded the Freedom of Dumfries, 11 December 1924) The garden of Moat Brae house is the birthplace of Peter Pan.

Over recent years, the house and garden have, sadly, been allowed to fall into a very bad state of neglect. The house is currently owned by Loreburn Housing Association, who recently announced that the house is “a goner”, and suggested its demolition, followed by a redevelopment of the site.

An alternative proposal, however, is the setting up of a Building Preservation Trust to acquire, restore, and find a suitable and sympathetic use for the house and its garden. The Peter Pan Action Group, formed by Roger Windsor and made up of concerned and dedicated local people with a wide range of backgrounds, interests and expertise, has included and has been working with Loreburn Housing Association to ensure a positive outcome for Moat Brae. Loreburn HA have now indicated to the Peter Pan Action Group that they would be open to passing the property on to such a trust, and so a small working group of volunteers is now incorporating a Building Preservation Trust to save the house and garden at Moat Brae.

Historic buildings preservation trusts (BPTs) are charities established to preserve buildings of architectural or historic importance whose survival is threatened and for which an economically viable solution is beyond the reach of both the original owner and the normal operation of the market. BPTs are usually constituted as companies limited by guarantee and have charitable status.

WE NEED YOUR SUPPORT!!!!
Please contact us if you can help in any way, or become a “Friend” of the Trust we are establishing for Moat Brae. Please emailĀ  friends@moatbrae.org if you would like to become involved; or to offer your support – specific or general, in cash or in kind. Please also let us know if you would like to be added to our mailing list.

Luke Moloney

Categories: Moat Brae
  1. No comments yet.
  1. No trackbacks yet.