The house was described in the
Perth Courier of 24 August 1809 as "lately built", likely by Perth lord provost
Thomas Hay Marshall (who died at the property in July 1808), and had a succession of owners before being sold to George Gray, a lawyer, and future father of
Effie Gray, in 1827. It was rented to John Thomas Ruskin (grandfather of the writer
John Ruskin) in 1809, but the Ruskin family never owned it. It is described at the time of Effie's childhood as "a Regency villa overlooking the city of Perth" (the
Regency era officially spanned the years 1811 to 1820, though the term is commonly applied to the longer period of 1795–1837). The
Buildings of Scotland volume describes it as "a large house of 1848" and the
Historic Environment Scotland listing also gives its date as 1848, but these dates would appear to refer to a remodelling. It "was only about forty years old in 1842–44 when George Gray undertook an extensive rebuilding in that neo-renaissance style which John [Ruskin] was to assail so comprehensively in his books". ==References==