The site has had buildings since the 16th century, and was once with the royal Forest of Drumselch. According to the 1792 history of the area by the minister of
Liberton, Rev Thomas Whyte,
James V of Scotland built a hunting lodge on the site, adjoining which was 'a handsome chapel' which was probably built around 1518 by Sir Simon Preston of Craigmillar, whose family owned the estate. The chapel was built 'for the health of the souls' of
King James III and
King James IV . In the 18th century the chapel building was being used as a stable A carved stone from the site, depicting a castle similar to
Edinburgh's coat of arms, was reused and set in the wall of Bridgend farmhouse, and is now displayed in the foyer of
Inch House. A major archaeological survey of the site in 2014 confirmed there had been a significant building on the chapel site in the medieval period. The renegade
Archibald Wauchope of Niddrie was captured at Bridgend in May 1589 after
James VI arrived and broke up the siege of "a stone house within a mile" of Edinburgh. Around this time, the
accused witches Agnes Sampson and
Barbara Napier met at "Camroune-brig-end" for friendly talks and "hameliness". Agnes Sampson tried to heal the Goodwife of
Cameron, who walked with crutches. The present day farmhouse building dates from the mid 18th century and was extended to its current size early in the 19th. It was originally worked as a mixed dairy and arable farm but in the late 19th century much of the arable land was sold to become Dickson and Co.'s Royal Nursery. When the nursery closed in the 1960s the farm reverted to mixed arable, cattle and pig farming. Latterly the farm was worked by the Binnie family and then the Darling family, who bought the land in 1962 and the house in 1965 until the council bought it in 1998 and the Darling's left in 2000. A social history project called 'Place, Work, Folk' was carried out between September 2017 and April 2019 to record, share and document the lived memories of Bridgend Farmhouse, funded by the
Heritage Lottery Fund. == Origins ==